"Mental Fitness For Traders" by Norman Hallet
"Mental Fitness For Traders" by Norman Hallet
"Mental Fitness For Traders" by Norman Hallet
Rev 02-20050310
Disclaimer:
Mental Fitness For Traders makes no consideration toward your financial circumstances.
All material presented within is not to be regarded as investment advice, but for general
informational purposes only. Trading stocks, futures, forex, and options does involve
risk, so caution must always be utilized. We cannot guarantee profits or freedom from
loss. You assume the entire cost and risk of any trading you choose to undertake. You are
solely responsible for making your own investment decisions. Hypothetical or simulated
performance results have certain limitations. Past performance is not necessarily
indicative of future results. No stock, futures, forex, or options method can guarantee
profits. The risk of loss exists in stock, futures, forex, and options trading. Profits Run, its
owners, or its representatives are not registered as securities broker-dealers or investment
advisors either with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or with any state
securities regulatory authority. We recommend consulting with a registered investment
advisor, broker-dealer, and/or financial advisor. If you choose to invest with or without
seeking advice from such an advisor or entity, then any consequences resulting from your
investments are your sole responsibility.
Table of Contents
As Norman points out, they are so focused on finding the “holy grail” of trading they
completely ignore the most important variable; that is, the trader himself and his ability to
trade with discipline, no matter what. You see, the losing trader embarks on an endless
cycle of going from system to method to guru only to meet with frustration over and over
again. And never looks at himself as the source of the difficulty.
Norman takes the trader on an odyssey of the many ways that the mind, in the absence of
the proper training, will conspire to work against the very success that the trader is trying
to achieve. He then gently leads the reader to consider facing up to this challenge as the
number one priority on the road to becoming a successful trader. If you sincerely want to
become a successful trader and are willing to act on that desire, I believe this report has
the potential to change your life.
Good Trading,
www.instantprofitstoday.com
You understood before you started that successful traders both win and lose and “losing
is part of the overall winning”. You’ve also heard more then once that “successful traders
don’t win on every trade.”
Moving on, still confident. Next trade made. Another loss, but…
This one hurt your pride a little because you got stopped out early in the trade, and then
the market rebounded and would have hit your profit target if you weren’t stopped out.
Yep, you placed the stop where your trading system told you to place it.
You kind of had a feeling that the early weakness in the market was just profit-taking
from the previous day’s trading, but you’re trading a system and you must stick to it.
Wounded, but resilient.
After a good night’s sleep and a few mouse clicks, your new daily trades are in front of
you.
Hey, this one looks good! It’s a little bit more risk than yesterday’s trades had, but look at
that profit potential!
With a smiling face, the trade is executed. With a nice start to the trade, you’re feeling
good and you’ve moved your stop to breakeven, just like your system said.
Surprise piece of news! Market reverses – blows through your stop – an “unexpected”
loss.
Has the overall market “personality” changed, affecting your system to the core,
rendering all your back-testing irrelevant?
You decide to “watch” the next trade… I mean, isn’t it wise to make sure the system gets
back on track before you “throw good money after bad?”
In your head, you beat yourself up a little because you know that when you started your
“live” trading, you made an agreement with yourself to take the first 10 trades “no matter
what”… and here you wimped-out and missed a big winner that would have gotten you
even.
What’s happening?!!
What’s happening is that you are out of control. Your emotions are ruling your trading.
The above scenario plays out in every trader from time to time... newbie and veteran
alike.
The winning trader senses what is happening and nips it in the bud. The winning trader
spend time EVERY DAY, working on “the discipline of trading”.
He/she reads a chapter in his/her favorite psychological trading book, scans the “ten
commandments of trading” that hangs on the wall over his/her desk, listens to his/her
mental training software for traders…
There are many more losing traders than winning traders… and it’s seldom about the
trading system.
In my career, I’ve come across at least 50 systems that I consider A+, yet I know for a
fact that MOST traders that have traded these systems have lost.
Why?
