The Cycle That Changed Everything
Stock experience from Nood to Professional (2)
It started during a strong bullish phase in the VNIndex.
Bank stocks were leading.
Securities companies were breaking out.
Liquidity expanding daily.
News optimistic.
Margin usage increasing across the market.
It felt easy.
Too easy.
Phase 1: Alignment With the Trend
When the overall market structure is supportive, even average setups work.
I was trading a structured swing strategy:
Pullbacks in strong uptrend
Risk 1% per trade
Target 2–3R
Maximum 4 open positions
Everything was mechanical.
Trade 1: +2.5R
Trade 2: +1.8R
Trade 3: +3R
Trade 4: +1.5R
Within three weeks, account up nearly 15%.
The system worked beautifully.
At this stage, I was disciplined.
But something subtle began to shift.
Phase 2: The Confidence Expansion
After a streak like that, something dangerous happens quietly.
You begin to internalize success.
Not intellectually.
Emotionally.
You start believing:
“I understand sector rotation well.”
“I can feel when momentum is building.”
“My reading of liquidity has improved.”
That’s not entirely false.
But here is the hidden trap:
You confuse favorable market conditions with personal superiority.
The market was generous.
You thought you were exceptional.
The First Small Compromise
The next trade was slightly different.
It wasn’t a perfect pullback.
It was slightly extended.
But the sector was strong.
Volume looked promising.
Old rule:
Only A+ setups.
New internal voice:
“It’s still good enough.”
Position size?
1.2% risk instead of 1%.
Small change.
Seems harmless.
The trade worked.
That success reinforced the deviation.
The Second Compromise
Next trade:
Breakout, but volume not ideal.
Market slightly overextended.
Some distribution signs appearing in the index.
But confidence was elevated.
Risk increased to 1.5%.
This time, trade went sideways.
Then stopped out.
Loss: –1.5R.
Emotionally manageable.
But something important happened:
For the first time, loss hurt more than usual.
Why?
Because ego was now involved.
The Turning Point
Instead of reducing exposure,
I wanted to recover quickly.
I convinced myself:
“It was just bad timing.”
Next trade:
Position size stayed high.
Setup slightly weaker.
Market showing early signs of sector rotation fatigue.
Then came the shock.
The Distribution Phase
Suddenly, the index behavior changed.
VNIndex stopped making strong follow-through.
Volume increased on red candles.
Breakouts began failing.
Sector leadership became inconsistent.
This is classic early distribution.
But confidence clouds perception.
I held positions longer.
I gave “extra room.”
I rationalized weakness.
Within two weeks:
Three losing trades.
One larger-than-normal loss.
Account drawdown: –11%.
Almost entire previous gain erased.
Not because system was bad.
Because discipline eroded during confidence expansion.
The Psychological Crash
Financial drawdown is one thing.
But the mental impact is heavier.
Questions appear:
“Was I just lucky before?”
“Did I overestimate my skill?”
“Can I really do this long term?”
This is where many traders quit.
Not because of money.
But because ego collapsed.
The Reflection Period
Instead of revenge trading,
I stopped for one week.
Reviewed every trade.
Patterns became obvious:
✔ Early phase: strict rules
✔ Mid phase: slight flexibility
✔ Late phase: emotional adjustments
The market shift wasn’t the real issue.
My internal shift was.
That realization was powerful.
The Rebuild
The recovery was not dramatic.
No big win.
Just discipline.
Step 1:
Reduce risk to 0.7% per trade temporarily.
Step 2:
Trade only clear pullbacks, no breakouts.
Step 3:
Increase cash allocation when structure unclear.
Step 4:
Journal emotional state before every entry.
Gradually, performance stabilized.
Small wins.
Small losses.
Neutral mindset returning.
The Breakthrough Realization
The real turning point wasn’t a trade.
It was this understanding:
Consistency of behavior matters more than magnitude of profit.
You don’t become professional by having big wins.
You become professional by eliminating behavioral volatility.
Your emotional equity curve must be stable,
even when financial equity fluctuates.
Another Experience: The False Euphoria Rally
Months later, another rally began.
Securities stocks running aggressively.
Small caps exploding.
Retail excitement high.
It felt similar to previous bull run.
But this time, I observed differently.
Volume was strong,
but distribution signs appeared sooner.
Instead of increasing size,
I kept risk constant.
Instead of chasing,
I waited for pullbacks.
Some trades worked.
Some didn’t.
But no oversized positions.
No emotional spikes.
When correction finally came,
portfolio drawdown was only –4%.
This time,
experience protected capital.
The Hidden Edge Professionals Develop
After enough cycles,
you develop something subtle:
Emotional anticipation.
You can sense when your confidence is rising too fast.
You recognize when market mood is euphoric.
You see when setups look “too easy.”
That awareness prevents large mistakes.
Not because you predict the future.
But because you control yourself.
The Most Important Experience Lesson
Trading teaches humility repeatedly.
The market does not reward intelligence.
It rewards emotional stability.
Every serious trader goes through:
Early wins
Ego expansion
Discipline breakdown
Painful correction
System rebuild
Controlled growth
The difference between failure and mastery
is whether you learn from the breakdown.
Capital Growth After Maturity
After that major drawdown phase,
growth became slower but steadier.
Instead of 15% in three weeks,
it became 3–5% per month.
Less exciting.
More sustainable.
And something else changed:
Sleep improved.
Stress reduced.
Confidence became quiet instead of loud.
That quiet confidence is different.
It’s not based on recent wins.
It’s based on process trust.
What Most Traders Misunderstand
They think success comes from:
Better indicators
Faster execution
More information
Insider rumors
But long-term success comes from:
Risk consistency
Emotional discipline
Adaptation to market phase
Accepting small losses
The technical edge might give you 5% advantage.
Psychological edge determines whether you survive.
The Emotional Cycle Map
Over time, you recognize four internal phases:
Fear (after losses)
Stability (balanced)
Confidence (after wins)
Overconfidence (danger zone)
The goal is to remain in phase 2.
Neutral.
Measured.
Stable.
When you detect phase 4,
you intentionally reduce exposure.
That self-regulation separates amateurs from professionals.
The Long-Term Mindset
If you plan to trade for years,
you must think in decades.
One bad month means nothing.
One big win means nothing.
Only long-term expectancy matters.
If your average monthly return is 3–4%,
compounded over years,
it becomes significant.
But only if you survive.
The Final Experience Insight
The market is not your opponent.
Your internal instability is.
The most expensive lessons I’ve seen traders pay for are:
Scaling size too early
Refusing to cut loss
Trading during emotional spikes
Believing recent performance defines ability
After enough cycles,
you learn to detach.
Wins don’t excite.
Losses don’t depress.
Market phases don’t surprise.
You simply respond.
That response-driven mindset is professional.
If You Truly Want to Grow
Start tracking:
Risk per trade
Emotional state before entry
Confidence level (1–10 scale)
Consecutive wins/losses
When confidence level exceeds 8,
reduce size.
When loss streak exceeds 3,
pause.
Build rules to protect yourself from yourself.
Because in trading,
experience doesn’t guarantee success.
Reflected experience does.
About the Creator
Zidane
I have a series of articles on money-saving tips. If you're facing financial issues, feel free to check them out—Let grow together, :)
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https://learn-tech-tips.blogspot.com/


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