It took the greater part of my young adult life to get where I am today. I was dead broke, worked shit jobs and took whatever I had left to the markets. I think about 3 years to break even and another two years until I made ok money.
I don't know if you intended it this way, but that's
really encouraging. I've been trading for about 20 months now, and am more pumped about the results than I could possibly explain. I'm not boasting - my account, and thus my returns, are so small that you'd laugh your head off - but I've managed to support myself with nothing but trading since the corona crash (which killed off my previous business.) I've also been growing those returns, and have more than doubled them over the past four months. If anybody had told me this two years ago, I'd have thought them a lunatic.
In all that time, I've only had one week where I finished in the red despite initially having zero clue of what I was doing (except for risk management, which has been my holy grail from the beginning). That may mean that I'm over-cautious, but growing my risk tolerance at my own rate and only trading within it suits me just fine.
Most of that time I tried to figure out with kind of trader I can be. Took a while until I arrived at market neutral derivatives trading and market making.
The better question would be: Would you do it again? And knowing what I know today I'd probably say no. Way too many sacrifices and an insanely hard life until you make it. Probably the same like becoming an actor
It
has been insanely hard. I've committed more concentrated effort to learning this than to almost anything I can remember in my life, and I've had to dig deep into who I am and grow (which is a goddamn painful process as you get older) as a person; to fix old, broken ideas about money, wealth, and success. AND I'd do it again if it took twice as long and was twice as hard. Trading is exactly the discipline and the tool set that I've wanted and needed for a long time - even though I didn't know it - in order to accomplish those things. The money, for all of its importance at this time, is incidental; that growth, and those tools, are what I've wanted for a long, long time.