I didn't take the quotes from above out of some random chapter in the middle of the book, but directly from the beginning section entitled "Why I Wrote this Book". In that section he says "There must be a difference between these two groups of traders (he's referring to the 95% that blow their accounts and the 5% that end up with that money)-the difference is that that traders who can make money consistently on a weekly, monthly, and yearly basis approach trading from a mental discipline. When asked for their secrets of success they categorically state that they didn't achieve any measure of consistency in accumulating any measure of wealth from trading until they learned self discipline, emotional control, and the ability to change their minds to flow with the market" he goes on to say (later in the page)...all traders experience confusion, frustration, anxiety, and the pain of failure. The few traders who pass through this phase to accumulate wealth are those who eventually confront and work through some very difficult psychological issues about what it means to be a trader..."
I didn't start this thread just for the hell of it. I am new to trading, but I am not new to the dedication it requires to become disciplined and be successful at something. I started my first company 3 years ago. I have made and lost substantial amounts of money. I've experienced great success in starting my second company and have watched it build up around me in the form of friends, multiple houses, and pride. I've also watched everything I created evaporate into thin air. I've felt the anguish and frustration of gaining everything, only to lose it a couple years later. Its quite something to build and easily afford a house worth just under a million dollars, and less than 2 years later wonder where your next meal is going to come from all before the age of 21. I didn't say all this for you sympathy or praise, only to try to differentiate myself from the 21 year old who got off of his mom's couch yesterday from playing xbox and suddenly decided to day trade because it seemed lucrative. No. I am trying to dig through what trading is about to get to the very bottom. 95% of traders blow their account, I would guess their are a few more that make a decent living or break even. That's great, but it's not what I'm interested in.
I am interested in the ones (since this is a zero sum game) who take the majority of the profits from the 95%. I'm sorry, but if you're making $100,000 a year, while that's a great accomplishment there is still something missing. I don't know the math, but I'm guessing (given the 95% rule) there is a ridiculous amount of money going out the door everyday in futures markets. There has to be. If you are taking full advantage of that (i.e. in the top 5%) you have to be raking it insane sums of money. Douglas himself says that. If you are not, then you are probably in the 95% or some other smaller percentage who break even or make a tiny fraction of what is really being made. You might say "oh making six figures in trading is almost impossible, if you think you can get to that or past it you are sorely mistaken". Maybe you are right. Maybe I never will. But I will tell you this: somebody is. I want to do, what THEY do. I want to trade how THEY trade. Having said that I think that just maybe Douglas had it right. Maybe most "successful" traders think they are disciplined when in fact they never fully addressed their mental set backs and because of that they are limited to breaking even or making 100k a year when there is far more than that to make. Maybe not. I don't know, but I'm trying to find out. I find it interesting that almost no one agrees with douglas, but if he's right how could they? If he is correct than 95% or more people won't agree with him. The people that would don't care to because they are off on their yacht drinking scotch (that was just at tempt to lighten the post).
I've posted this question on other boards too and get even more disagreement. Of course I do realize that the fact that he is disagreed with doesn't make him right...but it is what would happen. I don't mean any disrespect to anyone, I am just trying to get tot he very very bottom of what this is all about, and I think that's important.