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Don't let expectations ruin your trading.
Many traders only realize after reaching a certain stage that what truly traps them is often not losses, but expectations. The easiest time to lose control is not when losing money, but when the market does not develop as expected — thinking it will keep falling but it starts to consolidate, expecting a long decline but it suddenly stops, believing it will break below but it repeatedly oscillates. These moments of discrepancy with expectations are the real reasons that cause people to start acting rashly, exit early, or even reverse their positions. It may seem like trading in the market, but in reality, it’s a battle against the script in your own mind.
When you are no longer bound by expectations, trading becomes much simpler. Mature traders do not hold many preset scenarios in their minds, only one core judgment: whether the structure is still intact. As long as the key structure is not broken, they allow the price to develop in various ways — it can be slow, it can grind, it can oscillate, or it can rebound. How the trend performs is not important; what matters is whether it has changed the original logic. When you start viewing the market this way, pressure naturally decreases because you no longer demand the market to cooperate with you, but focus on your own response.
Another key shift is letting go of the sense of control over the market. Beginners always want to control the price, hoping that once they enter, it will develop as expected; but stable traders only control their own actions — entering with a basis, setting boundaries for stop-loss, having reasons for exiting, and leaving the rest to the market. When you stop trying to control the trend and instead manage your expectations, what you see will become more truthful, and your decisions will be cleaner. Those who can stay in the game long-term are not the ones with the most accurate predictions, but those who are least bound by expectations.
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