Are you?
“On a roll”… “Go with the flow”… “Ride the wave”… “Get out while the getting’s
good”… we’ve heard both sides of those golden words massaged in numerous different
phrases. We get it.
During my trading and coaching days, I would re-visit students that I trained weeks or
months previously and, low and behold, I would discover that many of them were
actually doing the opposite...
After a while I wasn’t surprised… I would go into a refresher visit EXPECTING to see
“limit/run rule” repeatedly ignored.
I would ask the students “Why?”... There were many different stories but one main
theme…
All the traders, in some way, had gotten out of emotional control.
During their trainings, I had made sure that they did extensive back-testing on their
systems and I did that because… I knew that the more they tested and saw that their
system would have been successful, the more they would TRUST in the system and have
the strength the follow its signals, especially through rough periods.
What I had been missing was that these traders were taking the losing PERSONALLY!
These new traders had been seeing losing trades as reasons to let negative thoughts into
their heads. A loss would mean that all the articles they read about “gambling” market
traders may be true.
All the family accusations that they were crazy traders … well, that could have some
merit!
This kind of negative thinking (as well as other forms of trading-related negative
thinking) makes it so you don’t want to take a loss. If you take a loss, maybe you’re that
much closer to that idiot trader that you’ve been accused of being.
So you enter a trade (after, say, coming off a losing trade) and it starts to go south.
As the market heads for your stop, you start looking around at the news, or a chart of a
“sister” market or share that’s showing strength, searching for an excuse to make it OK to
lift your stop.
Found it.
If the market comes back, you’ll be the smart guy or gal that made the right move and
turned a loser into a winner.
What you REALLY just did, however, was turn a potential winner into a potential loser...
YOU. You may have had a winning trade, but you will lose in the end.
It’s not about YOU. It’s about THE MARKET. If you don’t take your emotions out of it,
you don’t have a shot.
You must see yourself as a trader not someone who is becoming a trader.
If you are going to play in the Big Leagues, you have to do act and do what Big Leaguers
do… right from the beginning.
Do all your practicing on the paper-trading playing field. Once you put your money up,
you either do what your tested system tells you to do or pick a different profession.
If you’re not training mentally, you’re not giving yourself the best chance to laughing in
the face of your relatives!
Most of the time, we would chuck the article/leaflet into the trash as garbage, but at some
low ebb in our psyche, the article read like the answer to our prayers.
Whether we 1-2-3-counted with Ken Roberts, waved with Prechter, seasoned with
Bernstein, or banded with Bollinger, we all soon realized that if we were going to stay in
the game, we needed something more than desire and a dream…
We realized that we needed to take our emotions out of trading and look at trading like a
professional… like a job.
Now, that doesn’t mean we can’t have fun, because winning traders enjoy their jobs like
no others.
So, we either adopted a guru, inspected his archives of trades (that’s back-testing, right?)
and watched him/her live for a while before jumping in, or we bought software to test a
system we thought could work.
We have stops to defend against losing too much in one trade and we have limits to make
sure we take our profits when our system tells us to.
After a mix of trades over the first few weeks, we hit on a big one.
The news confirms that we are geniuses and we are quickly heading to our profit target.
In fact, we’re just ticks away. Hey, this heat wave is bigger than anyone expected.
There’s no way beans (or that stock or currency) are NOT going to the teens!
You decide you’ll put a stop right at your (former) profit target, so that if the market
backs off, you’ll take your profit where you were going to anyway.
What happened?
The same thing that happened when you read that original ad that got you involved in all
of this… You let your emotions take over.
If you’re still trading after a few years, it either means you have very deep pockets or
you’ve learned to control your emotions and take the profit your system tells you to.
You’re going to need them to overcome all the losses …and become the winner you
know you can be.
If you think about it, when winning trades appear in bunches, we get motivated and we
look for reasons to find the next trade. We’re on a roll and we love it. We’re on top of the
world.
