Meme illustration of a smug trader reaching to turn off their monitor after hitting a fixed daily profit target, while a massive green candle continues running off the top of the screen labeled "The Market," representing how rigid daily dollar goals can cap participation when the market is offering more.

Why Setting a Daily Dollar Goal Can Work Against You in Live Trading

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Not every productive session produces a trade. This one is a good example of that.

The morning started later than usual. Time went into setting up and evaluating a new trading journal tool before the session window opened, which pushed the start back and left less time on the clock than a typical morning. The market was in a bearish posture overnight, high volume selling had created a gap down in correlated instruments, and the physical energy going into the session was not at its best after a low-rest night.

One trigger appeared late in the window. It got skipped. The session closed without a position.

And two of the more useful conversations of the week came out of it anyway.

Why Setting a Daily Dollar Goal Can Work Against You in Live Trading

The idea of a fixed daily profit target is appealing on the surface. It sounds like structure. It sounds like discipline. Hit the number, stop trading, protect the gain. Clean and simple.

The problem shows up in two directions.

The first is the upside cap. When the market is genuinely offering more than the daily target accounts for, a rigid number creates a ceiling on participation that has nothing to do with what the market is actually doing. The plan gets cut short not because the setup ran out, but because a predetermined number was reached. Over time, that habit quietly leaves real opportunity on the table on the days when the market widens its range of possibility.

The second is the pressure it creates on the downside. When the market is not giving much and the daily target has not been reached, the gap between where the account sits and where the goal lives becomes a source of psychological pressure. That pressure pushes toward forcing trades on marginal setups, staying in positions longer than the plan calls for, or taking extra entries just to close the distance. None of those decisions come from the market. They come from the number.

Some people operate just fine with these static goals, but the alternative that has held up better for me is variable targets based on what the market is actually offering on any given day. Some sessions have more range, more follow-through, more opportunity than others. Some sessions are quiet and tight with limited setups. Letting the target flex to match conditions rather than forcing conditions to match the target is a more honest relationship with how markets actually move.

Being like water applies here. Not rigid, not forcing a shape the container does not support. Moving into the space that is available rather than demanding the space conform to expectations.

Is "Bad Fridays" a Real Pattern or a Story Being Told?

This came up directly in the session and it is worth unpacking because the mechanics behind it are more interesting than the surface-level observation.

There is a common belief in trading communities that Fridays are bad trading days. Lower volume, choppier price action, and less follow-through. There is some statistical basis for that characterization across certain market environments but here is where the belief becomes the problem: when a trader expects Friday to be bad, the behavior that follows from that expectation tends to actually create the undesired outcome.

The sequence looks something like this. The expectation of a rough day leads to passive behavior at the open. Valid triggers get skipped because it does not feel like the right day to be aggressive. The market moves anyway. FOMO creeps in. A trade gets taken, but now it is not a plan-based entry. It is a reactive chase. That trade loses. The expectation is confirmed.

The day was not bad because Fridays are bad. The day was bad because the expectation changed the behavior, and the behavior produced the result.

Statistical tools that only look at the numbers, without accounting for the psychology behind them, the mistakes, the skipped valid setups, and chased entries, will see a pattern and validate it without capturing what actually caused it. That kind of confirmation is more dangerous than useful because it gives a cognitive bias the appearance of useful data.

The antidote is straightforward: treat Friday like any other session. The plan does not know what day it is. The triggers do not care. Show up with the same pre-session routine, the same criteria, the same execution standard. Let the market determine what kind of day it is rather than deciding in advance.

What Does It Mean to Set Limits on What Can Actually Be Controlled?

This is the reframe that simplifies almost everything in trading once it actually lands.

The monetary outcome of a trade is not fully within control. The market will do what the participants with the most influence cause it to do, and no individual retail position changes that. Chasing a specific dollar outcome is chasing something that sits outside the boundary of what is controllable.

What is within control:

  • Whether the trigger criteria are fully met before entering
  • Whether the position size matches the defined risk parameters
  • Whether the exit rules get followed without finessing
  • Whether the plan is treated as the standard for every decision made during the session

When those are the limits being set, the daily focus shifts entirely. The question is no longer “did I hit my number?” It is “did I follow my plan?” Those are very different standards, and only one of them is actually achievable with consistency regardless of what the market does.

