Do you ever catch yourself refreshing your chart every 10 seconds… replaying lost trades in your head… or stressing about what the Fed might say tomorrow? You are not alone. But you’re not helping yourself either.
After nearly two decades of coaching and educating traders, including startups, pros, and funded traders, I’ve noticed a habit that consistently separates from the emotional. Successful traders never waste energy on things they cannot control.
It sounds simple. But it’s more difficult to stick with it when the markets move quickly, when your P&L fluctuates, or when fear kicks in. With a few shifts in focus, you can redirect your mental energy to what really matters and trade with clarity and discipline.
Avoid the anxiety control loop
Staring at your P&L, waiting for the candles to close, or stressing over the breaking news may seem counterproductive, but it’s not. The more you try to control your incontinence, the more your anxiety increases. And the more you worry, the less bandwidth you have for what really matters: your preparation, your risk, and your execution.
That’s when traders start suppressing trades, breaking the rules, and slipping into a dropdown.
This is what you cannot control
- Unexpected news
- Central Bank comments or interventions
- Algorithmic spikes
- Flash Crash
- Spread the width
- Slippery
- Liquidity Gaps
- Changes in market sentiment
- How long does the trend last?
- Even if a perfect setup wins today
- What do other traders do?
- Where the price goes after you enter
- The result of any trade
These will always sit outside of your influence, and worrying about them requires the energy needed to constantly process.
Traders can control 16 things
These are the levers that actually move your results.
1. Your business plan
Your rules for entries, exits, sizes, time frames and markets were traded.
2. Your risk per trade
How much are you willing to lose?
3. Your Position Sizing Formula
Many contracts are calculated by stop distance and risk.
4. Your Entry Criteria
Only take setups that fit your plan.
5. Place your stop loss
Know where your thinking is wrong.
6. HOW TO TAKE YOUR PROFITS
Fixed targets, partials, or trailing stops.
7. Rules for managing your business
How and when you adjust trades after entry.
8. Your daily or weekly maximum loss limits
Your guards to stay in the game.
9. Your Trading Schedule
When you trade and when you step.
10. Your tools
Charts, data feeds, execution platforms, and analysis software.
11. Your journaling process
Screenshots, Logic, Emotions, Errors and Results.
12. Your Backtesting and Forward Testing
Validating your edge with real data.
13. Your capital allocation
How much do you commit to challenges and accounts?
14. Your Tax and Legal Structure
Especially helpful with regular payments.
15. Your Business Environment
Noise, focus, normality and concentration.
16. Who do you trade with?
Your broker or prop firm. This is one of your most important decisions. Broker-operated support firms are backed by established, regular brokers with deep liquidity, strong execution, and greater stability during bullish markets.
Ask yourself 3 simple questions
1. Did the trade I made today reinforce my trading strategy and plan?
Or am I gone?
2. Do I need to change anything, or do I just need to understand how I felt about a particular trade?
Was the problem setup, or was it my emotional state?
3. What can I do tomorrow to become a better trader?
One improvement per day compounds into long-term mastery.
Commercial truth
Trading is not about predicting what the market will do next. It’s about handling yourself when you don’t know what’s going to happen.
When you stop wasting energy on things beyond your control,
When you refocus on your plan, your discipline, your process,
When you protect your mental capital the same way you protect your business capital…
You become a trader who stays consistent.
You become a trader who survives volatility.
You become a trader who grows accounts, funds or personally.
Control your effort.
Control your discipline.
Control your process.



