Not because you can’t follow the rules, but because you’re choosing a 〇〇 that’s hard to defend, you’re losing
When you keep losing in FX, there are people who think, "I am someone who cannot follow the rules." They cannot cut losses as decided. They cannot wait for profits. They enter trades in situations where they don’t need to. Repeating the same thing over and over makes them feel that their willpower is weak.
However, there is something I would like you to consider here. Are you really unable to follow the rules? Orare you simply choosing methods that are difficult to adhere to in the first place?
For example, a method that requires you to constantly watch the chart. A method that requires judgment every time there is a small price movement. A method where it is easy to decide on entry or exit based on the moment’s feeling. No matter how excellent the content, such approaches place a heavy burden on the person executing them.
Characteristics of methods that are hard to follow are as follows.
- Many judgments
- Longer time spent watching
- A large margin for emotions
- Easily touched even in situations where you don’t need to act
- The mind tires quickly before results are seen
If you choose such methods, rule violations become more likely. In other words, not following the rules is not a matter of personality, butwhether you are trading within a hard-to-follow structurethat can be the cause.
People waver more as there are more judgments. The more anxious you are, the more you want to change your standards. Moreover, in FX, each of those judgments involves money. Therefore, staying calm is not easy when faced with a hard-to-follow method.
Nevertheless, many people think, "I must be more disciplined." Of course, the awareness to follow rules is important. But what truly needs reconsideration is not just the strength of will.Whether the method itself is designed to be easy to follow.
The difference between people who can follow the rules and those who cannot is not just about perseverance.
It largely depends on whether it is designed to be easy to follow..
There is a fixed time to observe. Entry conditions are clear. Exit time is fixed. Even the situations where you should not act are predetermined. Such rule-based methods are less prone to hesitation. Therefore, they make it easier to continue without relying too much on willpower.
What I personally found important in the end was that. While it is important to strive to follow the rules, more than that,it is more practical to make it easy to follow. If you implement a time-based approach that completes within a set period, the number of judgments decreases and emotions are less likely to come into play. As a result, rules are less likely to be broken naturally.
If you are currently repeating the same mistakes, you would be better off not blaming yourself too harshly. It may not be that your will is weak, but that your current method is simply hard to follow for you.
Rule violations are not caused by being weak as a person.
It may just be that you are fighting in a hard-to-follow environment.
That is why it might not be a matter of increasing your motivation. What you need is to adapt your rules to be easier to follow, design that reduces your hesitation, and a format that makes it easier for you to continue.
If now you are feeling down because you broke the rules again, perhaps you should reconsider not your character, butrules-based methods that are designed to be followed without strain.
We are compiling a time-rule-based approach to avoid fatigue from chart monitoring
I am,for beginners and low-risk orientation, compiling a time strategy that does not require chart monitoring.
To avoid decisions influenced by emotions,a rule-based approach that proceeds only with the decided time.
If you no longer want to waver due to discretion, please check the details.
From the "Read more" button, the next entry date, results, and a free presentation of the technique are also available.