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I think it was Henry Ford who said “the harder I work the luckier I get”.
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We have to put in the study…the work…the time…the honing of skills…the psychology (this is a hard one) …the practice …before we submit great sums of money to the market to extract even more money. Start small and learn…practice…adapt..correct..…get good before going big. Simulators are good for practice although not exactly the same as real trading. But they can be used to hone skills. Just whatever amount you are looking to capture from a trade add two ticks to it. One for entry and one for for exit as price will have to trade through it. For instance, to give a simple example in ES. If you are looking to capture 1 point in real trading you will need to practice on a SIM capturing 6 tick move which in real trading will end up being a 1 point or 4 tick profit. Want to capture 3 points need to practice on Sim capturing 14 ticks. SIM is useful in some things..honing skills..discovering what will work for you or not work for you..etc. The psychological part if trading comes into play big time when one goes live. BUT IF YOU CAN’T make it work on a SIM you certainly won’t make it work with real money! Why throw real money at the market if one can’t make it work on a SIM?
One thing that doesn't get discussed enough is the probability of success of an endeavor.
My take is that if you start as a fat, middle-aged, out-of-shape guy, you got higher chances of success of making it into Premier League than starting as an intelligent, well-educated, resourceful college graduate and making it into trading. I DON'T KNOW ANYONE THAT GOT HERE WITHOUT CHEATING. It's literally setting yourself up to become Michael Jordan / Britney Spears / Tom Cruise / similar. Lottery ticket, with a lot more effort and money.
Talking about successful traders, I only know one guy that made it and he cheated, essentially used insider trading. Drinking with the right guys, finding out stuff before it hit general public ear.
Some day I'll write a Medium article how and why there's nothing left for the little guy.
But probability aside there's another reason why people choose trading. It's a religion.
Mind you, what would you say it's the fundamental trait of a religion? Faith you might say? Close but not quite.
It's HOPE.
It's https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandora's_box.
Investing your hope in winning an extremely unlikely lottery ticket in trading is far less delusional than adhering to some traditional religion, especially since here you also have a semblance of self-determinism and control over your own fate. Or, wait a moment, you have that in regular religions as well. So I guess the only difference is in real probability of realizing that hope.
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