but what truly changes a person is often a period of stagnation.
When results start to repeatedly fail, you are forced to stop, not to study the market, but to examine yourself.
Previously, I understood progress as “doing more”: more analysis, more execution, more review. Until one day I realized, these actions are still correct, but no longer bring stability.
It was then I realized— the problem isn’t the method, but the person carrying the method.
⸻
After a loss, the most common reactions are only two: wanting to quickly regain everything, or simply stepping away from the place.
But what truly causes change, is often a third state: you are still present, but no longer eager to act.
In that low-speed zone, you begin to discern: which behaviors stem from judgment, which are just emotions with a different excuse; which fluctuations belong to the market, which are actually just pride rising and falling.
This isn’t enlightenment, just disassembly.
⸻
Later, I named that phase: Rebuilding Period.
It’s not dramatic, only some inconspicuous adjustments: removing “profit or loss” from the day’s emotional score; shifting attention from the screen back to sleep, physical condition, and rhythm; accepting a period of dullness, passivity, and lack of proof; when impulses arise, first record them, instead of acting on them.
These changes are slow, even tedious, but gradually restore stability.
⸻
Later, I understood: technique determines whether you can enter, boundaries determine whether you can stay.
And boundaries, are not given by the market, but are set by you, in moments of deceleration.
If you are in a tough cycle, feeling dull, doubtful, slowed down— there’s no need to rush for a breakthrough.
That period of “nothing happening” may very well be your system recalibrating.
⸻
The last question I leave to you: when results no longer align with you, are you pushing yourself, or re-setting the rhythm?
Some phases won’t bring explosive growth, but will permanently change your trading approach afterward.
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Many people think that growth comes from profit,
but what truly changes a person is often a period of stagnation.
When results start to repeatedly fail,
you are forced to stop,
not to study the market,
but to examine yourself.
Previously, I understood progress as “doing more”:
more analysis, more execution, more review.
Until one day I realized,
these actions are still correct,
but no longer bring stability.
It was then I realized—
the problem isn’t the method,
but the person carrying the method.
⸻
After a loss, the most common reactions are only two:
wanting to quickly regain everything,
or simply stepping away from the place.
But what truly causes change,
is often a third state:
you are still present, but no longer eager to act.
In that low-speed zone,
you begin to discern:
which behaviors stem from judgment,
which are just emotions with a different excuse;
which fluctuations belong to the market,
which are actually just pride rising and falling.
This isn’t enlightenment,
just disassembly.
⸻
Later, I named that phase: Rebuilding Period.
It’s not dramatic,
only some inconspicuous adjustments:
removing “profit or loss” from the day’s emotional score;
shifting attention from the screen back to sleep, physical condition, and rhythm;
accepting a period of dullness, passivity, and lack of proof;
when impulses arise, first record them, instead of acting on them.
These changes are slow, even tedious,
but gradually restore stability.
⸻
Later, I understood:
technique determines whether you can enter,
boundaries determine whether you can stay.
And boundaries,
are not given by the market,
but are set by you, in moments of deceleration.
If you are in a tough cycle,
feeling dull, doubtful, slowed down—
there’s no need to rush for a breakthrough.
That period of “nothing happening”
may very well be your system recalibrating.
⸻
The last question I leave to you:
when results no longer align with you,
are you pushing yourself,
or re-setting the rhythm?
Some phases won’t bring explosive growth,
but will permanently change your trading approach afterward.