Conversely, when losing trades appear in bunches, we become fearful of the next trade
and look for reasons to shy away from following our system.
We become filled with doubt and the words “gambler” and “loser” seem to describe us
best.
OK, so why?
It’s because you are viewing your trading outcomes as reflections of you as a person.
Negative personal evaluation leads to your being emotionally out of control, which leads
to straying from your tested trading system … and the result…you’re trading by the seat
of your pants (which should be pulled down and you spanked!).
You see, you must develop the mindset (and the true understanding) that you are a
winning trader whether you are experiencing a run of losing trades or winning trades.
Your self-image of a winning trader allows you to glide through losing streaks so you can
be there for the winning streaks.
Most new and “intermediate” traders do NOTHING about their mental trading fitness.
They are willing to spend thousands of dollars on “holy grail” systems and out-of-town
seminars, but are totally neglecting mental conditioning.
You should be training as hard on your mental fitness as you do on preparing your
trading signals.
As a broker/trader/CTA for 21 years, I have probably seen 50+ trading systems that were
money makers, IF you had the mental/emotional strength to follow them!
You need to find a system that suits your personality (more on this next week), back-test
the system, appropriate the money to trade the system, and then GO FOR IT.
The “go for it” part won’t actualize without the mental strength to take the good with the
bad.
Let’s assess.
Let me stress here that by impatient, I mean that you don’t like the notion of waiting
more than, say, a day, to see your trade results.
You use logic like “I don’t like to stay in a trade overnight, because that’s where the risk
is…anything can happen in these crazy times.” Or…
“My signals are just as valid with a 60 second chart as they are with a weekly chart and
I’d rather be able to keep adjusting.”
These things that you say to yourself (valid or not) come from your inner-self trying to
move you to comfort.
You say, “The market can be controlled short-term, but eventually the fundamentals
come home to roost.” Or…
“I’m not looking to eat up my capital in transactional costs. As far as I’m concerned, the
trend is your friend and I’ll stick with a trade.”
You tend to think, “A signal is a signal, whether it’s on a 2-minute chart or a monthly.
When my signal sets up, I GO!” You add, “Sometimes I don’t even know which
(stock/commodity/currency) I’m looking at.”
“That really doesn’t matter to me. I just care about the technical pattern.”
I won’t bore you with more types, because they are unlimited. In my coaching of traders
for years, these above types were the predominant ones.
There is only assessing which type you are comfortable with perceiving yourself as and
then committing to a trading system that reflects that type.
There are plenty of winning trading systems, of all types, that can be very successful. The
best way to have a good system work for you is if you can follow its signals without
hesitation.
You are more likely to follow your trading signals if the system “agrees with you.” Now
look inside yourself. Then commit to following what your tested system tells you to do!
You must win the BATTLE WITHIN YOURSELF first, before you can win in the
markets.
Then I met a subconscious trainer (whom I later married), who sat me down and stated,
“Thoughts are things.”
I’ve seen Kreskin and other guys bending spoons with their thoughts…it that what she
means?
Rather than give you the entire exchange of words (I don’t know that I remember all of
them, as I was falling in love while I was listening), I’ll give you the capsule.
According to her, there is this stream of consciousness somewhere up there that you can
plug into, and then, by directing your thoughts, you can harness this consciousness
somehow to get what you want (as long as what you want is positive… you can’t wish
someone a losing trade!).
This, combined with the notion that time, as we know it, is not linear; we can affect the
future from the present through this universal consciousness!
I’m back.
I don’t know that I understand all of this, let alone believe it, but I’ll tell you one thing I
DO KNOW…
If you get your brain into an alpha brain wave state and you tell yourself (of have
someone else suggest to you) what you’d like to happen in the future, say, the picture of
you as a successful trader…you WILL head in the direction of that picture you’ve created
in your head.
At least that’s what happened to me, and just about every successful trader I know.
