The whole point of taking a few real trades is really to test yourself. Of course having a strategy which has an edge helps, but honestly, I would imagine most traders would say that they had moments where all the best plans we completely overlooked.
The way it works in trading is that you will either make money on the next trade, or lose money. You have to accept this, and see how you react to this. Now don't get me wrong, this is actually much more complicated than it sounds. I think it was Mark Douglas who in his book gave good example of how gambling is different than trading, and much harder. With gambling, you know how much you're willing to lose, you know when the game starts, and when it stops, and then its done. With trading, you can of course stay in longer, and make more, and lose more. There really is no end to the bet if you don't respect your stops and targets. This makes it way more complex.
But if you just start with a basic amount of knowledge, and a basic idea of what you're looking to do, there is nothing wrong with taking a real trade if you will stick to your parameters. For example, assume you want to get in on a trade when you see price getting to some previous swing low because you've noticed that a couple of times during the day, it has always bounced back up. So perhaps you enter, hoping to buy at 2200 and make 4 points. If you're wrong, you have a stop it place to get out at 1998. For this risk to reward ratio of 1:2, you really only need to be right 50% of the time to have a killer profits over long term.
The interesting part would be is if you can actually honor your stop, and get out when you said you would, and if you can also honor your target, and get the 4 points that you were hoping for. Now don't get me wrong, I'm not suggesting that its always best to be firm and dictate what price has to do, but when you're starting out, you simply don't have the experience to be in the rhythm of the market, you just want to see if you can control yourself.
If you did this same type of trade 10 times, and knowing that you only need to win 5 to make a killing, would you still be willing to make these trades if the first 2 don't work out? Will you let your psychology affect your ability to put on the next trade simply because you lost twice in a row already? This is the type of shit you need to figure out.
Now who really knows what the win rate should be, and some don't even subscribe to the notion that you can assign win rates like this since each moment in the market is unique, but you need to see if you can stick to a certain plan that has a decent set of parameters that takes into account the trade sometimes working out and sometimes not.
What you will not find at ET is people actually posting about this stuff so you don't get the impression that its important. But if some of the traders who are actually profitable posted on here, and posted this type of stuff, you would see how it almost looks random. There are a bunch of losses, there are a bunch of wins, and its just business as usual.
Also, figuring out why some trades don't work is good, but at the same time, you can't be wrapped up in it because its impossible to figure this out. Mark Douglas says that when a trade doesn't work out, it simply means that those traders who would have otherwise bought at this level and hence helped it take off simply weren't around to buy. So if you're trying to figure out why the trade didn't work, you will never know since you have no idea they were about to go to lunch, etc.
I bet that most beginning traders would do better with random entries but very strict trade management rules rather than trying very hard to predict where price is going and then freaking out when it doesn't do what they thought it would and then get desperate to get out, or double down, or whatever else their emotions tells them to do.
Once you get used to the statistical nature of trading, and detach yourself emotionally from it, you can work on finessing where and when to enter, and in what direction.
Now this I understand. I think I may do what I was thinking in the first place and just make some trades on paper...........Right now I just need to get the feel of using a few platforms and make some really simple trades, setting up charts, building watch list ect....I have really no experience in none of that. I could care less about winning on paper right now or anything like that. Just make some trades. I will take what you said into consideration and use it one way or another! I may just start watching some charts tomorrow and just do that for awhile. Thanks for the info Sir!
