Most trading journals track your money.
We track your behavior — the part that actually decides whether you're still here next year.
Limbix. Score your discipline, not your P&L.
@1MINUTETIP Staying in the game is a discipline problem before it's ever a skill problem. Most blow up because of behavior, not because they couldn't read the market.
@L2WTrades 240 accounts worth of proof that the prop challenge is a behavior test disguised as a trading test. The strategy was never the problem — knowing when to stop was. This is exactly the data most traders never collect on themselves.
@TheH0n3stTrader Most day traders fail because of behavior, not because the market can't be traded. The ones selling courses skipped the process — that's the scam, not the craft.
Everyone wants the P&L.
Nobody wants the playbook, the review, the logged mistakes, the discipline score after a losing week.
The traders who make it aren't chasing outcomes.
They're protecting the process that produces them.
People want results. Champions want process.
@hunchoforeva The paradox breaks when you stop measuring yourself by P&L and start measuring by how well you followed the process. Hard to let FOMO win when you're accountable to a score, not just an outcome.
@rugal_fx Log it before you do anything else. What you felt, why you took it, whether the setup was clean. The next trade you take without doing that is where the real damage happens. Then next one (IF YOUR PLAN ALLOWS IT)
@MyFundedFutures The reps part is what people skip over. One good trade is luck. The same trade, logged, reviewed, and repeated across a month — that's a system.
@eriktrades_@fnfutures 5 accounts, same system, zero red days — the execution is clean. Most people fall apart at the tracking layer before the P&L ever gets a chance to show up. Congrats 👏