Jump to content

Welcome to the new Traders Laboratory! Please bear with us as we finish the migration over the next few days. If you find any issues, want to leave feedback, get in touch with us, or offer suggestions please post to the Support forum here.

  • Welcome Guests

    Welcome. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest which does not give you access to all the great features at Traders Laboratory such as interacting with members, access to all forums, downloading attachments, and eligibility to win free giveaways. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free. Create a FREE Traders Laboratory account here.

Rande Howell

Beyond Fear: Developing Your Inner Trader

Recommended Posts

by J. Rande Howell

 

Despite their knowledge of trading, the vast majority of traders experience fear on a level that compromises their capacity to trade effectively. This problem eventually comes to a boiling point somewhere in the evolution of a trader. At this turning point they either leave trading, continue to suffer losses, or begin to take a closer look at themselves. They recognize that the Holy Grail is not “out there” in their system or methodology. The trouble lies within them. And the culprit is fear. The solution also lies within them.

 

So much energy is then focused on mastering fear in trading (rightfully so) that another question is never raised. What then? The battle has never “been out there” in the markets. When you learn how to manage fear, do you suddenly become a consistently winning trader? The answer is rarely. Mastering fear is the start of a journey. As jarring as this realization may be to a trader battling his fears, this is only the first, and foundational, step into the transformation of the self required to become a successful trader.

 

Learning to deal effectively with fear opens the door to re-training the mind for peak performance trading. Ultimately, a trader perceives and acts based on his deepest beliefs about the self. This is where potential lies. Fear blocks development of potential beyond the trader’s self limiting beliefs about self. But what are the tools and skills a trader needs to harness to develop his potential as a trader?

 

Mindfulness: Developing Awareness of Your Potential

Until the spell of fear is broken, getting to the potential that lives within remains closed to you. Even when the trader learns to regulate fear so that it does not sweep him away and he can establish a calm mind, how does he locate the discipline, patience, courage, and impartiality to which he is blind? The answer to this question is crucial in order to move from mediocrity to successful trading - the answer is that he develops awareness through the skill of mindfulness.

 

For all the talk about mindfulness, people remain vague about what qualities constitute mindfulness. Simply put, mindfulness is the capacity to be aware of (observe) your thoughts, your biases, and your beliefs – not as who you are, but as what your sense of identity has become fused to. Further, in mindfulness you become witness to your thoughts, beliefs, and biases. And a startling discovery is made: you and your thoughts, biases, and beliefs are not the same. They are simply one possible organization of the self.

 

You were born into a history of thoughts, biases, and beliefs that your brain, through adaptation, embedded into neural circuits that became your beliefs. You do not have beliefs – they have you. Your beliefs are firmly rooted into the assessment and pattern-making machine called your brain long before you can think or reflect back on what you believe. This is called your historical internal dialog. When you experience fear or impulse in trading, it is this self limiting internal dialog that has trapped you.

 

You can easily recognize its presence and the resulting unfiltered opinions and judgments by walking down a crowded street and “people watching”. Notice that automatic assessments fly into your perception as you watch people. Before you know it, entire stories are made up that “explain” circumstances as you simply watch people passing by. There is no proof for your automatic assessments – they simply show up as your thoughts. And, even if there is no proof to support your thoughts, biases, and beliefs, you (without thinking) are still influenced to believe these seemingly random thoughts. In trading, traders actually act on their ungrounded assessments all the time. This form of mindlessness is dangerous.

 

Think about the last time you experienced worry as you were trading (say, pulling the trigger after a string of losses). In the emotional state of worry the trader fixates his mind on perceived negative potentialities. The potentialities to which he becomes fused are no more true than any other thought running through his mind – but they are not questioned because they are not observed. When in mindlessness, the trader does not know to question the automatic negative assessments that rise from the emotional state of worry. Your thoughts represent core beliefs about the self that exist in the background of your trader’s awareness. Until the trader (you) learns to bring his thought life into awareness, he remains a victim to historical and automatic ways of perceiving the world – whether they are effective or not.

 

In developing mindfulness as a psychological skill specifically for trading, you begin to examine your thoughts in the midst of trading, looking for the underlying biases and self limiting beliefs (beyond what the emotional state of fear feels like) that drive your trading and that blind you to other possibilities. Mindfulness has to be developed as a practice because your brain, once the thoughts become familiar, pushes them to the background of your awareness where they are out of sight. And what you are blind to about yourself in trading will come back and bite you.

