I'll bite.
Ask yourself these questions
right before your next trade you post on here (I am dying to know your answers)
1) what made you decide your enter price? was it an indicator? a way the chart looked? describe it in WORDS. not a "gut feeling". gut feelings only work if you are a very seasoned trader. An example would be, "The bar pierced the top of the bollinger band and it looked like an opportune time to short"
2) what made you decide your stop price? just an arbitrary fixed number, like 10 pips? This might not work that well in the long run. A better example would be, "The support level was 10 pips lower"
3) what made you decide your target price? same type as #2
4) How many losses are you willing to take every day before stopping? Is there a limit?
5) Are you going to try the "home run" approach where you (strike out often) sell your losers quickly and hold on to your winners, or are you going to try to hit a lot of singles but rarely a home run? They both have their disadvantages and advantages, but you should really decide this at the start of the trading day...
Answering these questions after every trade and keeping a log of this is what makes you a stronger trader, in my opinion. If you can describe every trade then you are well ahead of the game. I have lost thousands of dollars in my earlier years because I tried to go with a "gut feeling" and end up getting lucky some times, but very unlucky the other times.
Just think about it this way: you are playing with real money. you might as well treat it as serious as you can.
I'm surprised I haven't read a ton of posts telling you to PAPER TRADE for months and months before you use real money. That seems to be the theme here. I personally think the best way you learn is to do it for real. Lose some money. Just make sure you have tried to do everything in your power to know WHY YOU LOST the money. When I started I started with $5000 and when the wire went through I basically wrote that money off as lost from the beginning. It's the only way to free yourself from worry about losing.
my two .02,
k.
Quote from uninvited_guest:
By entering the trades during a quiet time to be executed once GBP/USD moved 25 pips I was hoping for momentum would continue. Came very close, both legs achieved +7 pips before retracing.
I figured a move of 10 pips to trigger the limit, not 15 pips, and a retrace of 5 pips to trigger the stops.
This was a good lesson for only $20.00