Your edge means nothing if your mind is working against you. The most important work in trading isn’t on the chart — it’s inside your head.
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Here’s the idea that changes everything once it actually sinks in: a losing trade that hit your stop exactly as planned is a good trade.
Read that again. Because it runs completely against the way most people think about trading — and most people lose money.
The goal of trading is not to be right. The goal is to execute a process consistently, manage risk precisely, and let the probabilities play out over hundreds of trades. Winning and losing on any individual trade is largely irrelevant. What matters is whether you followed your plan.
That mindset shift — from outcome-focused to process-focused — is what separates traders who last years from those who blow up in months.
A good trade is not one that made money. A good trade is one where:
If you did all of that and the trade stopped out, you did everything right. The market simply didn’t move in your direction this time. That happens. It will always happen. No strategy wins 100% of trades — and any system that claims otherwise is lying to you.
This is harder to hear — but a trade that made money can still be a bad trade.
If you moved your stop because the trade went against you and you didn’t want to take the loss, then got bailed out by the market — that was a bad trade. You got lucky. Luck is not a strategy, and that habit will eventually wipe your account when the market doesn’t bail you out.
Notice that all of these are emotional decisions, not trading decisions. They feel logical in the moment. They’re not. They’re your brain trying to avoid the discomfort of being wrong — and that discomfort avoidance is more dangerous to your account than any market move.
Here’s the practical version of this philosophy: £50 a day, every day, is worth more than chasing £500 once a week and losing money the other four days.
It sounds obvious. But watch what traders actually do, and they do the opposite. They take small, careful trades — then give it all back on one big impulsive trade trying to make up for a bad week, or because they got impatient, or because they convinced themselves this one was different.
Consistent small gains compound. Run the numbers:
The traders who build real wealth from trading are almost never the ones hitting massive wins. They’re the ones who showed up every day, took their process-driven setups, respected their stops, hit their modest targets, and did it again tomorrow.
This isn’t something you read once and suddenly have. It’s built through deliberate habits:
Trading will test your patience, your confidence, your discipline, and your ego — often in the same session. The market doesn’t care about your feelings, your bills, or what you need to happen.
What you can control is your process. Your entries. Your stops. Your sizing. Your reaction when things don’t go to plan.
Be just as happy when your stop gets hit as when your target does. Both mean you traded correctly. That single mindset shift, consistently applied, is worth more than any indicator, any signal service, or any market edge you’ll ever find.
If there is one name every serious trader should know, it is Mark Douglas. His two books — The Disciplined Trader (1990) and Trading in the Zone (2000) — are widely considered the definitive works on trading psychology. Everything we have covered on this page is rooted in what Douglas spent his career teaching.
Douglas’s first book establishes the foundation: your trading results are a direct reflection of your beliefs and mental framework, not your strategy or market knowledge. Most traders already know what they should do — they just can’t make themselves do it consistently. That gap between knowing and doing is a psychological problem, not a technical one.
The central argument is that the market is a completely neutral environment. It has no opinion of you, no memory of your last trade, and no interest in whether you win or lose. Every outcome you experience is self-created — by your beliefs, your reactions, and your willingness to follow your own rules.
Trading in the Zone goes deeper, introducing the concept of the probabilistic mindset — arguably the most important idea in all of trading psychology. Douglas argues that the single biggest shift a trader can make is moving from thinking in certainties to thinking in probabilities.
Most traders approach each trade looking for reasons to be certain it will work. The professional thinks differently: “I have an edge that produces a positive result over 100 trades. I do not know which of those trades will win or lose. My only job is to execute flawlessly and let the probabilities play out.”
Douglas identified four specific fears that cause traders to act irrationally — recognising them in yourself is the first step to overcoming them.
Both books are available on Amazon and are worth reading more than once. Most serious traders revisit Trading in the Zone every year. It is not a technical book — there are no charts, no strategies, no indicators. It is entirely about the one thing that determines whether any strategy works: the mind executing it.
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Read article →This page is part of the Satdish Trading Psychology Series — 30 articles covering every aspect of trading psychology, built on the foundations of Mark Douglas.
View the Full Series →APEX is built around this exact philosophy — clear signals, defined stops, realistic targets. No chasing, no gambling.
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