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#SummerCreationCamp
I Used to Think the Market Was Against Me. Then I Realized I Was Making the Same Mistakes Again and Again.
For a long time, I blamed everything except myself.
If a trade failed, I blamed the whales. If my stop-loss was hit, I called it manipulation. If Bitcoin suddenly reversed, I convinced myself that the market was designed to trap retail traders.
The strange part?
Every losing trade looked different, but the mistake behind it was almost always the same.
I was entering too late because I didn't want to miss the move. I was increasing leverage after a few winning trades because I felt more confident than I should have. Sometimes I moved my stop-loss simply because I didn't want to accept that my trade idea was wrong.
None of those mistakes had anything to do with the market.
They had everything to do with my decisions.
That completely changed the way I look at trading.
Today, I don't ask, "Where will the market go next?" I ask a different question:
"If I'm wrong, what will this trade cost me?"
That one question has saved me from far more losses than any indicator ever has.
Something else I've noticed is that many traders spend hours searching for the perfect strategy but almost no time reviewing their own behavior. They'll change indicators five times in a month, but they'll never ask why they ignored their own trading plan.
The market doesn't reward people for finding a secret setup.
It rewards people who can execute the same plan with discipline, even after a losing streak.
One lesson that took me a long time to understand is that not trading is sometimes a trading decision.
There are days when the chart isn't clear. The trend is weak. Volatility is unpredictable. On those days, forcing a position usually has only one purpose—it satisfies our emotions, not our strategy.
I've also stopped judging trades only by whether they made money.
A profitable trade taken without a plan isn't a good trade.
A losing trade that followed every rule isn't necessarily a bad one.
That mindset feels uncomfortable at first, but over time it changes how you measure progress.
The market doesn't care how confident you feel.
It doesn't know how much time you spent analyzing a chart.
And it certainly doesn't owe anyone a winning trade.
The only thing you can truly control is your own process.
That's why I believe trading is less about predicting the next candle and more about becoming the kind of person who can make good decisions under pressure.
Because in the end, the biggest battle isn't against Bitcoin, Ethereum, whales, or market makers.
It's against the habits that quietly destroy consistency.
Once you start improving those habits, the charts begin to look very different—not because the market changed, but because you did.
Disclaimer: This is my personal market view for educational purposes only, not financial advice. Always do your own research (DYOR).
@Gate_Square