The TRUTH Losing Traders Refuse To Accept🚨
Harry has generated over $250,000 from prop firms with just a 35% win rate. His edge wasn’t better entries. It was patience, accountability, and learning from data instead of emotions.
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A trader once asked a question that almost every trader has asked at some point:
"What's the one strategy that works in every market?"
It's the dream, isn't it?
One system.
One set of rules.
One approach that makes money no matter what the market does.
Up.
Down.
Sideways.
Anything.
Then I heard Marci Silfrain explain why that dream causes so much frustration.
Marci said there's no system that works in every type of market.
It simply doesn't exist.
The market is constantly changing. Sometimes it trends higher for weeks. Sometimes it falls apart. Sometimes it goes nowhere and chops traders to pieces.
Yet many traders keep blaming their strategy every time conditions change.
They jump to a new indicator.
A new setup.
A new mentor.
Hoping the next thing will finally be the answer.
But what if the problem isn't the strategy?
What if the problem is expecting the same tool to work in every environment?
The best traders don't just study their setups.
They study the conditions where those setups thrive.
Because every strategy has a season.
The question is:
Do you know when it's time to trade your edge, and when it's time to wait?
$16M+ in verified trading profits. Alex Temiz says the most dangerous moment in your trading career isn't when you're losing.
It's when everything is going right.
"A lot of people feel like when they're on a win streak, that's when they're the most invincible. But that, to me, is when you're the most vulnerable."
Most traders treat a green streak like proof they've figured it out. They loosen up. They start attacking setups they'd normally skip. They stop questioning themselves.
And that's exactly when the market humbles them.
Alex doesn't even track his streaks. Not because he doesn't care about consistency, but because he knows what streaks do to your psychology.
They make you cocky. They make you sloppy. And before you know it, you're taking risks you never would have taken on a down week.
"If I was not self-aware and something crazy happened, I might be a little bit more loose with my risk."
His solution isn't complicated. When things are going well, slow down. Get more selective.
Treat the good run as a warning sign, not a green light.
The streak doesn't make you untouchable. It makes you a target.
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Jeff Holden is Head of Trader Development at SMB Capital.
He has spent years watching traders develop, and he keeps seeing the same pattern play out.
Traders pour energy into networking. Into searching for the right pod, the right partner, the right community.
Constantly looking outward for the thing that will elevate their trading.
But the traders who actually find that? They weren't looking for it.
"If you're doing really good, high quality work, there is no doubt people are going to find you and be attracted to that."
That's the shift most traders never make. They treat finding the right people as the input.
Jeff sees it as the output. The byproduct of doing exceptional work consistently over time.
And the work itself isn't complicated. It's the daily report cards. The honest self-assessment.
The process posted publicly so others can see the standard you hold yourself to.
"Just start doing the best work you can possibly do. Start doing your daily report cards.
Use this process. Post it online. People will find you. They really will."
When you operate at that level, the right people don't need to be chased. They come to you.
You stop having to seek and start having to choose because the quality of your work, then becomes a magnet...
and Everything else follows.
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Most traders think a bad trading day is hard. Logan knows otherwise.
Before he ever opened a chart, he was a US Marine and military contractor working in active combat zones. So when losses hit in trading, they didn't break him the way they break most people.
He found a strategy that worked. But what he says matters more — trading is 90% psychology, not the setup.
In 18 months he made over $500,000. Multiple six-figure months. One stretch where he turned $1,500 into $55,000 in just 8 days.
The numbers weren't luck. They were structure. The same discipline that kept him alive overseas kept him consistent in the market — routine, emotional control, showing up the same way no matter what happened the day before.
He's also honest about something most traders avoid. Strategies can't be backtested forever, because the market never stays the same. So he front tests constantly, staying alert instead of assuming yesterday repeats today.
Most traders try to control the market.
Logan learned long before trading that you can only control yourself.
The $100,000 MONTH Trading BLUEPRINT🚨
Most traders think they need more indicators. Logan says they need more discipline. From Afghanistan to six-figure trading months, he reveals the mindset and process behind his consistency.
