1)Put away 3 - 5k and start aiming to only make a £100 a day.
2)Stop taking trades you don’t believe in / add a minimum requirement of confluences to your checklist before you enter a position.
It gets a little easier when you’ve got some capital under you, but you will still need steady cashflow to keep your mind at ease, when you’re taking losses.
Trading is ruthless because when you’re wrong or having a bad day, you literally lose money for it. Bad day at the 9-5? Possible bollocking from your boss, but he’s not taxing you. Forex? You gotta stomach that loss.
Becoming comfortable with that reality, takes some getting used to / developing a serious mental fortitude, and that the stats have already shown you that many people who enter the market, fail to conquer it. So guess who a few of the negative responses to your post are from ?
Don’t be disheartened by these folks telling you that you’re gambling. The real question is;
How frequently are you actually backtesting the market & studying the system that pays us - Japanese Candlesticks
Who are you learning from? Do you have a mentor?
How long you see yourself in this game.
If you know you’re not a quitter, save your money, keep back testing and I strongly believe it will come together eventually.
I haven’t quit my 9-5 yet, but the end is definitely in sight, and I won’t leave without at least year’s worth of rent & daily expenses, accumulated from the charts. I’m 4+ years in like you, but I went very hard in the first two and experienced similar heartbreak - lost thousands I didn’t have, couldn’t catch a run of clean form, turning down girls/fun to study, only to lose more money in the following weeks meanwhile your peers are moving to NYC\Dubai etc and enjoying the fruits of their steady income with cars/holidays. Something about seeing money move that fast, makes dummies of many when we first enter the market…
Look at the skillset you’re trying to master, and look at the world we live in. Something this lucrative definitely won’t be earned without some trials and tribulations.
Also surround yourself with successful traders. Stomaching a red day, is way easier when you see someone you want to be like, post their profits for the day, cause you can to study their results, see what they saw and then ask yourself “If he can, why can’t I?” “Eventually that’ll be me”, and believe it. I’m still not there, but I’m making withdrawals and losing nowhere near as much as the early days. I didn’t make a single withdrawal Year One or Two.
Lastly, you really don’t know hear of traders with 5/10 years experience, that have steadily grew their over time from their charts profits, who digress over time. Excluding the quitters, most of the traders I learnt from in 2019, have increased their lot sizes significantly since then, and they had years in the game then.
DM me for more info, but this is Forex you don’t really need to reach out lol, you need to keep backtesting, get a mentor who trades and is living the life you want, and start embracing the adversity that comes with the charts.
1)Put away 3 - 5k and start aiming to only make a £100 a day.
2)Stop taking trades you don’t believe in / add a minimum requirement of confluences to your checklist before you enter a position.
It gets a little easier when you’ve got some capital under you, but you will still need steady cashflow to keep your mind at ease, when you’re taking losses.
Trading is ruthless because when you’re wrong or having a bad day, you literally lose money for it. Bad day at the 9-5? Possible bollocking from your boss, but he’s not taxing you. Forex? You gotta stomach that loss.
Becoming comfortable with that reality, takes some getting used to / developing a serious mental fortitude, and that the stats have already shown you that many people who enter the market, fail to conquer it. So guess who a few of the negative responses to your post are from ?
Don’t be disheartened by these folks telling you that you’re gambling. The real question is;
How frequently are you actually backtesting the market & studying the system that pays us - Japanese Candlesticks
Who are you learning from? Do you have a mentor?
How long you see yourself in this game.
If you know you’re not a quitter, save your money, keep back testing and I strongly believe it will come together eventually.
I haven’t quit my 9-5 yet, but the end is definitely in sight, and I won’t leave without at least year’s worth of rent & daily expenses, accumulated from the charts. I’m 4+ years in like you, but I went very hard in the first two and experienced similar heartbreak - lost thousands I didn’t have, couldn’t catch a run of clean form, turning down girls/fun to study, only to lose more money in the following weeks meanwhile your peers are moving to NYC\Dubai etc and enjoying the fruits of their steady income with cars/holidays. Something about seeing money move that fast, makes dummies of many when we first enter the market…
Look at the skillset you’re trying to master, and look at the world we live in. Something this lucrative definitely won’t be earned without some trials and tribulations.
Also surround yourself with successful traders. Stomaching a red day, is way easier when you see someone you want to be like, post their profits for the day, cause you can to study their results, see what they saw and then ask yourself “If he can, why can’t I?” “Eventually that’ll be me”, and believe it. I’m still not there, but I’m making withdrawals and losing nowhere near as much as the early days. I didn’t make a single withdrawal Year One or Two.
Lastly, you really don’t know hear of traders with 5/10 years experience, that have steadily grew their over time from their charts profits, who digress over time. Excluding the quitters, most of the traders I learnt from in 2019, have increased their lot sizes significantly since then, and they had years in the game then.
DM me for more info, but this is Forex you don’t really need to reach out lol, you need to keep backtesting, get a mentor who trades and is living the life you want, and start embracing the adversity that comes with the charts.
You got this brother.