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After noticing Trader Mike's update regarding a doctored interview with Dave Mabe of StockTickr,
I decided to leave a comment on Dave's site. Here I'd like to amplify
that comment, because it gets at the heart of trading success and
failure.
We talk about losing discipline in trading as we might
talk about losing our car keys or our way out of a forest. But losing
discipline is not about a simple act of forgetting. It is an active
process of refusing to act upon one's knowledge, of blotting out
uncomfortable realities. It begins in small ways: talking about our
winning days, but remaining mum about losers; convincing ourselves (and
others) that we're "doing okay" and "breaking even", when in fact we've
stopped looking at the red P/L; ignoring a profit target and taking
small gains; violating a stop-loss level and substituting hope for
planning on a losing trade.
Out of such small fakes of reality
come the larger ones that lead to blow ups: the breaking of risk
management rules, the rogue trader's futile attempts to cover up losses.
The
really good traders? They don't present themselves as gurus. They're
all too keenly aware of the market's way of humbling such pride, and
they keep their hard-won lessons firmly in mind. Reality is their best
grounding. It's the boasters and self-promoters who have to fake
reality to sustain their images in the public mind. But if would-be
gurus can't be faithful to reality, how can they remain true to you?
Years
ago, when I was in Syracuse, I met with a trader who wanted coaching
and counseling. He had sustained major losses in the markets. During
his description of his trading woes--and his grandiose plans for making
the money back--he casually noted that his home life was tense because
he had hidden the losses from his spouse. I declined further meetings
with the gentleman. His problem was not trading and, strictly speaking,
it wasn't psychological. It was his lack of integrity: his
unwillingness to be true to his wife, his plans, and his perceptual
process. I had no doubt that his marriage would blow up the way his
trading had blown up--and for precisely the same reasons.
As
part of writing my new book, I asked over a dozen bloggers and traders
to share their ideas about self-coaching and what has worked for them.
A dominant theme in the responses has been a relentless drive to keep
score: to learn from losing trades and winning ones; to assess
performance and guide risk taking accordingly; to clearly identify
strengths and weaknesses and adjust trading styles for those. These are
experienced and successful traders who have met with success largely
because they've been unafraid to sustain the look in the mirror.
Now
when I first start working with a trader or a firm, I will toss out a
simple homework exercise, such as keeping regular journal entries. Some
traders go out of their way to make the most of the assignment; others
fulfill it with minimal effort; still others fail to follow through at
all. It's the difference between those who work hard at trading and
those who hardly work: one seeks earned achievement; the other seeks
the unearned. One is grounded in plans, the other in fantasies.
Show
me a person's relationship to reality and I'll show you their
character--and their success. Contrary to the popular saying, those who
fake it never make it. Originally posted at: http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/
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