Author: ferb
Compilation: Yuliya, PANews
Editor's Note: In the end, trading is not a competition of intelligence, but of the survival capacity of the nervous system. This article delves into the often-overlooked yet critically important realm of trading psychology. Behind the pursuit of profits lies the crucial task of protecting your mental health and trading rhythm, which is the key to long-term survival in this brutal market. Below is the translated original text:
Your decisions, your trades, your life.
You can listen to the opinions of a hundred people, but in the end, your cognitive boundaries determine your execution. Blindly following the decisions of those you trust might work occasionally, but if you never truly believe in the process deep down, you will ultimately either sell too early or panic and exit at the first sign of loss.
You as a person, your life, your experiences—all of this reflects in your trading. Someone burdened with debt cannot possibly maintain the conviction of someone who is financially free. Your upbringing alters your risk tolerance, your emotions, your patience, even your ability to endure drawdown periods.
I've come to realize that trading psychology is one of the least discussed topics in the entire industry.
Everyone cheers for the winners.
But no one talks about what happens to them when they lose.
No one speaks of the sleepless nights, the complete emotional breakdowns, the deep despair, and just how bad things got before the tide finally turned.
Because this game is far more than just numbers flashing on a screen.
It can lift you to the clouds, and it can drag you into the depths.
I know this because I've been through it all myself.
I cried for ten nights straight. Even after making $50k the next day, the tears wouldn't stop.
That's when I realized a dangerous sign:
When your trading gets bad enough, it stops being about making money.
It becomes a battle for psychological survival.
Every trader enters with hope.
Frankly, hope is likely why most of us are here. That feeling is: maybe one trade, one cycle, one opportunity could change everything for us.
At first, hope is beautiful.
It drives you forward.
It makes you dare to dream bigger.
It fills you with endless energy.
But eventually, the cycle begins.
Small wins.
Small losses.
The first mistake.
The first big rally missed.
You start noticing how quickly this market moves, and suddenly, your entire perception of risk is flipped. You become afraid of missing out, terrified of being left behind while others are making life-changing money.
That fear slowly morphs into impulsivity.
Trading more often.
Changing positions more frantically.
Patience diminishing.
Thinking becoming shallower.
Eventually, you enter the losing phase.
Losing streaks grow longer.
Your account is down 30%, then 50%, then more.
You start lowering your trading standards just to feel like you're still in the game.
And this is the moment trading becomes psychologically dangerous.
Because after enough consecutive losses, your nervous system changes.
Most people think trading is a game of intellect.
It's not.
This game is largely a battle of biological chemistry.
Dopamine gives you the high.
Cortisol keeps you hooked.
Humans were not built for chronic high-stress environments. Cortisol exists to help us survive short-term dangers. Thousands of years ago, it helped humans escape predators, survive disasters, stay alert at critical moments.
Trading breaks this entire mechanism.
The modern trader wakes up stressed, goes to sleep stressed, eats with stress, and even scrolls their phone with stress.
Even when the charts are out of sight, the nervous system never truly relaxes.
Your brain begins living in a constant state of "survival mode."
And cortisol changes you slowly.
Your sleep gets worse.
Your decisions become emotional.
Your patience evaporates.
Even a small loss feels like the end of the world.
You stop responding with logic. You start reacting with impulse.
The scariest part? You barely notice these changes happening.
Because dopamine gives you just enough of a sweet taste here and there to keep you addicted to the cycle.
After weeks of agony, one winning trade suddenly makes you feel alive again.
And so, your brain starts linking pain to reward.
This is why many traders cannot stop, even when they're mentally exhausted.
Not because they're stupid.
Not because they're weak.
But because they are physiologically and emotionally trapped.
The market becomes that bear you're chasing in the woods, but unlike our ancestors, your body never gets to return to safety after the chase ends.
Eventually, something terrible happens:
You get used to losing.
A 30% drawdown no longer shocks you.
Sleep deprivation becomes normal.
Anxiety becomes your personality.
You're no longer trading to win. You start trading just to feel something.
A green candlestick becomes your emotional comfort.
A red candlestick triggers self-loathing.
Your P&L starts determining whether you deserve inner peace today.
And in that moment, trading quietly becomes an addiction.
Perhaps the harshest truth about trading is this:
Sometimes, the most powerful move a trader can make is to do nothing.
Not revenge trading.
Not adding more capital to chase back this month's losses.
Not forcing trades for the dopamine hit.
Not staring at charts for 16 hours straight, hoping for a miracle.
Just stopping.
Stopping long enough to ask yourself the one question that matters:
Do you still love the game?
Or are you just trapped in a cage built from stress, dopamine, cortisol, and survival instinct?
Because the market will always be there.
New narratives will emerge.
New opportunities will arise.
New cycles will begin.
But if you destroy yourself mentally chasing every single one of them blindly, then when the real opportunity finally arrives, you won't even have the capital left to participate.
I genuinely believe the best traders in the market aren't necessarily the smartest.
They are simply the ones who managed to stay mentally intact long enough to keep a seat at the table.
And perhaps the most terrifying realization of all is this:
"You were never really chasing money.
You were chasing relief."






