Many beginners and even experienced pros make the same mistake: they judge their success by their balance at the end of the week or month. If the account is in the red or just breaking even, the self-flagellation begins, followed by doubts about the strategy and a downward emotional spiral. Trading is a game of probabilities, not a linear job with a guaranteed salary.
When you focus solely on the "here and now" money, you end up on an emotional rollercoaster:
A losing month feels like a personal failure. You start labeling yourself a "bad trader," when in reality, it might just be market noise or a temporary phase where your strategy doesn't fit the current environment.
The urge to "make it back" leads to broken risk management, tilt, and even deeper losses.
Your true focus should be on the process:
Discipline: Did you follow your trading system?
Risk Management: Was your risk-per-trade kept in check?
Analytics: Are you keeping a journal and reviewing your mistakes?
If you closed the month in the red but never once broke your algorithm, you are an excellent trader. If you closed the month with a "huge" profit while breaking your rules, you’re just a lucky gambler who will eventually lose it all.
The result is simply a byproduct of a well-executed process. Over the long haul (one, three, or five years), the mathematical expectancy of your system will inevitably take over as long as you don't let short-term emotions kill your potential.
Just One Good Trade
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