The reason is that most traders can benefit from learning how to trade and from following a method/system someone teaches them. If they also become interested in their mind's inner workings (as far as trading is concerned) as they should, a good book like
It's unfortunate, but most folks do seem to view looking into their mind's inner workings as secondary and less important to their method. Of course, most successful traders say psychology is 90% of the game. But still, people want the method. The method is easy. Self-discipline is hard.
The fact is, if you want someone to hold your hand and tell you how to trade, Innerworth won't be much help to you. But, if you want unbiased questions that make you think, if you're really willing to do the hard work... then I strongly feel Innerworth is the best site out there for traders.
That doesn't mean there isn't value in subscribing to someone else's system or newsletter. But pretty much every successful trader I've talked to or read about seems to share one common trait... they essentially have created their own system of indicators that they can reliably act on, to use to pull money out of the markets.
They do this by thinking for themselves. Which means in my eye, if you don't want to be a sheep, and follow... you need to be independent enough to look for you own answers, make your own tools, and learn to trust your own observations. And that's where Innerworth helps with the trader mindset.
I do have a disclosure... I work for Innerworth.