The system already accounts for risk parameters during the development phase. That work has been done. The daily job is execution accuracy. When the attention stays there, the noise around monetary outcomes quiets down considerably and the decision-making gets cleaner.

A session measured by execution accuracy can be a success with zero trades. That is not a rationalization. That is what the standard actually produces when it is applied honestly.

How Should a New Trading Tool Be Evaluated Without Disrupting the Session?

Aurafy came up several times this week as a tool worth testing. This session was the first real evaluation window, which is part of why the start was delayed.

The initial impression was positive enough to keep exploring. The interface is clean, the concept of an AI-powered trading journal is genuinely useful in theory, although the community around it gives the vibes of an early startup. A few friction points surfaced quickly though. The CSV import functionality for loading historical trade data did not work with Sierra Chart’s trade activity output, which is an important piece since a journal without historical data to work from leaves out key information. Data privacy and security questions also came up, specifically around what gets displayed on the front end and how it data is stored, which are reasonable questions for any tool that touches trade data.

The Aurafy Discord community raised a flag during the evaluation. The member list was thin and the visible activity was almost entirely from the person running the server, with little to no engagement from actual users. That kind of signal matters when evaluating whether a tool has real adoption behind it or whether it is still in early stages without a proven user base. It does not disqualify the tool, but it does mean the support layer has yet to be thoroughly tested, which factors into how much trust to extend to it during a live workflow integration.

The criteria for any tool earning a permanent place in the workflow is the same every time: does it reduce friction in the documentation and review process without introducing new friction somewhere else? That question does not get answered in one session. It gets answered over a few weeks of actual trial-and-error use under real conditions.

The plan is to have it fully set up and running by Monday. A full review video is also on the list once there is enough real usage data to to give a detailed take.

When Does Skipping a Late-Window Trigger Make Sense?

One trigger appeared near the end of the trading window this morning. It got skipped.

Two things drove that decision. The first was the honest self-assessment going into the session: the rest the night before was not adequate, which means the focus quality during the window was operating below the baseline. The second was the timing. A trigger that appears at the edge of the trading window, on a day when the physical and mental state is not at full capacity, carries a different risk profile than the same trigger earlier in the session under better conditions.

There is also the practical reality that the price action following that trigger moved quickly and directly toward the target without much of a tradable fill window. That observation came after the fact, but it aligned with the decision made in the moment.

Protecting the process on days when full readiness is not available is not passive or fearful. It is honest self-assessment applied to risk management. The market will be there Monday. The same setups will form again. Taking a low-quality shot at the end of a window on a low-energy Friday to say participation happened is not a win by any meaningful standard.

This is a theme that runs through Pull the Trigger: How to Stop Missing the Trades That Pay as well. The psychological pressure to participate, to have something to show for the session, is one of the more subtle forces that drives decisions outside the plan. Recognizing when that pressure is operating and not acting on it is its own form of execution discipline.

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Good Sessions Are Not Always Green Sessions

No positions. A delayed start. A late-window trigger skipped. A market that moved in the anticipated direction without participation.

And still: a meaningful conversation about why fixed daily targets create their own problems, a clearer framework for what the self-fulfilling prophecy of “bad Fridays” actually looks like mechanically, a first evaluation of a new journaling tool, and an honest decision to protect the process on a day when full readiness was not available.

That is a productive Friday.

The psychological work done on quiet sessions, such as reframes, honest self-assessments, and tool evaluations, shows up in the execution quality of active ones. It does not appear in the trade log. It appears in the decisions made when the market is moving and the plan is being tested in real time.

Releasing fixed outcome expectations is not lowering the standard. It is replacing the wrong standard with the right one. Execution accuracy over monetary outcome. Process over result. The long game is built exactly this way, one honest session at a time.

Trade it easy ✌🏾

Meme illustration of a calm trader holding a single USB cable next to a green chart, with a sticky note reading "Check the Basics First" and a pile of discarded overcomplicated troubleshooting equipment on the floor, representing the physical layer principle of always checking the simplest solution before assuming a complex problem.

What Should You Do When a Technical Issue Happens Right Before a Trade?

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The setup was there. The conditions lined up. And the rule said wait.

Not because the trade was not valid. Not because the market was unclear. But because there was an unresolved technical issue sitting between the current moment and any position being placed, and the rule on that is not ambiguous: fix the problem first, trade second.

So the setup was skipped to resolve the audio clipping issue. And of course the skipped setup turned out to be one of the cleanest I have seen in a while.