There are different ways to visualize. During a quiet time (I know you can’t imagine any
quiet time… so start while seated in the bathroom) …
Now, just see yourself living the “Life of Riley” (am I showing my age… for those of
you that don’t recognize that phase, it means “the good life”) and having people around
you recognize you as that successful trader whom everybody is talking about.
You can move up the effectiveness ladder (get off the pot?) as you get used to the notion
of visualization and get more and more affective with your thinking, but the idea is to get
started.
“Doing the wrong thing”, like pulling your stops when the market comes close to them,
or not taking your profit when your system tells you to, becomes inconsistent with your
picture of who you are.
So the thing is, you don’t want to stay a “new trader” for long?
A new trader, the way I refer to it here, is either someone who has just begun trading and
has yet to make the mistakes of a beginner, OR someone who keep making the beginner’s
mistakes over and over again and never learns.
Most traders that I’ve come across over my 22 years as a trader and CTA (three years as a
“new trader” and 19 years as a “seasoned trader”) have never gotten out of the “new
trader” category.
To some, it’s impossible and they wind up walking away blaming the “volatility” or the
“institutional traders” for their failures.
OK, here’s the key to taking the leap from newbie to successful trader: Your mental
discipline.
The fact is, the beginner who’s done his/her homework before trading is (largely) using
the same indicators and techniques that the successful trader is using.
The beginner is controlled by emotions and fears and has not learned… I mean REALLY
learned… that trading the market is a math game.
It’s an exercise in probability and statistics and you must keep the odds on your side,
even if, from time to time, it hurts.
If you’ve back-tested your system properly… if you’ve followed your guru’s past
recommendations carefully… and you’re ready to start trading…then you have one job
and that is to follow your system like the IceMan.
If, over your chosen period of time, the system is not working, then change the system.
Never change your commitment to following your system to the letter once you’ve
decided to trade it.
Fears and emotions can easily overtake you. We’re humans, not machines.
You must TRAIN your mind to be disciplined. That’s what seasoned traders do.
They train their minds because they know that habit patterns are simply neuro-pathways
that are etched into your brain... AND…
When one identifies a poor trading habit (and you know who you are) all that needs be
done is to train your mind to create a new neuro-pathway to replace the old one.
A good trading system and the mental strength to commit to and execute the signals that
system gives you is the way of the seasoned trader.
Why?
Yum, yum!
Over my CTA/trading career, I’ve talked to many traders just beginning their quests for
riches and too many of them approach the market with “money they’ve saved up” for the
purpose of speculation.
That may be all well and good, but before you start on your journey of pain and joy, get
one thing straight.
You’re going to get emotional… just HOW emotional will be largely a function of
whether your risk capital is “comfortably losable,” when you are faced with a step back
on your road to profit.
The more mental and emotional investment you have in not wanting to lose your stake,
the more you are likely to lose it.
You like.
You do some “worst case” math. “Let’s see, with the stake I’m going in with, if I keep
my losses to a maximum of X dollars, then to lose my stake, I’d have to have 20 losers in
a row.”
“Never happen.”
Seasoned traders are laughing to themselves reading this because they know that if you
have to do this kind of math, then your chances of surviving and prospering are slim to
none.
It’s like the guy who counts his chips at the blackjack table…
Those that are too concerned about every chip are usually playing scared. And you know
what happens to scared money.
Yes, it flows into the pockets of the confident. And that is the point of this text exercise.
If you don’t REALLY have an “If it’s gone it’s gone, and it won’t affect my lifestyle in
the least” attitude, you are not creating the best chance to win.
I’m not saying that you should take a flippant attitude toward losing or winning. I’m
saying that the more losing your money has emotional meaning the less chance you have
of succeeding.
Stock (Forex, Futures and options…) trading should ideally be part of a mix of
diversified investments.
Who am I kidding?!
Most of the newbie traders I come across barely have their bills covered and are looking
for a way to break out of the financial doldrums.
Enter Ken Roberts, and all the gurus telling you your dream is possible for a stake of
$3,000. And maybe it is for the Few, the Proud and the Lucky.
