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Taking Risks in Stride
All traders must face risk. No trader is immune.
Whether you're a novice trader with a small account or a
hedge fund manager trading millions, you must learn to
take risks and live with the consequences. If we knew
that profits were assured, we wouldn't have trouble
taking risks, but nothing is certain. Unfortunately, it
is impossible to make profits without taking risks. The
challenge is to readily accept the possibility that you
may lose, but at the same time, take risks and
occasional losses in stride.
Risking money can
be difficult. When we fear the consequences of potential
losses, we cower, paralyzed and defeated. We can
alleviate some of the fear through risk control. By
risking a small percentage of your trading capital on a
single trade, and looking at the big picture, you will
feel more at ease. If you make enough trades with sound
methodology, you will profit overall. All you have to do
is keep the risks small. Some traders suggest making the
risk so insignificant that you may start thinking, "Why
am I even bothering making this trade?"
Risks are hard to
take for a variety of psychological reasons. Obviously
we don't like to lose, but it's more than that. We
dislike regret. Sometimes, our avoidance of regret is
more powerful than our fear of loss. It's one thing to
make a losing trade, but it is quite another to feel
that you've made a mistake, and continually berate
yourself for making it. It's useful to be aware of this
dynamic. We dislike feelings of regret, and may avoid
taking action because of it. How can we face possible
loss and regret more easily? An old saying from romantic
relationships may offer solace: "It is better to have
loved and lost than to have never loved at all."
Similarly, if you yearn for wealth and financial
security, it is better to have attempted trading and
blown out a few times than to complacently wish you had
tried and spent the rest of your life regretting that
you never mustered enough courage to have taken a big
risk and seen for yourself whether or not you could have
realized your dreams. If you don't take a chance, you
won't get hurt, but on the other hand, you'll never know
what could have been. In addition, if you don't take
risk after risk, by making trade after trade, you'll
never hone your trading skills, and you will never
become a winning trader. So when you face risks and
possible losses, don't despair. Remember that it's much
worse to stand on the sidelines and wish you had taken
action than gone after your dreams and feel satisfied in
the knowledge that you tried your best.
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