In life, we run on routines. You wash your face when you wake up (at least I hope you do), eat around noon, wash your hands after, then crash at roughly the same time every night.
We build daily habits to survive the day.
As traders, we do the same thing in the markets.
Over time, we form a trading routine in the way we process and react to information thrown at us.
For example, some people lie to their partners on impulse, even if they did nothing wrong, just to avoid a lengthy conversation. Heck, even a kid would fib a little just to avoid a scolding!
They aren’t really liars by nature, but they have already conditioned themselves to respond a certain way given a specific situation.
How does this apply to trading?
Open your trading journal and look up your worst trade. Not just the biggest loss, but the one that still makes you wince. The missed home run. The early exit. The time you froze.
Your worst trade may not even be the one where you’ve incurred your largest loss.
It can be in the form of a missed opportunity, when you hesitated to take what could’ve been your trade of the year, or when you locked in profits too early instead of letting it ride.
You might’ve wimped out because of your fear of losing, even when the markets gave every indication that this next trade would be a winner.
Ask yourself, “Why did I even take this trade? What was I thinking?”
You might realize you were not thinking at all. You simply reacted to a familiar setup and ignored what the market was actually saying.
Another negative thought pattern is when you become absolutely indifferent to losing, and you end up blindly taking one trade after another just to make up for your losses.
On the flip side, numbness after a loss can push you into revenge mode, firing one trade after another until the drawdown gets ugly.
Most traders try to shrug this off. Like old high school rejections, they push bad trades to the back of their minds and promise to “do better next time.”That is not enough.
You need to dig into the details. Open your journal and ask:
“Why did I take this trade?”
“Did I follow my plan when I closed it?”
“What emotions were driving me at the time?”
When you force yourself to answer honestly, you start to see patterns in your thinking. That is where change begins.
Unlearning bad habits is not fun, but it is how you take back control of your emotions and grow into a better trader.