Scared money.
To win, your attention should be focused on the process of trading, not on each win and
each loss. If you don’t treat trading like a business, and make sure it’s well funded, you’ll
wind up the way of the Edsel (ask an older friend if you don’t know that word).
In the end, it’s all about attitude and you mental strength of conviction to follow your
tested trading plan.
You’ll hesitate when your system gives you the green light and you’ll take your profit too
early. Your light will dim and in the end, after blaming market conditions, your light will
go out.
Whether you’re going to “fake it till you make it”, or you have adequate capital to begin
with, you better have your emotional wits about you.
First, although most traders will admit that the mental part of trading is key to winning in
the long-term, most believe they can “gut it up” and just “shake it off” when negative
emotions and behaviors rear their ugly heads.
They know what they need to do and by-cracky, they’ll do what needs to be done without
any help!
And what’s funny is… I get most resistance to the notion of mental discipline (as formal
training) from those that need it most… the emotionally out-of-control trader.
Second, a common mindset is that the primary key to being a successful trader to hook
your wagon to a guru or trading system and then following that system to riches.
The problem is that all (even great) trading systems experience draw-downs and you
wind up blaming the system for losing rather than doing what is painful for some…
blaming yourself (for not having the courage to trade through adversity)!
To the trader with low self-confidence, those words can cut like a knife.
“How about paying more attention to the mental/emotional part of trading?” To the trader
with low self-esteem, I’d be accusing him/her of having something wrong with them.
Being the Shepard of the mental/emotional aspect of trading is not an easy job.
For those who start paying REAL ATTENTION to the mental part of trading, results can
improve rapidly.
“How can I make sure that the only variable to losing and winning is my system and not
me?”
When was the last time you asked yourself these important questions?
It’s not all about changing your system; tweak, tweak, tweak.
You’re in the middle of a trade, and you’re scrambling around groping for your cell
phone so that you can call the trading floor directly and have them be your eyes and ears.
You’ve got your eyes peeled on the charts, waiting for the signal so you can pull
the trigger.
A phone call comes in about something other than the trade you are concentrating on.
You know you can’t talk, but you don’t want to be rude. Well, being polite just may cost
you.
Trade missed. You’ve waited all morning for everything to fall into place and you missed
it.
You’re angry.
You’re getting close to your target but the RSI seems nowhere near a peak. You don’t
want to take the profit quite yet even though you’re right on top of your price target.
Hey, let’s let it ride a little and we’ll just trail it with a stop. Surprise news! “El dropo”
and the market blows through your stop.
Distractions for following your system come from outside (lightning and phone calls) and
inside (your “feelings” about what could happen).
It’s your job to MAKE THE COMMITMENT to follow your tested trading system.
You’ve got to be deadly serious about it.
Get caller ID so that you take only the calls that you HAVE TO take.
Note: I knew a trader that held to the concept of “mental stops”. He was lucky for a
while, but when a power outage hit in his part of New York City, he couldn’t get through
to the floor.
The lights went back on in about 15 minutes but by that time he had lost a bundle. His
“mental stop” turned to “mental anguish”.
After that, he put his stops in… but just for a week and he was back to his old habits.
He doesn’t trade anymore. And the sad part is that the guy had talent.
You’ve worked hard to arrive at a system that you can trust…well then, do everything in
your power to stay focused on the ONE TASK of following that system to the tee.
At all times.
If we don’t have the “eye to the future”, maybe a trading friend has it.
Sometimes all you have to do is call up a trading buddy and say, “Hi, how are you
today?” What you’ll get in return will be, “Boy, have you seen the ‘so-and-so’ chart
today?
If that breaks the XY level, it’s going to really take off!” He continues, “And with that
unstable political situation, this could really be a big trade.”
We shouldn’t.
I guess we could take a look at the suggested chart and apply our trading parameters to
it… and if it passes scrutiny, well, that would be alright to trade, right? Yeah, OK.
