Quote from steve0617:
Douglas, in Trading in the Zone, does much more than simply talk the problem to death. He does that of course, but then gives you specific things to COMMIT to yourself that if you were to truly believe the idea of probability, then you will no longer be at odds with your brain. And then trading becomes a method of execution, rather than stress.
Excellent book. Highly highly recommended.
I also endorse both Douglas and Steenbarger, because they emphasize different areas of development. Mark is big on self understanding and the power/influence on beliefs on a trader's ability to execute flawlessly. Dr Brett is big on approaching trading as a peak performance sport and hence focuses most of his time/energy on strategy/tactics. In his latest book, the majority of the chapters are devoted to enhancing performance via strategy/tactics and the last few (not that they are unimportant) are about cognitive self help.
Now, if Dr Brett and Mark did NOT trade, I would not offer the following constructive criticism. But since they do, I will go ahead with it: They both acknowledge that you need a demonstrable edge to trade. They have both stated that in online seminars, classes, blogs etc. However what they have NOT done is told you how to KNOW beyond reasonable doubt that you have an edge. And that requires going into statistics and hypothesis testing.
This is where it gets interesting. The only way you can have unshakeable confidence (the kind that lets you recover from a 30-40% drawdown for example) without changing trading methods is by knowing the numbers/stats on your system/s cold with constant monitoring for possible deterioration in them. For you to BELIEVE, really believe that the next trade has a random outcome and that you don't need to know it's outcome to be profitable over a sample of trades, you need to KNOW that you have an EDGE. I would go as far to say that the helpfulness of these 2 trading coaches is either 0 or 100%, depending on whether the trader reading them knows whether he has an edge or not. If he does not have an edge, then no amount of reading these 2 will help, and hence usefulness will be a big zero. If he does have an edge, then their usefulness catapults to 100% or even more, because they reinforce all the necessary steps to flawless execution.
It follows that if you don't know whether you have a statistical edge, you should not be surprised if your performance is marred by a host of 'psychological' problems. Those are your body/subconscious mind's way of trying to tell you the truth: that you're not ready to trade yet.
If he puts another book out, I hope Mark Douglas addresses this issue. But since he is trading for himself and probably doing very well, I doubt he will. Dr Brett on the other hand will probably look into this.
Hope this helps