Most people aren't trying to become rich. They're trying to stop worrying about money.
Getting financially rich requires a different mindset altogether. Also can't ignore the role of luck.
Dear CBSE, I am Sarthak Raj . I got 27 in Maths and I need only a 6 marks to pass. Due to personal issues and exam pressure, my performance was affected. Please give grace marks and save my academic year. College counselling has started.
@TheAnuragTyagi@cbseindia29@narendramodi
Many people picking stock before entry:
“Strong breakout, volume support, perfect setup.”
They after entry:
“Let me become a long-term investment real quick.”
Swing trading is not about catching every move.
It is about finding one clean setup, risking small, sitting patiently, and letting the stock do the hard work.
Most traders lose money by doing too much.
Sometimes the real edge is simply waiting.
Trading taught me one thing about real life:
Discipline beats mood.
You won’t always feel motivated.
You won’t always get perfect conditions.
You won’t always win immediately.
But if you follow your rules daily, results will eventually respect you.
Bad market environment is not the time to show bravery.
Choppy index.
Weak breadth.
Failed breakouts.
No sector leadership.
That’s not opportunity.
That’s a warning.
Sometimes the best trading decision is to protect capital and wait for the market to improve.
Drawdown phase is not the time to prove yourself.
It is the time to protect yourself.
Reduce size.
Avoid revenge trades.
Review your mistakes.
Wait for clean setups.
Every trader faces drawdown.
The winners survive it with discipline.
When you are in drawdown, sitting out is not weakness.
It is risk management.
Your mind is already emotional.
Your confidence is shaken.
Your decision-making is not fresh.
Sometimes the best trade is taking a break.
Protect capital first.
Comeback later.
Hitting jackpots becomes easier when you catch right sectoral movement.
In cyclic moves even bad stocks of right sector moves better than good stocks of wrong sector.
A fighter takes losses but follows the plan.
An overtrader takes losses and immediately tries to recover.
A fighter waits for the next valid setup.
An overtrader creates a setup in his mind.