Hello traders,
Most traders don’t go broke from one catastrophic bet. They bleed slowly by trading in reverse.
They grab profits the moment they see green. They hold onto losers, hoping for a miracle.
They call it discipline. Patience.
But deep down, you and I both know what it really is.
It’s fear disguised as control. It’s ego dressed up as conviction. It’s the illusion of progress, while you’re quietly sabotaging your edge.
I’ve walked that path myself.
If you’re tired of forcing trades and ready to wait for the ones that call you in with real alignment, structure and intent, this is the perspective shift you need.
You see a trade start to work, and instead of letting it breathe, you slam the door shut.
Then a loser starts drifting, and you freeze. You wait. You hope.
You move the stop. Maybe remove it entirely.
And just like that, one stubborn red candle wipes out five clean wins.
That’s not bad luck.
That’s a rigged deck—stacked against you by your own psychology.
Here’s how you rig the deck in your favor…
Get Out of Your Own Way
Markets reward asymmetry. Let winners run. Cut losers fast. That’s the formula.
But most do the opposite.
Why?
Because small wins feel safe. And admitting you’re wrong feels like failure.
But here’s the truth:
If your system regularly locks in pennies and holds onto grenades, you don’t have an edge.
You have a leak.
And it’s not fixed with motivation or mindset hacks.
It’s fixed by structure.
Build your rules. Respect your size. Let the trade work without you hovering over it.
Protect your capital, not your ego.
If this market feels like it’s testing you, that’s because it is. It rewards the prepared ones, not the reckless. Learn how I manage size and stay sharp when things get wild.
This game is brutal to those who try to control the outcome.But it rewards those who manage risk and trust the process.
If you’re stuck in this loop, you’re not broken. You’re just human. But you have two options now: feed the cycle, or fix it.
One keeps you stuck in place. The other moves you forward, for good.
See you in the next one.
Imre Gams
Editor, The Trading Room