 

A Trader Comes Face to Face With His Self Limiting Beliefs

What does this look like in real life? A trader comes to me with a problem. He has been trading for ten years and is only marginally profitable, even though he knows his methodology backwards and forwards. And after ten years, he is considering giving up trading, despite his passion for it, because he cannot ask his wife and family to support his folly anymore. He actually feels shame.

 

He discovers (no surprise here) that he has a fear of losing that compromises his trading. After he is able to regulate his fear, he is then able to discover the self-limiting beliefs which imprison him. And these self-limiting beliefs show up in his thinking as a motivation “not to lose” rather than a motivation to win. And to insure his set ups are geared “not to lose”, he only puts in orders at a price at which they are frequently not filled. He ends up with small losses, but few wins. He also sees that many of his trades would have been winners if only he had not asked for the rock bottom price.

 

He knows this, but he keeps getting swept away by this historical conversation in his mind about “not losing”. Then, in the process of developing mindfulness, he makes a startling discovery – he feels responsible (compelled actually) to take care of his parents and his wife financially as a way to feel worthy. He has tied his sense of worthiness to his performance as a trader.

 

His trading performance has become a measure of his personal sense of worth. This is a set up for disaster. And here is the recipe:

 

As he watches and evaluates set ups, the trader suddenly experiences a flashing image of a trade going bad on him. Simultaneously, he feels this as a shrinking in his gut. Then he becomes aware that his thoughts have turned to self doubt – “are you sure?”. The internal conversation of hesitation takes over his trading performance. Out of this, he seeks a rock bottom price or more confirmation before he will enter the trade. He is now trading “not to lose”, which insures he will lose. In this trader’s case, it means that his loss will be small if he gets into the trade at all.

 

This is the anatomy of an emotional hijacking. Most traders have these trains of thoughts streak past them as a blur. They are never examined, nor confronted. In mindfulness training, the trader learns how to slow his thinking down so that he becomes aware of what thoughts are actually coursing through his mind as he trades.

 

This is important. If these thoughts are fear based, they will produce a self fulfilling prophesy that dooms the trader’s state of mind into victimhood – a bad choice for trading. Once you can emotionally regulate yourself, mindfulness becomes open to you as an evolving trader. In the case of the trader in the vignette above, he realized he had been gripped by an internal belief that swayed him to trade NOT TO LOSE, rather than trading to win.

 

The self limiting belief, “you’ll lose if you risk”, was unmasked and he could challenge the fear behind it. In confronting this embarrassing self limiting belief about himself, the trader developed a new, empowering belief about his trading –“I am a manager of risk. It is probable that I will win.” This belief, once it was firmly rooted into his core beliefs, led to much more productive trading.

 

With Mindfulness, Beliefs become More Fluid

As a trader develops his capacity to be mindful, he begins to understand that most of our assumptions are really just automatic assessments that have taken on the power of belief over time. As we free ourselves from our self limiting beliefs, we open ourselves to re-organizing our beliefs so that we become far more powerful users of our platform and methodology.

 

Trading takes on new meaning for our lives. It too, becomes a tool for the creation of an evolving life.

This process begins with a trader developing the skills of emotional regulation. No change in self limiting beliefs is possible until then. Next, mindfulness is developed as a skill so that the trader becomes an observer of his internal struggles rather than its victim. Later, the trader learns how to move beyond the prison of his self limiting beliefs and find powerful parts of himself that he uses to rebuild the "committee of the mind".

 

Instead of the trader’s mind being controlled by fear and self doubt as he trades, he is able to bring to his trading the elements of himself that give rise to disciplined, impartial, and courageous thought. Trading becomes a very different experience. The mindful trader is able to embrace uncertainty from a very different, and effective, state of mind.

 

If you would like to learn more, come to a free webinar that can be found on http://www.traderstateofmind.com. There is much to explore on this website.

