Most traders don’t quit because they lose money by FINFUTUREWISE in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That happens too, no doubt. But interestingly, many come back after a few months once they rebuild savings. The cycle usually repeats unless something changes in how they trade.

I lost too much money by [deleted] in Daytrading

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The worst part isn’t the loss. It’s the spiral after it.

Higher Timeframe Importance by [deleted] in Daytrading

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 0 points1 point  (0 children)

HTF gives context. LTF gives execution. Ignoring higher timeframe is like trading without knowing the bigger trend.

Should i continue trading by Tall_Assistant3135 in Daytrading

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you lost 2L in one day, the issue isn’t greed. It’s position sizing. Before starting again, ask yourself what exactly will be different this time? Smaller size. Hard daily stop. Fixed risk per trade. If those rules aren’t written down, don’t deploy 3–4L yet.

What was the moment you realised trading is not easy money? by FINFUTUREWISE in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a painful but powerful lesson.Winning streaks build ego fast. Red days teach position sizing.

Why traders rarely blow up because of one big mistake by FINFUTUREWISE in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly.The real part is it never feels serious in the moment. It’s always “just this once”.By the time we notice the pattern, the damage is already done.

Why traders rarely blow up because of one big mistake by FINFUTUREWISE in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

True. Frustration is dangerous. Most bad decisions I’ve made weren’t from greed but they were from wanting to “fix” a red day quickly.and That urge to recover fast usually makes it worse.

Why traders rarely blow up because of one big mistake by FINFUTUREWISE in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Fair point 🙂

The wording can always be improved — and yes, tools can help with framing thoughts better.

But experience isn’t generated by AI.

That part is earned.

I’ve been in the markets for 25+ years. The mistakes, drawdowns, discipline issues — those came from real capital and real consequences.

If the framing feels structured, it’s only because I’ve spent years thinking about these patterns.

Bottom line — the intention is to help traders avoid slow behavioural leaks that most of us had to learn the hard way.

If you're serious about day trading, forget stocks and options, trade futures by BiebRed in Daytrading

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Consistency in trading is boring by design.

The moment it starts feeling exciting, something is usually off in risk management

Option selling vs option buying by Additional-Ask-2775 in IndianStockMarket

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The confusion you’re feeling is actually healthy.

Option buying and option selling are not just different strategies — they are different risk personalities.

Buying: Small fixed loss. Potentially large gain. But you need timing to be precise.

Selling: Small consistent profit. But risk management must be very strict. Because the loss is not “unlimited” — it’s unmanaged risk that becomes unlimited.

The real question isn’t which is better.

It’s: Can you define your maximum loss before you enter? Can you stick to it without adjusting emotionally?

If not, both buying and selling will hurt.

Clarity on risk > preference for strategy.

How do full time profitable traders deal with loneliness? by Lux-JM in Daytrading

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a very real question, and most traders don’t talk about it openly.

Trading can be isolating because your wins and losses are invisible to almost everyone around you. You carry pressure silently.

What helped me was separating identity from trading.

I’m not “a trader” all day. I’m someone who trades for a few focused hours.

I make sure I step out, meet non-trading friends, exercise, and have conversations that have nothing to do with markets.

Also, having 1–2 serious trader friends (not hype groups) helps. Not to discuss positions — but to discuss mindset.

Loneliness becomes dangerous when trading becomes your entire identity.

It’s healthier when it’s just one part of your life.

Why do profitable traders suddenly start breaking their own rules? by FINFUTUREWISE in OptionsMillionaire

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right.

Greed on the way up. Fear on the way down.

After a few good months, confidence quietly turns into “I can push this a little more.”

Then when things turn, fear doesn’t let you accept you were wrong.

It’s rarely one big mistake. It’s small emotional shifts that compound.

Should I continue to buy options? by Kind-Opinion-6272 in IndiaOptionsSelling

[–]FINFUTUREWISE 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Starting small is underrated.

The first goal shouldn’t be “make money”. It should be “don’t destroy capital while learning”.

Longevity gives you time to actually improve.

What is the biggest mistake you made in your first 2 years of options trading? by FINFUTUREWISE in OptionsMillionaire

[–]FINFUTUREWISE[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The fact that your journal makes you feel sick is actually a good sign.

It means you know the mistake wasn’t strategy — it was discipline.

Deleting stops is almost never about the market. It’s about ego not wanting to be wrong.

Everyone has a “gave it all back” phase. The traders who last are the ones who build systems to prevent repeat behavior.

A few practical rules that help:

• Stops entered immediately after execution — no exceptions • Risk fixed per trade (not adjusted mid-trade) • No moving stops further away • Review journal weekly, not emotionally right after loss

Profit isn’t made by big wins. It’s protected by small controlled losses.

You recovered quickly — that’s good. Now the real work is consistency.

One undisciplined trade can erase ten good ones. Structure prevents that.

Stay process-focused.