Welcome to HINDSIGHT CAPITAL, LLC (fictional entity)! 100% success. Zero percent real-time. 🤝

This session was a green day with one trade taken cleanly and one setup correctly skipped. By execution standards, 100% accuracy was achieved for this session. That is the result worth focusing on, not the setup that looked good after the rule was appropriately followed.

What Should You Do When a Technical Issue Happens Right Before a Trade?

The answer is built into the rule: resolve the issue before placing any trade. No exceptions, no “I’ll just take this one and fix it after.”

Here is why that rule exists.

A technical issue during a live session is a variable that sits outside the plan, taking up mental space. An open position with an unresolved technical issue introduces a split-focus problem at exactly the moment when full attention is required. If the issue affects the platform, the audio, the recording, or the ability to monitor the position clearly, the risk being taken on is no longer just the defined risk of the trade. It is the defined risk plus whatever the technical problem might create at the worst possible moment.

The rule removes that compounding risk, even if the current instance appears minor. Resolve the problem first. Trade after.

What the rule also produces, and this is the part that is harder to sit with, is the occasional missed setup. This session was a direct example. The audio troubleshooting was happening during the RTH open. Although a possible clean setup was in sight, the rule said the troubleshooting had to be completed first. By the time it was resolved, the moment had passed.

In hindsight, that was the perfect setup where momentum carried to a quick target hit. But hindsight is not a trading tool. Hindsight does not know what the audio issue would have done mid-position. Hindsight does not carry the weight of the decision. The rule was right at the time it was applied, regardless of what the chart looked like afterward.

Execution accuracy is not measured by what the market did after a rule was followed. It is measured by whether the rule was followed at all.

Why 100% Accuracy Does Not Always Mean Maximum Trades

This session produced one trade following the skipped trade for troubleshooting. Both of those outcomes were correct.

That framing matters because there is a version of trading that evaluates sessions purely by opportunity captured. How many setups were available, how many were taken, and what was left on the table. That framing quietly redefines success as maximizing trades rather than maximizing plan adherence, and those two things are not the same.

The long-term objective is plan adherence. Every session.

Accepting planned risk is the only way to win. That line from the session notes going into this morning is worth sitting with because it contains more than it appears to on the surface. Planned risk includes the risk of missing a setup when the rules say conditions are not right for a trade. That is a real cost. It shows up as a missed opportunity in the session log. And it is still the correct decision.

A trader who bends these seemingly minor rules to avoid missing a setup is not maximizing opportunity. They are accepting unplanned risk, which is a different category entirely. The plan accounts for missing setups. It does not account for what happens when a technical problem intersects with an open position and there is no bandwidth to manage both.

One rule-based skipped trade, followed by a perfectly executed trade per the predefined rules, makes for a good trading day with 100% accuracy.

There Is Nothing Genius About a Good Exit

The trade that was taken today exited at the point of rotation into the opposite direction. The decision to take profit at the peak of the move was fully guided by the plan. Nothing more.

There is nothing genius about that.

That is worth saying directly because trading has a subtle trap built into good outcomes: the tendency to attribute smart results to instinct, feel, or exceptional reads rather than to the system that produced them. When a position closes at a clean level and the chart goes on to confirm that the exit was well-timed, it is easy to take that as evidence of sharp judgment. What it is actually evidence of is a well-designed plan being followed.

The problem with confusing the two is that instinct is not repeatable. A system is.

Keeping execution separate from outcome is one of the more important habits to build in trading. The exit today was correct because the plan said to exit there, not because of some “smart” read on current conditions. If the market had kept going after the exit, the exit would still have been correct. The trades are not evaluated by what the chart does after the position is closed. It gets evaluated by whether the rules were followed while the position was open.

This is a principle that runs through Pull the Trigger: How to Stop Missing the Trades That Pay. The confidence that makes clean execution possible is not built from feeling smart about good outcomes. It is built from the documented evidence of a process that has been followed consistently over time. That is a very different foundation, and it holds up under conditions that feel-based confidence cannot.

What Does Past Documentation Reveal About Where the Process Is Now?

Something unexpected came out of this session: a collection of historical game film and screenshots from 2023, found stored in a browser extension that had not been checked in a while. Real session footage from a few years ago, sitting in a forgotten corner of the workflow.

Looking back at that material was useful and humbling at the same time.

