I read the article and it does not proof at all your point of view. I will copy here a few fragments of the article and give my opinion. If you are guilty of being a Good Starter, but a lousy finisher — at work or in your personal life — you have a very common problem. After all, David Allen’s Getting Things Done wouldn’t be a huge bestseller if people could easily figure out how to get things done on their own. More than anything else, becoming a Great Finisher is about staying motivated from a project’s beginning to its end. In their studies, University of Chicago psychologists Minjung Koo and Ayelet Fishbach examined how people pursuing goals were affected by focusing on either how far they had already come (to-date thinking) or what was left to be accomplished (to-go thinking). People routinely use both kinds of thinking to motivate themselves. But too much to-date thinking, focusing on what you’ve accomplished so far, will actually undermine your motivation to finish rather than sustain it. If, instead, we focus on how far we have left to go (to-go thinking), motivation is not only sustained, it’s heightened. Fundamentally, this has to do with the way our brains are wired. To-go thinking helps us tune in to the presence of a discrepancy between where we are now and where we want to be. When the human brain detects a discrepancy, it reacts by throwing resources at it: attention, effort, deeper processing of information, and willpower. Great Finishers force themselves to stay focused on the goal, and never congratulate themselves on a job half-done. The article describes how the brain reacts. So the point is to reprogram your brain and avoid the described behavior. First of all I trade based on mathematical models. These models are never influenced or manipulated by a human brain. The models calculate and work fully independently from any human intervention. So what the article describes is non existing in the generated entries and exits. I trained fulltime for many months day in day out to learn to enter and exit ONLY WHEN THE SYSTEM TELLS ME TO DO SO. So the problems with my brain are non existing anymore. I know by experience that every manual intervention in my systems will in long term cost me money. Even if I by accident might improve a trade. In the long run I can never beat the performance of the mathematical models. The fact that I have in general very good entries and never have a lasting open loss makes it easier to follow the rules and not intervene. On top of that the article does not specify who is a great finisher. Everybody who enters a trade is convinced that he took a good entry, if not he would not enter. I am convinced by my models and you are convinced because of the break of a support or resistance. Being a good finisher is not linked with where you enter the trade. Or do you think that only people who enter on breaks of support or resistance can be good finishers? I don't see the link of what you suggest. A good finisher is someone who finishes good, no matter where he entered.
No problem, you can have your own opinion, and I can have mine. Discussion can lead to new knowledge for one or even for both parties.
Trend going on for days. Everybody else is already aboard from min. 1- 60. All terrific entries. Me? I get in on day 2 after massive breakout according to MY criteria. Then I notice over the days that THEY with the excellent entries have been in and out 100+ times. I stay in until breakdown according to MY criteria. Thread is about stress. In hindsight it didn’t matter much whether I got in on day 2 or 3 or 8. By staying in with eye on prize aka trend death I got. a great return for LOW STRESS like so, inconsequential midfield play (entrues galore), few more passes here and there no matter but when the breakout gets underway there were 6 opps to TP, but his eye was on the prize. Strong exit. Stress? Only the opposition
Stress is poison. Its f'n toxic.... and I mean that literally. There's enough stress in everyday life for god's sake. If you can't trade without stress... then you need to lower your position size considerably, because you will fail. Confidence and conviction is where its at. You will have many losing trades. You need to laugh at them and see where you went wrong. I'll say it again.... stress is poison. And make no doubt about it.... it will manifest itself in so many other aspects of one's life. All of them bad. Trading needs to be the least of your worries. jmho fwiw
non sequitur for most but not to me. Sorry! Exit? what multiple can I sell this business (this trade) for = major part of my exit strategy ...... thought out well in advance WAY before the breakout Entry. The thinking actually begins when there are signs of possible breakout, the idea of a business venture https://www.tonyrobbins.com/business/whats-exit-strategy/
Trading should be stress-free. With no emotion. If you're feeling stressed, Vanzandt's advice above is spot on: reduce your position size.
Indeed! But reduce stress even further south to Argentina .... by not playing with such a losing mentality for peanuts. The winner will take only 80/20 trades (odds overwhelmingly in favor) - this way RISK is controlled in the same manner as the Loser controls overhead ONLY but not blowing the doors off Income Winner takes a juicy position size swing.
Stress, stress reliever #1 ... big profit, minimal # losing trades. Opposite is Stress factory entry signal is LEAST important http://www.newtraderu.com/2014/03/20/ten-things-more-important-than-a-trade-entry/