"The moment you remove payments from the 'hands of people', everything falls into place."
To be honest.
“I will quit doing the settlements myself”
It took a long time to arrive at this idea.
Why is settlements only extraordinarily difficult
You can enter.
・There is a basis
・The timing is known
・The direction is correct
Even so――
the results don’t stick.
The cause is always the same.
✔ Taking profits too early
✔ Cutting losses too late
✔ Touching what you shouldn’t
And I always think this way:
“Next time I’ll do it better.”
Settlements weren’t a “skill.”
I learned this through repeated testing.
Settlements are,
not something you get better at.
Because it’s always about the “result.”
Unrealized gains
Unrealized losses
The last loss
The last win
All of it distorts judgment.
Then I realized one fact
Even looking at pro histories,
settlements are amazingly “calm.”
・A fixed range
・Fixed conditions
・No exceptions
There’s no feel in it.
In other words――
settlements were a “task.”
What happened when you let go of settlements
At first, honestly, I was scared.
“Is it okay to be so mechanical?”
“Maybe I could have grown more.”
But the results were the exact opposite.
✔ Fewer unnecessary stop-outs
✔ Profits started to “stick”
✔ After trades, I didn’t feel tired
More than anything, what mattered was
the disappearance of regret.
When regret disappears, losing streaks stop
No regret =
doesn’t drag into the next trade.
・Don’t try to recover
・Don’t enter aggressively
・Be able to follow the schedule
For the first time here,
trading became “stable.”
Settlements are not the place where talent shows up
On the contrary,
settlements are the place where human weaknesses show the most.
That’s why,
・Don’t think
・Don’t hesitate
・Don’t choose
When these three are in place,
your results align for the first time.
Delegating settlements ≠ running away
This isn’t running away.
Rationalization, perhaps.
You simply entrusted your weakest point to a system.
All professionals
do this.
Next,
so what exactly did you fix?
I’ll get into the contents.
If you read this,
you’ll think, “I can’t go back.”
? Preview for next time (Episode 19)
“What I fixed wasn’t ‘winning.’ It was a condition that wouldn’t break.”
See you next time.