What seemed like adequate documentation at the time lacks the detail that would make it genuinely useful now. The notes are thinner. The context is missing. The level of specificity that the current process requires is just not there in the older records. Not because the effort was not real at the time, but because what is known now about what good documentation looks like is different from what was known then.

What a trader does not know changes over time. And old records reflect the knowledge level of the person who made them.

This is actually an encouraging observation once the initial frustration passes. The gap between what the 2023 documentation captured and what would be captured today is evidence of real development. The standard for what constitutes useful data got higher because the understanding of the process got deeper.

The practical application is to use that old footage as backtesting material. Test current strategy assumptions against historical setups from a few years back to see how the current rules would have applied to those conditions. That is a legitimate data source that was almost overlooked entirely.

How Should a Trader Evaluate New Journaling and Documentation Tools?

The documentation workflow question is ongoing. A new local-hosted trading journal tool called Aurafy came up this session as worth evaluating. The session also surfaced the question of whether the Awesome Screenshot extension, where the 2023 footage was discovered, might still serve a purpose in the current workflow or whether it is time to consolidate.

The criteria for adding any new tool to a trading operation is straightforward: does it reduce friction in the documentation process without introducing new friction somewhere else?

A tool that makes screenshot capture faster but requires a separate workflow to get those screenshots into the central journal is not necessarily a net improvement. A tool that integrates directly with the journaling process and captures the right data at the right level of detail is worth the time to evaluate properly.

Aurafy is on the testing list. The evaluation criteria are already in place. That is the right order: define what the tool needs to do, then test it against those criteria, rather than adopting it because it looks impressive and figuring out what problem it solves later.

The broader principle is the same one that applies to strategy tools, automation, and anything else that gets added to the trading operation: the tool serves the process, not the other way around.

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The Physical Layer Principle: A Troubleshooting Lesson That Goes Beyond Tech

The audio issue got resolved this session through a principle borrowed directly from professional IT troubleshooting: always check the physical layer first.

Before assuming a software problem, a configuration issue, or a settings conflict, check the physical connections. Reseat the cables. Check the port. Verify the hardware is actually communicating before digging into the software stack. In this case, reseating the USB connection on the audio interface resolved a clipping issue that had been causing problems across multiple sessions.

That principle is worth carrying beyond technology.

In trading, the equivalent of the physical layer is the basics: is the plan being followed? Are the criteria actually being met before a trigger is taken? Is the documentation happening consistently? Before assuming that the strategy has a deeper problem, verify the fundamentals are intact. Most of the time, when something is not working in a trading operation, the answer is at the physical layer: a rule that has quietly drifted from its original criteria, a documentation habit that has gotten inconsistent, a pre-session routine that has been shortcut.

Check the physical layer first. The complex explanation is rarely the right one when the simple one has not been ruled out.

This applies to strategy troubleshooting as I’ve documented in my journal process: before concluding the system is broken, confirm the system is actually being applied as designed. That question alone resolves more apparent strategy problems than any technical adjustment ever has.

The Plan Worked Because It Was Followed, Not Because the Market Cooperated

Green session thanks to clean execution.

  • One setup correctly skipped under active troubleshooting.
  • Audio issue resolved with a documented solution that will hold up the next time the same problem appears.
  • One trade taken on valid criteria.

Hindsight does not get to rewrite any of those decisions. The rule was followed at the time it needed to be followed, based on the information available at that moment. What the market did after the setup was skipped is interesting but not relevant to whether the decision was correct.

Discipline is not just about following the plan when it’s easy. It’s about following the plan no matter how good (or bad) the results may look in the rearview, or if the internal argument for bending the rule just this once is genuinely convincing.

The traders who build something durable are the ones who follow the plan on exactly those days. Not because the outcome will always validate the decision, but because the process only works if it is actually followed.

Accepting planned risk is the only way to win. Even when planned risk looks like a missed trade in the session log.

Trade it easy ✌🏾

Meme illustration of a tormented trader hovering over a red "Exit Early" button during a choppy live position, while a calm version of themselves leans against the wall with a speech bubble reading "Breathe," representing the discipline of staying in a position through back-and-forth price action instead of exiting the plan early.

What Should You Do When the Market Tests Your Patience Mid-Position?