Full episode👇
Most traders never blow an account because of a bad strategy.
They blow it because they can't do the same thing twice.
One day they risk 1%.
The next day they risk 5%.
One loss turns into revenge trading.
One missed trade turns into forcing entries.
One red week turns into a completely new strategy.
Then they wonder why consistency never comes.
Dhesi Trades shared a lesson that most traders ignore.
The goal is not to catch a 500-point move every day.
The goal is to find a setup you trust and execute it over and over again.
50 points.
100 points.
150 points.
Day after day.
Month after month.
That's how accounts grow.
That's how prop firm traders scale.
That's how large payouts happen.
Most traders are searching for the perfect setup when they should be building trust in the setup they already have.
The market doesn't pay traders for being creative every day.
It pays traders for being consistent.
The traders who reach six and seven figures are often doing something surprisingly boring.
They follow the same process.
The same risk.
The same confirmation.
The same execution.
While everyone else is chasing more, they are simply repeating what works.
Look at your own trading.
What is the one rule you keep breaking that is stopping your results from becoming predictable?
@dhesi_trades breaking down his complete strategy with LIVE Trading!
Finishing that day with OVER $70,000 in profits.
This is the exact system he’s used to do over $2+ million in payouts.
Check it out now 👇
A trader once asked a question that sounds simple, but it exposes almost everything wrong with the way people trade.
"Do you want to be a gambler or do you want to be a trader?"
I heard Alex Timez talking about this, and the more I thought about it, the more uncomfortable it became.
Because most traders say they want consistency.
But the moment a trade moves against them, they start acting like gamblers.
The stop gets moved.
Then moved again.
And again.
Not because the setup changed.
Because they don't want to accept being wrong.
Alex explained it perfectly.
If your stop is $5 and you keep moving it to $6, $7, and $8, you're not managing risk anymore.
You're avoiding reality.
The lesson that finally clicked for him came from watching a live trader repeat one simple phrase:
"You have to accept your risk."
That's it.
Not predict better.
Not find a magic indicator.
Just accept the risk you agreed to before entering the trade.
Because profitable traders don't make money by avoiding losses.
They make money by controlling them.
What's harder for you: taking a loss or accepting it before the trade even begins?
20 LOSING Traders vs A $2,000,000+ Prop Firm Trader 🚨
Trader Kane sits down with 20 struggling traders and exposes the exact habits keeping them from getting funded: overtrading, forcing setups, moving to breakeven too early, and refusing to stay patient.
Full episode👇
Most traders think profitability comes from finding more winning trades.
Our guest Amas learned the opposite.
Early on, Amas spent hours looking for setups, convinced that more trades would lead to more profits.
Instead, the unnecessary trades were doing the most damage.
The turning point came when Amas realized that profitable traders aren't defined by how often they win.
They're defined by how many bad trades they avoid.
That sounds simple.
But developing that skill takes something most traders skip.
Repetition.
Thousands of backtested trades.
Hours spent studying what works and what doesn't.
According to Amas, the real edge isn't predicting the next move.
It's having the discipline to stay out when there's no edge.
Because one unnecessary trade can erase the progress of several good ones.
And that's a lesson most traders only learn after paying for it.
The hardest part of trading isn't taking losses.
It's doing the same thing tomorrow.
Most traders don't quit after a red day.
They quit after a red week.
That's when the doubts start.
Maybe the strategy stopped working.
Maybe the market changed.
Maybe someone else has a better system.
So they start over.
Again.
And again.
What looks like "learning" is often just running away from discomfort.
The uncomfortable truth is that every real edge goes through periods where it feels broken.
Every trader experiences drawdowns.
Every strategy has losing streaks.
The traders who eventually become consistent are not the ones who avoid those periods.
They're the ones who stay objective enough to work through them.
They review their data.
They follow their process.
And they refuse to make emotional decisions during temporary pain.
Most trading careers don't end because the trader lacked potential.
They end because the trader abandoned the process before the process had time to pay them back.
Think about your own trading.
What have you quit in the last 12 months that might have worked if you had given it another 100 trades?