Focus on the Trading Process not the Money

It may seem a contradiction to say that you don’t want to pay attention to the profit of a trade.  In fact, many of you might be saying that this guy must be smoking rope to say that profit is unimportant.  Well, to clarify, that is not what is being said.  Of course, profit is one of the main reasons why you are involved in trading in the financial markets.
However, when we discuss how you will garner your mental and emotional resources in order to become consistently successful, profit (in any one trade) is not where you want your focus to be. Profits come as a result of “probabilities” over a series of trades. In fact, profit can be a major distraction and the cause of erratic behaviors that beget unwanted results.  Let’s face it, results, consistent positive results, are what you want.  Anything else is unacceptable.  So, your main trading trajectory must encompass this reality.  Consistently successful trading requires a laser focus on what-matters-most; alignment of body, mind and emotions; and an ability to be truly disciplined, for starters.
Lessons from the Pros - Specialty Skills
The Distraction of Trading Profits
Let’s look at how focusing on profit can position you to attract the very undesirable results that you want to avoid.  Profit is transient which means that it is not only variable but it is random to the point of being capricious.  No matter how good your methodology, you cannot predict what price action will do.  The only thing that is certain about the markets is that they are unpredictable.   Due to this level of randomness, profit is an extremely inefficient data point to measure against results.
In fact, one of the worst things that can happen to you as a trader is to be profitable early in the game before you intimately know your strategy.  This type of profit is almost invariably luck.  Luck is totally unsustainable; and in your attempt to replicate these results you will reinforce bad rule violating behavior that is very hard to halt, creating many more losses as you attempt to extricate yourself from that abyss.  Furthermore, when you focus on profit alone, your attention is fragmented and your mental state is susceptible to distorting data due to a confirmation bias (the tendency to only perceive information that confirms your limiting beliefs about the current market and consequently denying information that is contrary but critically important).
Actually, you want to approach the trading process with your eyes wide open and embracing the fact that any trade can lose, and some will.  No matter how strong your strategy, you must accept the randomness of the markets and therefore be very serious about protecting your capital; in other words, using and relying on your stops.  In this way, you will begin to manage your fear…a very important skill.
One of the facts about consistently successful traders is that many of them have blown up accounts; and they came back.  When this happened, they realized that the world didn’t come to an end and developed a deeper appreciation for the importance of their stops.  They created consistency in planning their trades, trading their plan, following all of their rules, and thereby developed the capacity for emotional strength and endurance in the trade.
Trading is a process oriented endeavor for those who are serious about becoming and remaining a consistently successful trader.  In any one trade, it is not about the outcome.  You must remain dispassionate about that and reserve all of your focus to be honed on what you are doing and how you are doing it. 

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