Trading is risky! Past performance does not guarantee future results. Click here to read our full Disclaimer

Some sessions are easy to sit through. The setup forms, the trigger fires, price moves toward the target with reasonable directness, and the position closes cleanly. Those sessions build confidence in an almost effortless way.

And then there are sessions like this one.

Volatile conditions, heavy price swings, back-and-forth movement that makes every open position feel like it is one candle away from going wrong. The kind of session where the plan is clearly right but the market seems determined to make holding it as uncomfortable as possible before proving it.

This session produced one of the better performance days for the current strategy in recent months. Three positions, all taken on rule-based criteria, all profitable. And it was also one of the harder sessions to sit through mentally. Those two things are not a contradiction. They are directly connected.

What Should You Do When the Market Tests Your Patience Mid-Position?

There is a specific kind of price action that creates the most psychological pressure for a trader holding an open position. Not a clean move against the trade, which is easier to process because at least something clear is happening. The harder pattern is what I call the tennis match (most people call chop): price swinging back and forth, testing both sides of the position, never quite picking a side to continue or reverse the trend. Just grinding.

That pattern is not random and it is not personal. Wholesale participants are facilitating the orders sitting on their books, managing their own inventory against a budget, and working toward exits that match the positions they accepted as they keep the market efficient for everyone involved. An individual stop is not on their radar. They are focused on finding the other side of their own position at a price that respects the spread between where they took on the risk and where they can profitably exit it. The back-and-forth movement that feels like a test is just what that process looks like from inside a retail position. Understanding that context does not make the discomfort disappear, but it removes the emotional charge that comes from feeling targeted.

What does help in the moment is breath.

Not as a motivational ritual, or as something to do while waiting passively, but as an active redirection of the physical energy that builds during choppy conditions. The impulse to exit early, to adjust the stop, to do something that the plan does not call for, that impulse has a physical component. Redirecting focus into breath interrupts the cycle before it produces a decision. The position stays open. The plan stays intact. The discomfort gets processed without being acted on.

This is a core principle in Pull the Trigger: How to Stop Missing the Trades That Pay. The psychological interference that breaks execution is almost always physical before it becomes a decision. Breath work is not a soft skill. It is a real-time execution tool.

Is the One Trade Per Day Approach Actually Better?

This question came up during this session and it is worth addressing directly because the one-trade-per-day framework has a genuine appeal that deserves an honest examination rather than a quick dismissal.

The math sounds clean on the surface. Take one high-quality trade per day, hit a consistent target, and the results over a month should be solid. Less screen time, less decision fatigue, fewer opportunities to make mistakes.

The problem is in the application. Limiting to a single daily trade requires narrowing the criteria to only the absolute highest-quality setups, which in practice means passing on valid, rule-based triggers that do not reach that subjective threshold. Over time, that habit of passing on valid triggers is exactly the kind of pattern that bleeds into the rest of the trading process. The hesitation built from constant selective restraint does not stay contained to the “not quite A+” setups. It starts showing up on the ones that clearly qualify, resulting in fomo, overtrading, chasing trades, and compounding mistakes that deteriorate the account balance.

There is also the data problem. A one-trade-per-day approach generates a much smaller sample of execution data over time. The statistical foundation for evaluating whether the system is working becomes thinner. It takes much longer to accumulate the kind of evidence that makes informed adjustments possible.

For me, the approach that fits better, and what this session demonstrated clearly, is an accuracy-focused system with multiple rule-based triggers. Not trading more for the sake of activity. Taking every trigger that meets the full criteria, following the rules completely, and letting the results accumulate across a meaningful sample. Today that produced three positions. All three were taken cleanly. All three were profitable.

What Does 100% Rule-Based Execution Actually Produce?

The session note going into this morning carried a line worth sitting with: “Allow your imagination to do its job of ruining the surprise.”

That line is about anticipation. Imagination does not stop at realistic scenarios. It runs to best and worst-case outcomes with full commitment, especially when the market is being choppy and the position is not moving cleanly toward the target. Imagining an array of scenarios helps you plan for a response, mitigating impulse decisions in the moment that drives early exits, adjusted stops, and rule violations that feel smart in the moment and costly in hindsight.

Use data to support the plan your imagination produced. Zooming out across sessions, the pattern is clear: taking small early wins to avoid a potential loss your ego is forecasting as a protection mechanism actually leaves more on the table over time than holding the plan would have. The system was built around specific target levels for a reason. Those levels reflect real market behavior and real historical data.

