Patience
Patience has always
been one of my biggest problems…especially when it comes to trading.
It takes patience to let what's working, work. I've always had trouble
balancing my long-term goals of "trading success" with my very real
short-term needs to make money to pay bills and rent.
Recently, I've had success in the markets. I am earning very respectable
percentage gains that if left to continue compounding, will in the long-run
amount to a tremendous fortune. Of course when these runs happen, my natural
tendency is to want the long-run to hurry up and get here as fast as possible.
Naturally, this is not possible, and this is where I usually run into problems.
They say the first step is "admitting you have a problem." So this
blog post is my effort to throw my recognition and acceptance of this problem
out to the universe. Now, the next step is to learn to practice patience.
Keep my head down. Keep plugging away and duplicating what I know is working.
Make it as automatic as possible. Focus on the process, not the results. The
results must take care of themselves.
The other tactic I am beginning to practice is visioning that I've already
achieved my goals. Allowing myself to experience what it would feel like to
already be there. In which positive ways would my life be different? Imagine
it. Feel it. One amazing result I've had during these mind games is to realize
that in a lot of ways, I'm already living it. Maybe my money clip doesn't
reflect it. But my attitude, and the way I spend my time does.
Endurance
While the act of patience requires one to go with the flow and to base your
actions with the big picture in mind, the struggle you often face is finding
the strength to keep moving forward when strong headwinds blow in your face. It
sometimes takes every ounce of power you can muster to keep the wheels spinning
and the car on the road – when the road takes unpredictable turns, ups and
downs, and on top of all that, the road is covered in a sheet of black ice! To
focus, you need endurance.
This week, my account equity touched new highs. However, it had been over a
full calendar month since my last new high. During the period of battling a
slow-bleed drawdown, I found solace in knowing that with just a few small
tweaks, I'd be able to right this ship and get headed back in the right
direction again. I had absolute confidence in my plan and knew that over time,
these will just be small bumps in the road. My perseverance paid off,
and today we're back at new highs.
The struggle for me constantly is this: Since the summer of 2009, I have
completely turned around my trading and have settled into a groove that is
yielding excellent results. We are talking annualized percentage gains that are
too embarrassing to publish because they don't look real and you probably
wouldn't believe me. This is a good thing, right? Yes and no. The problem is
that although I am employing a great strategy that is highly scalable (meaning,
any Trader should be able to trade the same way I am regardless of whether he
is trading a $1,000 or a $1 million account), I'm still trading with an account
that is too small to really enjoy the rewards. All the gains that are being
achieved must remain in the account so that I can continue to grow it so that
it can get to a level where I can then begin regularly withdrawing cash to
spend as we please. Its frustrating performing so well, yet still having to
live frugally and continuously make "either/or" decisions instead of
making "yes/and decisions." Instead of saying: "Yes, lets go to
our friends' wedding in Mexico AND buy tickets to that concert we want to see
next week" – these days, we're always saying: "We can take our cat to
the vet, OR we can buy that dresser for our bedroom – but not both, we need to
buy groceries."
So, I'm faced with the very real situation of having to ENDURE the time it
takes to get from Point A to Point B. And the trick to do this is to stay
COMPLETELY FOCUSED on the method that has fueled my turnaround, ignore the
dollar balance of the accounts, and minimize real-life distractions along the
way that inevitably get me thinking about whatever may be wrong outside of
work, but not about what is right and working on a daily basis.
The one thing that keeps me motivated is knowing that the in the end, the
Journey will have been totally worth it. My line of work is one of the hardest
professions to master. The road to Market Wizardry is littered with thousands
of well-intentioned (and some VERY well-funded) carcasses of promising
individuals who believed they had what it took to make a living as a Trader or
Speculator. But despite the challenges and long odds against the majority, the
few who make it are true masters of their universe. I don't mean to imply they
are gods or some kind of superhuman. I mean that the ones who truly make their
living in the markets have the best jobs in the world. In fact – to them (dare
I say "us"?) – trading or speculating isn't even a job. It's
something they love to do. And nobody can take their job away from them. They
are their own boss. They can trade any market in any country they want. They
can trade in boom times and in recessions. They can trade whenever they want.
They can vacation whenever they want.
This is true freedom, and freedom is what makes it all worth it. Patience and
Endurance will get me there.
Leisa here: I asked Sean to give Slopers a brief introduction. . . . .
In a past life starting in 1997 I traded equities for
several proprietary shops. I then moved on to start and manage a small
Commodities fund with a handful of investors. Following this, I leased a seat
at the Chicago Board of Trade.
Now after nearly 13 years, I exclusively trade options for
my own account out of the comforts of my home office in Chicago.
My trading strategy is discretionary and tends to be
swing-trade in style. My trading thesis is centered around being positioned for
the frequent and inevitable negative market surprises that throw lessor
mortals' trading plans into the vortex of indecision.
Outside of trading, I'm a hardened skeptic of governments
and politicians, a hockey fan, and lover of great music and cheap beer. You can
follow me on twitter: @chicagosean. And I've recently begun a blog titled I Guess I'll Say it Here.