Thank you for the clarity. You helped me see that my problem is not the system, but how I deal with it emotionally.
Printable View
Thank you for the clarity. You helped me see that my problem is not the system, but how I deal with it emotionally.
Thank you. This part marked me: "the market is a brutal mirror." What a crude truth.
Thank you for giving you the time to write something so deep. It provides more than many paid courses.
Thank you. Your words made me slow down and think. I am very grateful.
Thank you, I needed to read something like that after a disastrous week.
Interesting reflection, but I ask you: don't you think fear is also a sign that the system is too aggressive?
And how do you integrate fear with statistics? Because one thing is to feel it, and another to trust in mathematical expectation...
What do you think of fear when it comes right after a winning streak?
Good point, but it seems to me that part is missing: fear is also trained. It is not only observed.
Isn't it that you're too rationalizing fear, and in the end you disguise it as analysis?
Thank you, this post made me understand that I was operating from the ego rather than from logic.
Thank you, you helped me change the way I face the market every morning.
Thank you for helping me see that I'm not alone. I thought I was the only one who felt afraid operating.
Thank you, I'll reread it several times.
You opened my eyes to how fear leaks without one noticing it.
Thank you. Yours was more useful than many �gurus� videos that only show profits.
But one thing is to be afraid, another is to stop operating. Is it not contradictory to say that fear guides you but also slows you down?
What if fear disappears over time or becomes overconfident? Isn�t that worse?
Wouldn't it be better to ignore fear and operate like a machine? Emotions just interfere, they don't help.
Is fear not simply lack of preparation? Perhaps what is missing is more backtesting, no more introspection.
Fear is a natural part of trading, especially after losses or personal stress. It’s about acknowledging it, not ignoring it. Facing it involves accepting it, taking a break when needed, and gradually building confidence through consistent practice and emotional control.