You have to watch yourself, though. You see, you can have a tendency to want to
MAKE a trade fit.
After hearing all about the great fundamentals, you can (subconsciously) view the chart
with “I wanna buy” eyes, meaning that you can tell yourself that an almost-confirmation
is close enough (with all those fundamentals going for it!).
It’s always best, I think, to come across a trade yourself. You see a price falling… and
falling… gosh, when will it bottom? Your system says, “Don’t guess, be patient”.
“I’d rather be out of a market (or stock) wishing I was in, than in a market wishing I was
out.”
So, the market has a nice reversal day…new low during the day with a higher close.
Getting close to a buy, but not yet. The price goes higher for a few days and then starts to
come back down.
The low holds, the market breaks the rally high and BOOM, we pull the trigger and we
are in.
Every trader (you, included) has his or her own agenda. Only you know what works for
you, system-wise and emotion-wise.
Trust in your tested trading system. It will serve you if you stick to it.
My close friends know that I’m just getting good trading advice!
Now see yourself as Tryon.. cause that’s what you’re doing, tryin’, and of course, the
Market is Marcus, because the market’s always right.
Now you have a shot to win. Not a great shot. But A shot.
A hundred fighters have faced Marcus and 90% of them have lost. But 10 have won.
What did they do to win?
I didn’t see all the fights, but I know I’m accurate when I say that 9 out of 10 of the
fighters (if not all) that beat “All-Ways” Wright, kept a journal between rounds so that
they could improve after every round.
They all knew Wright was tough, so they had to make sure of two things. They had to
make sure they didn’t get knocked out in the early rounds, and they had to learn from all
their mistakes.
They were getting beaten up so badly each round, they had to make sure they made notes
so they didn’t forget what they had learned about “All-Ways” weaknesses.
They all knew they had to be brutally honest with their assessments of themselves.
Kidding yourself meant a right hand across the chin from the champ.
You had to correct what was wrong with your style every round so that you could adjust
and move forward.
They didn’t lie to themselves about their performance, because by taking their self-
assessment seriously, they could stay alive early and then get aggressive in the later
rounds.
So, it was back to the corner for every Ican, to honestly self-assess, adjust, and perform
better the next round because of what each was taught by reviewing the journal notes
from the previous rounds, while adding that round’s blow-by-blow.
It’s the fifth round and “The Best” Ican is bloodied and is starting to look tired.
The Champ has won every round but the second and hasn’t got a mark on his face.
A pawing jab by “The Best”. The Champ takes advantage with a big chopping right
hand!”
And Out.
Dr. Ferdy Pacheco, jumps into the ring to see if quivering Challenger is OK. Flashlight
in the eye.
Keep a journal.
Now being somewhat of a Guru myself, I think there IS a certain truth to this query, but
not the way you probably think.
Other trader’s experiences can make you aware of what to expect as you embark upon
your trading.
Knowing what to expect should translate into having less “blindside” occurrences.
However, when you come across the forewarned learning experience, emotions will
come up. These emotional situations (fear, overconfidence, freezing) are up to YOU to
handle.
Here, if you’re going to be a successful trader, is where the learning takes place… in
dealing with your emotions so that you can follow your trading plan.
If you blow the situation, your supposed learn from it and go on.
And learn from it, you must... or even the best trading system won’t save you from doom.
Your Mental Toughness is going to be the key to whether you make it or break it as a
trader. I know of two MAJOR things that you can do to develop your Mental Toughness
for trading.
I know that sounds like work, and who wants more paperwork at the end of the trading
day?
However, soon after you force yourself to start writing down your day’s trading
experiences; you will see the power of the technique.
You’ll find after just a week or so of keeping a journal of your trading experiences,
mistakes and all… especially mistakes… that when you are confronted with a trading
situation that you blew before… in the back of your head you’ll know that if you do the
same stupid thing again you’re going to have to report it to yourself…in your journal…
and… THAT will give you the strength to “do the right thing.”
