Between unrealized gains and unrealized losses, there often lies the dividing line between success and failure.



I know many small-cap traders whose understanding of candlestick patterns can be considered professional level, and they have memorized most of the technical analysis theories. But the problem is, their accounts keep fluctuating between profit and loss, like a taut string that can never stabilize.

Where is the root cause? Not in technique, but in psychology.

**When the account only has a few hundred or thousand dollars, every price fluctuation feels like a stab to the heart.** When losing, they are anxious and can't sleep; when winning, they are afraid of missing the opportunity. As a result, they fall into a vicious cycle. In this state, traders often take extreme routes: either set very loose stop-losses, frequently taking small losses; or not set stop-losses at all, turning small losses into big ones in the end.

Even more heartbreaking is that when the account shows unrealized losses, the heartbeat accelerates; when there are unrealized gains, they rush to lock in profits. This is precisely the most dangerous state in the market—you're completely driven by emotions. At this moment, you're not truly trading; you're being led by market sentiment.

Think about it. The market is fundamentally made up of people, and human greed and fear often influence prices more than rationality. Small-cap traders, due to limited capital, react very sensitively to price fluctuations and are most vulnerable to emotional swings.

**The transformation comes from a simple yet profound realization: losses are not failures, but the basic cost of trading.** From my own experience, real change begins with accepting this.

Once you truly internalize this idea, placing orders will no longer be hesitant, stop-losses will become decisive, and market fluctuations will no longer affect your mindset. Even when the account shows unrealized gains, you won't always be eager to exit quickly. This is not blind optimism, but a genuine maturity of mindset.
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