Do you know why ninety percent of people get out of the market after a year or two? It’s not because the market is too difficult, nor because their skills are poor; it’s because they don’t treat this as their life. How many people make a few trades and then think they understand the market, too lazy even to write a complete trading record? Listen carefully: no review, no record, no statistics—you’re not trading, you’re risking your life.



I’ve seen too many of these people: today they make a little profit and get cocky, tomorrow they lose two trades and blow up, shouting about logic but full of emotion. The biggest fear for professional traders isn’t losing money; it’s not knowing why they lost. True beginners don’t start with their first trade; they start honestly writing trading diaries, logic, emotions, and reasons. From that moment on, you’ve shifted from a gambler to a player.

• Step one, record. Don’t just write a laundry list or vague logic; clearly state the reasons for entry, time, position size, stop loss, risk-reward ratio, and emotional state. Don’t be afraid of the trouble—it’s just two minutes, but those two minutes can save you dozens of future mistakes. You think you remember the past, but you’re wrong—you’re remembering the future. Because trading isn’t prediction; it’s replication. Human nature never changes, and you are the biggest variable.

• Step two, review. Pick one evening each week, turn off your phone, and quietly ask yourself a few questions: Did I stick to discipline on this trade? Was I greedy again? Did I move early because I was afraid of missing out? Was I thinking about winning more when I was already winning? When you dare to look in the mirror and admit, “I was wrong,” that’s true growth.

Many spend years learning techniques but never learn to admit mistakes. I tell you, the biggest difference between professional traders and retail traders isn’t IQ; it’s the speed of admitting errors. We admit mistakes immediately and still fantasize about rebounds—that’s the watershed of execution.

• Step three, find patterns. You’ll discover you’re especially accurate at certain times, or especially stupid under certain emotions. Some lose every Friday, some click randomly when tired, some win three trades in a row and then become overconfident, going all-in and losing it all. You think you’re fighting the market, but actually, you’re controlled by your own patterns. Human nature has templates; your losses are pre-written. Review is about tearing down those templates.

And about position sizing—this is the real life-or-death line of trading. A $10,000 account can determine whether you’re out in three days or survive ten years. Most people go all-in right away, dreaming of doubling overnight, only to be wiped out in a single night. Professional traders only look at one metric: survival rate.

Let’s assume a stop loss of three points. That means I can make thirty-three trades, halving my position each time, leaving me sixty-seven chances to survive. If all sixty-seven are wrong, I should be going to get an award, not crying. What really causes traders to be eliminated isn’t the market; it’s luck. Those who claim to have patience are actually just insecure. People without confidence pretend to be calm; systematic traders are truly stable.

Professional traders rely not on luck but on calculations, position sizing, and rhythm. First, figure out where you might fail, then plan how to survive. Fixed position sizes, fixed risk, stable emotions, and unified rhythm—that’s a system. The purpose of a system is to help you follow rules even when you’re panicked.

Experts never focus solely on indicators; we study how not to panic during fear, and how to stop before greed takes over. All market crashes, liquidations, and emotional collapses stem from that tiny 0.3-second hesitation. Waiting longer might bring a rebound, but the market won’t turn back; it only teaches me.

Let me tell you the truth: ninety percent of people in the market aren’t eliminated by the market itself—they’re eliminated by themselves. They have opportunities but die in inertia, dying because they don’t write, don’t calculate, don’t watch, don’t change, and don’t improve. You ask me what trading depends on? It’s the system. And what does the system rely on? People’s character.

Being a professional trader isn’t about talent; it’s about the speed of self-renewal. Review isn’t about finding faults; it’s about evolving. Just like forging iron—you rust if you don’t hammer it. The market is the furnace; review is the hammer. You need to forge yourself into steel, not mud. Do you understand? The market isn’t about who makes money faster; it’s about who can survive longer. When others are exploding with emotion, chasing and selling, you stay calm and still. When the dust settles, and you’re still standing, that’s when you earn the title of professional trader.

So stop asking me how to make money. First, ask yourself: do you write records every day? Do you review once a week? Have you identified your stupidest moments? The market isn’t short of smart people; it’s short of self-awareness. If you’re still placing trades based on feelings, you haven’t truly started trading. When you write your first trading journal, that’s when you’ve just begun.
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LittleTwoLovesSeedlings
· 7m ago
So most people's ultimate outcome is losing money.
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LittleTwoLovesSeedlings
· 8m ago
Most people do this, placing orders based on intuition.
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RollerCoaster
· 40m ago
It sounds like I wrote it myself
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GateUser-a45dcadf
· 2h ago
That was written so well.
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TaskJelly
· 2h ago
Chong Chong GT 🚀
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TaskJelly
· 2h ago
Buy the dip and enter the market 😎
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TaskJelly
· 2h ago
Steadfast HODL💎
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Nice隔壁王叔
· 2h ago
Buy the dip and enter the market 😎
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Nice隔壁王叔
· 2h ago
Just charge it 👊
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Nice隔壁王叔
· 2h ago
Steadfast HODL💎
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