Daytrader lifestyle =boring

Boring as hell. Lonely. What can you do? Post on here, is one of my solutions. What is bad for me, I never stop. The market closes and I'm reading more and more. Looking at after hours charts etc. 8am to 1 am. I try to make it to the gym some days, and stay outside all weekend. I had to take a break a few months back, having eye twitches, no sleep. It must be different for you, you got a well deserved check coming in every month. This is do or die, and I'm alone.. I still love it, but I haven't found a way to cope with it yet, just keep grinding.
 
Quote from Humpy:

The qualities needed by any self respecting sniper are very useful - such as patience, pace yourself, pull the trigger when you are sure etc.

Find a meantime hobby
such as music, exercises, write a book etc.

Plan a holiday with your enabled laptop to trade while sipping pina colladas on the beach

the alternatives are endless

If you have already learnt self discipline you are off to a flying start

You hit it. Large percentage traders trade for excitement. Trading should be enjoyable, with excitement appreciated via other pursuits.
 
Do something that excites you after trading.

Or simply do something would excite you when trading if still can manage the trade....
 
Quote from bat1:

I retired from the Military in Jan 2010

So I got into trading Nasdaq Stocks

I been doing OK however it get boring and lonely at times
when wife is away at work.

I would like to know how you guys beat the boredom
and looking at the walls day to day :p
Add to the boredom the frequent losses.

Daytraders are losers.
 
your not making fast big easy money that is why it is boring. and you know what i mean.

making big money is never boring.





Quote from bat1:

I retired from the Military in Jan 2010

So I got into trading Nasdaq Stocks

I been doing OK however it get boring and lonely at times
when wife is away at work.

I would like to know how you guys beat the boredom
and looking at the walls day to day :p
 
Quote from crgarcia:

Add to the boredom the frequent losses.

Daytraders are losers.

Just because you apparently failed doesn't mean everyone else did. Your constant mindless drivel got old a long time ago. I've traded as my sole source of income since 1996, and whereas I don't make $500K a year I do pretty well and live a comfortable lifestyle. And I take 2 or 3 late afternoons off each week to work with kids in a school. Your negative attitude towards trading likely contributed to your failure. Those who believe they can succeed and who work hard and persevere oftentimes do.

And for those who think trading is boring - I don't get it. Trading offers the ultimate as far as freedom. If you're bored go for a run or a bike ride. Go run errands. Go do some yard work. Go volunteer at a school or non-profit. What other job can you take off an hour (or more) and come back later on in the day and pick up where you left off?
 
Start trading OPM. Clients always want to talk/ ask questions. Also Sometimes you get fresh ideas talking to various people.
 
Quote from DHOHHI:

And for those who think trading is boring - I don't get it.

I've been a trader for almost 18 years and a daytrader for 11. I find trading boring. Very boring. However, I do agree with you that trading provides freedom that you can't get with any other job that I know of. This past summer, while my kids were out of school, I took six week off just because I felt like it. To me, it's a tradeoff. I trade a few boring hours each day for a lot of freedom and control that I can't get with any other way of making a living.
 
Quote from DHOHHI:

Just because you apparently failed doesn't mean everyone else did. Your constant mindless drivel got old a long time ago. I've traded as my sole source of income since 1996, and whereas I don't make $500K a year I do pretty well and live a comfortable lifestyle. And I take 2 or 3 late afternoons off each week to work with kids in a school. Your negative attitude towards trading likely contributed to your failure. Those who believe they can succeed and who work hard and persevere oftentimes do.

And for those who think trading is boring - I don't get it. Trading offers the ultimate as far as freedom. If you're bored go for a run or a bike ride. Go run errands. Go do some yard work. Go volunteer at a school or non-profit. What other job can you take off an hour (or more) and come back later on in the day and pick up where you left off?

I agree for the most part. The actual act of trading should be boring to the extent that it shouldn't be edge of your seat exhilarating....at least not for me---except for the times when there is volatility that can't be avoided. I find trading to be engaging. Engaging, for me, doesn't equal exciting and it certainly doesn't equal boring. But there are times of boredom when I don't have any signals to act. Those moments of boredom are probably more enjoyable than the entire days of boredom that most people endure while working in jobs that they dread.
 
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