Whether you just buy a spiral notebook (like I do) and and start writing, or you make it a
religious experience and buy something leather-bound…
You will find that the discipline of keeping a journal, is a practice that will flat-out make
you a better trader.
The other way to get Mentally Tough is to train your mind with as much intention as
exibit when you test and run your trading system.
There are a few psychologists I’ve bumped into over the years that seem to have enough
of a handle on what training is … so they may be qualified to help a trader.
But I prefer the process of literally programming the mind for discipline and focus, via
putting the mind in an alpha brainwave state and then submitting the right suggestions to
it.
If you were to learn the simple rudiments of self-hypnosis, that, in my opinion, would be
a great way to go.
This way you could tell yourself exactly what you wanted!
This is what Tiger Woods does for his golf game. Why not do something similar with
your trading?
THAT is a problem.
Maybe you’re a visual sort of person and you are drawn to Candlestick charting. Take the
time to understand why the patters mean “reversal” and not just accept the “picture”.
Go deep.
If you choose to take your trades from a guru, understand where his or her godliness is
coming from.
This can be a dangerous choice in that you are giving up control to another. Choose
wisely.
In today’s modern world of software, there’s no excuse not to run all the back data you
can through your system and see what the results would have been.
Although back-testing is no proof of future performance, at least you can see the logic of
your system at work.
This could be the most valuable phase. Although you won’t have “fully-invested”
emotions tugging at you, you will feel something, and you can learn to control your
emotions as you allow your system to do its’ work.
The bottom line to all of this is that if you don’t have TOTAL CONFIDENCE in your
system before you start trading it, you will doubt your system’s ability to perform with
every losing streak.
Thinking about your system and its’ validity while you are trading it will spell doom.
Now, when the trading day is over, you should be reviewing your trades… but not your
system.
Nobody is saying that you should be sticking to a system that is losing in real time.
What I’m saying is you should only judge your system over the long term…not on a daily
or even a weekly basis.
THINK long and hard about what stock or futures or forex speculation is and whether it
fits your investment objectives.
THINK about the system you are choosing and why it’s right for you.
THINK about the results you get from your back-testing and your real-time testing of
your system.
Unless you can control yourself, you can never control your system.
And in order to control yourself and your emotions, you have to believe totally in your
trading system.
Do the work.
Think.
I walked up to Steve Nison, the Japanese Candlestick guru and had a 15 minute
conversation with him about our mutual love for candlestick analysis… AND our
common appreciation for the mental and emotional part of successful trading.
The very personable Larry Williams walked up to the Traders World booth to say hello to
Larry Jacobs, but instead his eye caught my display about The Mental Side of Trading.
We spoke for about 10 minutes on a small range of subjects from the markets to internet
marketing to the importance of mental toughness for traders.
After wishing Larry well, it occurred to me that one thing all the gurus seem to have in
common was their appreciation for the mental part of trading.
Now, most traders in general will give lip service to the importance of the mental aspects,
but do absolutely nothing about it.
A few lines of “Today I’m not going to make the same mistakes as I made yesterday”
self-talk is about all the mental training they will muster.
They train.
They train their minds to do the right things during the trading day. What are the “right
things”?
To follow their tested and trusted trading system… without wavering…without flinching.
Of the 113 booths (that I counted) at the Traders Expo, 111 ½ had to do with trading
systems, trading information sources, data feeds, and the like, while 1 ½ booths dealt
with the mental part of trading.
Why is that?
Well, many traders(wrongly) feel that committing to training their minds means that
something must be wrong with them.
It’s an admission that one is out of control and that’s just not something that most want to
face.
They’d rather find a system that works more of the time… one that gives you better
signals that they can follow.
No admissions necessary.
The truth is that if you train yourself to be disciplined and focused in your trading, you
don’t even need last year’s best performing system to be successful in your trading.
I’ll likely be many other Trading Expos and my guess is that I’ll see a lot of the same
trading faces, zombie-ing down the isles, continuing their searches for the Holy Grail…