How many of yuo learned on yuor own?

So are you actually trader65 posing as trader56 or what?

Quote from trader56:

Actually, I am.

Now, having gotten that terribly pertinent piece of ground covered, can we get back to the original question?
 
Quote from austinp:

<i>"Again, WHAT you learned isn't nearly as important as HOW you learned."</i>

I learned the bulk of what I know thru trial and error, honestly several thousand manhours spent breaking down charts outside of market hours, and several years of daily trading = observation of live market action.

If you have several years of your life to dedicate charts above all else, 1000s of manhours after hours for research and lots of $$$ lost in the discovery process, you can do it on your own like the rest of us who did.
-----------------------------------------------------

Hi, folks.
I am a trader from Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Though I frequently review this forum –actually I find it pretty interesting and plenty of substance- this is my first post.

Now, going to the subject: fully agreed with austinp. That has been my experience as well as a stock trader since 1999, starting from scratch.

For what it may help, the following is an article taken from somewhere, sometime, that complies 90% with my experience .
Here it goes:

....................

<i>The 3 Phases of Trading Business Maturity</i>

As new traders, we must understand that the road ahead of us will not be easy, nor will it be a quick journey. The path that lies ahead is filled with daily challenges that will test our skills, both technical and mental.
In fact, most traders fail to progress past the start-up phase. They fail to learn:
To take a loss
To be wrong
That, to succeed, they must take the time required to learn!

The one constant fact that all successful traders, including Borselinno, Fisher, Jones and more, all agree on is this: It takes time to become a successful trader. Borselinno says at least a year; Fisher says maybe 2 years, but they all say this business has nothing to do with instant success. Quite the contrary: Most successful traders say that Survival is the first key to success.


<i>Typical Progressions of the Start-Up Phase of a Trading Business</i>

We:
Are lured by money
Perceive a low barrier to entry
Are influenced by “Peer Pressure” news hype
See that a friend did this and that
Read a few books
Go to a few seminars and get all that is freely available online
Find some speculative capital
Trade
Win
Lose
Lose
Find we need the right tools but think we can’t afford them
Think, “I need to try something more difficult.” even though we don’t understand what we just tried nor do we have the tools or the education
Lose more
Understand that we truly do need to work on “planning” and a way to shift our emotions from an adversary with respect to our goals to a powerful force that guides our actions
Finally, understand that it is okay to take a loss (In fact, we discover that this was the first lesson we needed to learn to survive!)

Survival is actually the goal for the start-up phase. So, then, we graduate to the Growth Phase.

<i>Typical Progressions of the Growth Phase of a Trading Business</i>

We:
Make a commitment to getting education and the proper equipment
Actually learn something
Plan
Trade with better results
Decide to make it complicated for some stupid, unknown alien reason
Lose patience
Lose
Simplify again, refining
Now understand the importance of patience in all of this
Take more risk
Are slaughtered by the market(s) even worse than ever before
Now have trouble pulling the trigger when the set-ups are very clear
Begin to understand the importance of discipline
Discover the mechanics of trading
Learn the life cycle of a trade
Commit our capital as planned, using strict money management
Get better
Start actually accepting responsibility for our own actions
Stop searching and start focusing (That is the key to graduating to the Maturity Level.)

<i>Typical Progressions of the Maturity Phase of a Trading Business</i>

We:
Are patient in our endeavors
Are disciplined enough to trade our plan
Understand leverage
Practice strict money management
Take less and less risk, preferring to use size on stronger signals
Learn how to handle huge dollar profits but keep our perspective (return on investment versus time to money)
Find out how to handle huge dollar losses but keep our perspective (return on investment versus time to money)
Truly understand the life cycle of a trade and can plan accordingly
Commit to a lifetime of education and learning
Now trade on auto-pilot, choosing to participate when the best risk:reward ratios exist
Make our main priority to trade our plan.
 
Quote from gnome:

You could learn on your own with enough time in the seat in front of your screen. A quality mentor* would be much faster, however.

*probably an oxymoron like "happily married" or "jumbo shrimp"


There are a few. I've been away from the business for a few years but am looking @ getting back in, at least the mentoring aspect of things...so I would like to think that I'm aware of at least one quality mentor.

Brandon
 
I would take the phrase "let the market teach you" very literally. I may take columns of numbers, print them out for various stocks and stare at the page and write down every thing I knew about what I am looking at. Then make notes on every possible question I don't know about what I am looking at.

I sometimes would do this in what I might call a vacuum, without news and slowly add pieces to the information notes.

I would do this in each segment of the market I thought may have influence. Short interest, up grades, gaps, and so on.

I would just put my notes in a pile on each segment and ask questions on forums from my notes.

Overall, I would venture a guess it took me about a year before I could even ask a decent question. Generally though I got in the habit of trying to find as much info with feedback from the market as opposed to having just putting a question out on a message board. Info from books became more relevant once you went one on one with the market esp re-examing your trades and trying to work it out without outside influence.
 
learning on your own can take 3-6 years for most people to truly get it.

Taking a mentor can speed the process IF your lucky enough to find a good one but in the end it's still up to you.
 
Quote from Brandonf:

There are a few. I've been away from the business for a few years but am looking @ getting back in, at least the mentoring aspect of things...so I would like to think that I'm aware of at least one quality mentor.

Brandon

This doesn't make sense :confused:

IF you were a successful trader you never would have left the business but you believe that now after a few years off your qualified to teach ????

Sorry dude but you need a reality check and from what I remember about you, your mentoring was a flop too!

It's guys like you (self deluded) that should stay out of the mentoring business UNTIL you yourself can make consistent income for several years FIRST.

No offence :)
 
Quote from trader56:

Did any of yuo do this?

Interested in hearing how many of yuo learned on yuor own. Not what yuo learned, but the way yuo learned it.

No mentors, just yuo and whatever reading and independant research - of what ever sort - yuo did to become profitable.

Again, WHAT yuo learned isn't nearly as important as HOW yuo learned.

Everyone wants to be told how to trade, I'm finding few ask how to learn (though admittedly, I've not searched this topic here exhaustively).

Thanks for yuor replies!


i learned on my own ..no teacher, no mentor ... just trial and error ...

started with 10k back in 1998.. proceeded to lose 6k of it immediately ..then i never looked back ... i will admit i am a one trick pony ..but it still works ..( even though i wish it were 1999-2000 again :-))

--mm
 
Quote from trader56:

That was actually pretty clever - well done!

Yuo've been here on ET for some time now, can yuo share some thoughts on the question about learning?

I'm glad SOMEBODY got the joke.. sheesh!

Unfortunately, most of what I "learned from sources outside myself" turned out to be temporarily correlative.

I've spent a lot of time at a real-time screen, so I'd have to say you can observe a lot just by watching.
 
Quote from gnome:

I'm glad SOMEBODY got the joke.. sheesh!

Unfortunately, most of what I "learned from sources outside myself" turned out to be temporarily correlative.

I've spent a lot of time at a real-time screen, so I'd have to say you can observe a lot just by watching.

The real benefit to watching what you're observing, is the competence to learn to unlearn.
 
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