
Are you putting someone's real number on an internet forum?
I hope it is a business number.
Mark Douglas put it best I think:
Rarely do any of us grow up learning how to operate in an arena that allows for complete freedom of creative expression, with no external structure to restrict it in any way. In the trading environment, you will have to make up your own rules and then have the discipline to abide by them.
The problem is, price movement is fluid, always in motion, quite unlike the highly structured events that most of us are accustomed to. In the market environment, the decisions that confront you are as endless as the price movements you intend to take advantage of. You don't just have to decide to participate, you also have to decide when to enter, how long to stay in, and under what conditions to get out.
There is no beginning, middle, or end - only what you create in your own mind.
Since it doesn't matter if a mentor is profitable or not, I'm now considering entering the mentoring business for struggling traders.
Let me know if you're interested.
Oh, pardon me? I didn't catch that. You don't have a detailed analysis of at least 100 appearances of this setup.
I do.
Maybe that's why I magically know when to trade it, how to trade it and how to manage the trade after I'm in.
If spending hours and hours doing that sort of tedious analysis isn't your cup of tea, then you have the answer to the question posed by this thread.


1. Think of someone you believe has done you wrong and toward whom you have great anger and resentment.
2. Call or visit this person and forgive them.
Ironically, good mentor indeed doesn't have to be a golden champion. Many glorious sport coaches never were champions, many great professors did not get Nobel etc.
And the opposite: great trader (or other professional) may be an awful mentor.
Skill of teaching something is different from the skill of performance in the same something.
Yeah, that's true. I'm well aware of that.
At my former work place, I had two bosses. The most skilled one was the worst teacher by far.
Regardless, both were proficient in their fields and they had mentored other people who became successful before me.
If you're referring to fat football coaches and such, it should be said that while they may not be able to play themselves, they do understand the game. And most importantly, those fat coaches actually produced RESULTS.
And it may very well be true that a skilled trader will be a horrible teacher, but who would you rather teach from, the guy who's actually earning a buck trading or the guy who have nothing but losses to show for?
If I were to be taught by a losing trader, I would at least want to know that he had a produced results by having profitable students.
True. You expect either stellar performance from mentor or stellar performance of his/her students.
