NoDoji...

The best laid battle plan, once the first shot is fired, is shredded

Let’s not marginalize the mkt’s ability, via its “so called” antics, to enter one’s head and mind fuck them into inaction…, even destructive action

Seriously though, is it the mkt’s ability… or one’s inability (rhetorical)

There is absolutely no plan..., back tested (till the cows come home) or not..., that will overcome one’s predisposition

Tis fact

RN
 
Quote from StarDust9182:

"You see, I don't mind what happens."


Caring and minding are two distinct levels of disassociation

Minding = objecting
Caring = concerned

Best we learn not to care – and resolve both



Quote from StarDust9182:

When you master your self, you will no longer need

want / wish / hope / or care

This I like

RN
 
Quote from Redneck:

There is absolutely no plan..., back tested (till the cows come home) or not..., that will overcome one’s predisposition

Which is why it's so much easier to teach beginners than those who are dragging years of failure behind them.
 
Quote from StarDust9182:

"Part-way through this particular talk," writes Jim Dreaver, who was present, "Krishnamurti suddenly paused, leaned forward and said, almost conspiratorially, 'Do you want to know what my secret is?' " (There are several accounts of this event; details vary.) Krishnamurti rarely spoke in such personal terms, and the audience was electrified, Dreaver recalls. "Almost as though we were one body we sat up… I could see people all around me lean forward, their ears straining and their mouths slowly opening in hushed anticipation." Then Krishnamurti, "in a soft, almost shy voice", said: "You see, I don't mind what happens."

Ooooh, I like that.

I've found the work of Byron Katie to be an effective method of attaining this elusive "Buddhist" state of mind. It's a form of meditation that involves questioning all stressful thoughts until there's nothing remaining except right here right now everything is exactly as it should be.

Her entire process is available free on her web site:

http://thework.com/thework.php

Like all highly effective methods of self-improvement (and trading improvement), it requires that you actually work at it, only always :cool:
 
Quote from dbphoenix:

Which is why it's so much easier to teach beginners than those who are dragging years of failure behind them.

I've always wondered whether a total beginner could trade my plan in a calm relaxed manner, without fear, hesitation, second guessing, etc.

I had one friend who was interested, but had no time to commit to learning.
 
Quote from NoDoji:

I've always wondered whether a total beginner could trade my plan in a calm relaxed manner, without fear, hesitation, second guessing, etc.

If a nine-year-old can do it . . .
 
"Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth."

- Mike Tyson

"People were asking me [before a fight], 'What’s going to happen?,' " Tyson said. "They were talking about his style. 'He's going to give you a lot of lateral movement. He's going to move, he's going to dance. He's going to do this, do that.' I said, "Everybody has a plan until they get hit. Then, like a rat, they stop in fear and freeze.' "

What I like so much about the quote is that its application stretches far beyond boxing. It really has meaning in any area of life, whether the blow comes from a health issue, losing your job, making a bad investment, a traffic jam, whatever.

It's how you react to that adversity that defines you, not the adversity itself.

"Exactly," Tyson agreed. "If you’re good and your plan is working, somewhere during the duration of that, the outcome of that event you're involved in, you're going to get the wrath, the bad end of the stick. Let's see how you deal with it. Normally people don’t deal with it that well."

He laughed. There's another way to spin his famous quote:

"How much can you endure, buddy?" he said. "Most talkers, they can’t handle it."





http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/20...9_1_mike-tyson-undisputed-truth-famous-quotes
 
Quote from Visaria:

"Exactly," Tyson agreed. "If you’re good and your plan is working, somewhere during the duration of that, the outcome of that event you're involved in, you're going to get the wrath, the bad end of the stick. Let's see how you deal with it. Normally people don’t deal with it that well.

Not entirely applicable to trading, at least not to all trading plans, unless one can exit the ring when "things begin to go bad" and stand aside until conditions are once again favorable.
 
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