 

J. Rande Howell

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Rande,

 

I completely expect the your next post to explain how fears were injected into the earth's soil as a means of retaliating against the slaughter of alien forms who visited the earth millions of years ago, peacefully seeking refuge. So, fear is part of every carbon molecule that forms our being,

 

 

MM

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • How's about other crypto exchanges? Are all they banned in your country or only Binance?
    • Be careful who you blame.   I can tell you one thing for sure.   Effective traders don’t blame others when things start to go wrong.   You can hang onto your tendency to play the victim, or the martyr… but if you want to achieve in trading, you have to be prepared to take responsibility.   People assign reasons to outcomes, whether based on internal or external factors.   When traders face losses, it's common for them to blame bad luck, poor advice, or other external factors, rather than reflecting on their own personal attributes like arrogance, fear, or greed.   This is a challenging lesson to grasp in your trading journey, but one that holds immense value.   This is called attribution theory. Taking responsibility for your actions is the key to improving your trading skills. Pause and ask yourself - What role did I play in my financial decisions?   After all, you were the one who listened to that source, and decided to act on that trade based on the rumour. Attributing results solely to external circumstances is what is known as having an ‘external locus of control’.   It's a concept coined by psychologist Julian Rotter in 1954. A trader with an external locus of control might say, "I made a profit because the markets are currently favourable."   Instead, strive to develop an "internal locus of control" and take ownership of your actions.   Assume that all trading results are within your realm of responsibility and actively seek ways to improve your own behaviour.   This is the fastest route to enhancing your trading abilities. A trader with an internal locus of control might proudly state, "My equity curve is rising because I am a disciplined trader who faithfully follows my trading plan." Author: Louise Bedford Source: https://www.tradinggame.com.au/
    • SELF IMPROVEMENT.   The whole self-help industry began when Dale Carnegie published How to Win Friends and Influence People in 1936. Then came other classics like Think And Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill, Awaken the Giant Within by Tony Robbins toward the end of the century.   Today, teaching people how to improve themselves is a business. A pure ruthless business where some people sell utter bullshit.   There are broke Instagrammers and YouTubers with literally no solid background teaching men how to be attractive to women, how to begin a start-up, how to become successful — most of these guys speaking nothing more than hollow motivational words and cliche stuff. They waste your time. Some of these people who present themselves as hugely successful also give talks and write books.   There are so many books on financial advice, self-improvement, love, etc and some people actually try to read them. They are a waste of time, mostly.   When you start reading a dozen books on finance you realize that they all say the same stuff.   You are not going to live forever in the learning phase. Don't procrastinate by reading bull-shit or the same good knowledge in 10 books. What we ought to do is choose wisely.   Yes. A good book can change your life, given you do what it asks you to do.   All the books I have named up to now are worthy of reading. Tim Ferriss, Simon Sinek, Robert Greene — these guys are worthy of reading. These guys teach what others don't. Their books are unique and actually, come from relevant and successful people.   When Richard Branson writes a book about entrepreneurship, go read it. Every line in that book is said by one of the greatest entrepreneurs of our time.   When a Chinese millionaire( he claims to be) Youtuber who releases a video titled “Why reading books keeps you broke” and a year later another one “My recommendation of books for grand success” you should be wise to tell him to jump from Victoria Falls.   These self-improvement gurus sell you delusions.   They say they have those little tricks that only they know that if you use, everything in your life will be perfect. Those little tricks. We are just “making of a to-do-list before sleeping” away from becoming the next Bill Gates.   There are no little tricks.   There is no success-mantra.   Self-improvement is a trap for 99% of the people. You can't do that unless you are very, very strong.   If you are looking for easy ways, you will only keep wasting your time forgetting that your time on this planet is limited, as alive humans that is.   Also, I feel that people who claim to read like a book a day or promote it are idiots. You retain nothing. When you do read a good book, you read slow, sometimes a whole paragraph, again and again, dwelling on it, trying to internalize its knowledge. You try to understand. You think. It takes time.   It's better to read a good book 10 times than 1000 stupid ones.   So be choosy. Read from the guys who actually know something, not some wannabe ‘influencers’.   Edit: Think And Grow Rich was written as a result of a project assigned to Napoleon Hill by Andrew Carnegie(the 2nd richest man in recent history). He was asked to study the most successful people on the planet and document which characteristics made them great. He did extensive work in studying hundreds of the most successful people of that time. The result was that little book.   Nowadays some people just study Instagram algorithms and think of themselves as a Dale Carnegie or Anthony Robbins. By Nupur Nishant, Quora Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/    
    • there is no avoiding loses to be honest, its just how the market is. you win some and hopefully more, but u do lose some. 
    • $CSCO Cisco Systems stock, nice top of range breakout, from Stocks to Watch at https://stockconsultant.com/?CSCOSEPN Septerna stock watch for a bottom breakout, good upside price gap
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.