Should I quit?

Discussion in 'Professional Trading' started by shootingiron, Jul 21, 2008.

  1. ElCubano

    ElCubano

    nothing takes that feeling away quicker than a BIG WIN....pick a side and double down ...then if you made a nice chunk take it out and sim trade for 3 months....peace
     
    #31     Jul 23, 2008
  2. Mate, it's thinking like that that GOT me in this drawdown in the first place...thanks for the laugh though :cool:
     
    #32     Jul 23, 2008
  3. ElCubano

    ElCubano

    this is what got you into this....picking a side and letting it ride till it hits ur stop or your target has a better chance than the above...pick a side and leave the house...peace
     
    #33     Jul 23, 2008
  4. That may be the most profound piece of wisdom ever posted on these boards. Seriously. :D
     
    #34     Jul 23, 2008
  5. jonkry

    jonkry

    1. Do what you're doing: take a week off.
    2. Do something that absorbs all your attention during that week: fishing, hiking, blackjack, running, getting drunk, whatever, where you are not able to think of anything else. Thinking about trading will cause nervous/frustrated exhaustion. Thinking about something else will get you your energy back.
    3. When you get back next week, do one trade per day, with real money, and halve or quarter your normal position. Your brain will be working on what you can do different than before.
    4. Stick to ONE TRADE PER DAY. I mean it.
    5. Figure what your average stopout is. Double it, and make it your defined gain. You only need to be right 1/3 of the time to break even.
    6. Set a bracket order. You either get stopped out or make money.
    7. LEAVE! Shut the computer off, leave the room. Go outside, go for a walk, go for a drive, eat a sandwich, enjoy the day.
    8. Come back 10 minutes before the close and see what your trade did.
    9. Repeat for a week.
    10. Don't just log out of your trading account and surf the internet. Shut the computer off and leave. Git. Scram.
    11. Ease up on yourself in week 2.
    12. The reason for doing this is to break your train of behavior. You are currently forcing yourself to ride the tracks off a cliff. If you can derail that train, you can put it back on another track, one that will lead to a good destination.
     
    #35     Jul 23, 2008
  6. cjg199

    cjg199

    "Knowing your weakness is twice the battle"

    Sun Tzu, Art of War
     
    #36     Jul 23, 2008
  7. olias

    olias

    ...but it's not necessarily true.
     
    #37     Jul 23, 2008