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@htxmi7 @Kevicfx@DegenBibee@FundedNext@NextLvlFunded Itโs an active prop that Iโm already trading and all of a sudden it disappeared and your server canโt be seen on mt5 no more
People say, โIf trading worked, everyone would do it.โ That sounds smart on the surface, but it falls apart when you test it against real life.
The gym works too, yet most people stay out of shape. Saving money works, too, yet many people stay broke. Reading books works, yet many people remain mentally lazy.
The issue is rarely whether something works. The real issue is whether people are willing to do what works for long enough, with enough discipline, to see the result.
Trading is not a magic trick. It is a performance skill. And like every serious skill, it rewards the few who can stay consistent while others chase comfort, excitement, and shortcuts.
Most people do not fail in trading because the market is impossible to predict. They fail because trading forces you to face parts of yourself that normal jobs can hide. The market exposes greed, fear, impatience, ego, and lack of discipline very fast.
A man can say he is patient until he is in a drawdown. He can say he follows rules until the price comes close to his stop loss. He can say he thinks long-term until he sees someone else post a big win online and suddenly wants to double his lot size.
Trading is not only a battle with charts.
It is a battle with your own mind.
That is why many people quit. Not because trading does not work, but because self-control is harder than they imagined.
The truth is, profitable trading is boring in many ways, and most people hate boring. Good trading often means waiting, passing on weak setups, risking small, taking losses calmly, and repeating a process over and over.
That does not excite the average person. They want fast money, constant action, and emotional highs. They want to feel like they are winning big every day.
But the market does not pay you for excitement.
It pays you for precision.
It pays you for patience. It pays you for protecting capital when there is no edge, and pressing only when the odds are clearly in your favour. This is why many people turn trading into gambling.
They are not really trying to build a business. They are trying to satisfy emotion.
A real trader knows that making money is not the first goal. The first goal is survival. You survive first, then you learn, then you earn.
That order matters.
The beginner thinks, โHow much can I make this week?โ The professional thinks, โHow much can I lose if I am wrong?โ That difference in thinking changes everything.
The amateur is focused on reward before risk. The expert is focused on risk before reward. One wants to be right. The other wants to stay in the game.
Once you understand this, you stop judging trading by social media results and start judging it by process, consistency, and capital preservation. That is when your mindset starts to mature.
Another reason โeveryone would do itโ is false is that most people do not actually want the lifestyle that real trading requires. They say they want freedom, but they do not want structure.
They say they want profits, but they do not want journaling, review, backtesting, and emotional control. They say they want to become traders, but they still move like spectators, not professionals.
The market rewards responsibility. You cannot blame your boss, your team, or the economy for every bad decision you make on your chart. It becomes you versus your choices.
That level of accountability is heavy. Many people would rather keep the fantasy of trading than live the reality of trading. The fantasy is easy to love.
The reality is strict, lonely, and demanding.
So yes, trading works, but not in the way weak minds imagine; it works for the person who treats it like a craft. It works for the person who can think in probabilities, manage risk, accept losses, and stay steady through both winning and losing streaks.
It works for the person who stops looking for certainty and starts building skill. The market is not asking whether everyone can do it. The market is asking who can do it properly.
That is the real question.
And when you understand that, you stop using the crowd as your standard. Because in every field that pays well, the crowd is usually the worst example to follow.