This session produced one of the better performance days for the current strategy in recent months. Every position was 100% rule-based. No discretionary decisions, no finessing, no adjustments made because a position felt uncomfortable. Each target was patiently hit without stepping in to intervene because “something doesn’t feel right” or “I’ve seen this not work out before”. All of those voices were very real in the moment (more on that later), but preparation and keeping the bigger picture in mind allowed them to be silenced before hijacking the moment.

Not trying to finesse trades and following the system completely produces better results in the long run. That is not a belief. It is what the data shows.

How Does Ego Show Up in a Live Position?

Ego gets discussed a lot in trading circles, usually as something to eliminate. The framing here is different. Ego is not the enemy. It is a protection mechanism that is trying to do its job, just pointed at the wrong target.

When a position is open and price is swinging back and forth in tennis match fashion, ego reads the situation as a threat. The rationalization it produces sounds reasonable: take the small win now, protect the capital, be smart about risk. What it is actually doing is protecting self-image from the discomfort of a potential loss, not protecting the trading operation from a genuine risk that the plan has not already accounted for.

The reframe that works is redirecting what ego is protecting. Being right in trading does not mean the position goes where you want it to go. Being right means the plan was followed. A position that gets held through choppy conditions, hits the stop, and closes as an expense is still a correct execution if every decision along the way was inside the plan. A position that closes early because ego manufactured a justification for bailing is a mistake even if it happens to be profitable.

That distinction, between being right for the money and being right for the plan, is one of the more important things to internalize in trading. Once it lands, the whole relationship with individual position outcomes changes. The emotional investment shifts from whether the trade wins to whether the execution was clean.

Even a position that would have resulted in an expense can be a good trade. That is not a rationalization. That is how a rule-based process actually works.

What Does Self-Experimentation Teach That Following Others Cannot?

There is a version of trading education that is essentially: here is what works, here is what does not, follow the rules and avoid the mistakes. That framework has value. But it also has a ceiling.

A trader who has only ever followed prescribed rules has a borrowed understanding of those rules. They know what they were told. They do not know why the rule exists from the inside, what it feels like to break it, what the market actually does when the boundary gets crossed. That surface-level understanding tends to crack under the conditions that matter most: volatile sessions, live positions, real money on the line.

Personal exploration builds a different quality of understanding. Not reckless exploration, not ignoring risk, but genuine curiosity-driven engagement with concepts that are typically taught as things to avoid. That kind of firsthand experience produces clarity that instruction alone cannot. It also eliminates a specific kind of anxiety: the anxiety that comes from wondering whether the person teaching the rule is being honest about their own results.

When the knowledge comes from direct experience rather than someone else’s account, that question simply does not come up. The understanding is grounded in what actually happened rather than what was claimed to happen. And if your experience tells a different story than their teachings, it does not mean they are wrong. It’s just evidence to the difference in your perspectives. Nothing wrong with that.

This approach to learning also builds the confidence to evaluate outside advice objectively rather than accepting or rejecting it completely. Not dismissing conventional wisdom, but not deferring to it without examination either. That kind of independent judgment, developed through personal exploration and honest documentation, is where genuine trading confidence actually comes from.

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The Session That Required the Most Patience Produced the Best Results

The final position of this session required the most patience of the three. Price worked its way through the tennis match pattern for an extended period before finally breaking in the direction the plan called for and hitting the target. Every moment of that process produced the same set of impulses: exit now, no need to take a full loss, do something!

Nothing was done to the position. The breath stayed the focus. The plan stayed intact.

The position hit the target.

There is a relationship between staying in the discomfort and the outcome that follows. Not in a mystical sense, but in a practical one. The trades that require the most patience to hold through are often the ones that hit full targets because the choppy price action that makes them uncomfortable is the same action that builds the energy for the eventual move. Exiting early to escape the discomfort means exiting right before the reason the trade was taken in the first place shows up. I have made this decision so many times in the past, which often ended in regret as I watching the breakout shoot to where my planned target was.

Patience in trading is not passive waiting. It is active discipline applied to what can be controlled: breathing, staying focused, and committing to the plan, while letting go of what cannot be controlled, like price, timing, and the path the market takes to get where the system hopes it will going.

Three rule-based, profitable positions. One of the better strategy performance days in recent months.

The plan did exactly what it was designed to do. The only job was to follow it.

Trade it easy ✌🏾