
Let’s say you just went through a brutal losing streak. What happens next?
Do you spiral into frustration and start second-guessing every setup you see, or do you brush it off, reset, and stay focused on the next solid trading opportunity?
No matter how long you have been trading, there is always the risk of experiencing performance anxiety.
When trades do not go your way, it is easy to slip into doom mode and start thinking you have failed or that you are not cut out for this. That mindset can drag your performance down even further and eventually push you to walk away from trading altogether.
Instead of focusing on your flaws, try seeing the situation from a new perspective. It is called positive reevaluation, and it can be a game changer.
For illustrative purposes, let’s take a trader who has a habit of using stops that are way too tight because he’s afraid of losing too much.
Lately, he has been getting stopped out left and right, piling up a long losing streak. Now he is even more scared to enter new trades, worried he will lose more money. He is stuck in a vicious cycle that is freezing him in place.
Sure, you could say his mindset is negative, but with a little positive reevaluation, he can flip that weakness into a strength.
Instead of obsessing over the fear of losing, he can step back and realize it is really a position sizing issue. By trading smaller positions, he can risk less per trade and give his setups a bit more room to breathe with wider stops.
If you can reframe a negative thought, tendency, or trait into something useful, you can get it working for you instead of against you.
Now, imagine you are the kind of trader who gets swept up in emotion when a trade turns against you. Instead of sticking to your plan, you tend to widen your stop just to avoid taking a loss.
This is where positive reevaluation comes in. Rather than beating yourself up for being too emotional, try using that emotional reaction as useful feedback.
If you notice the urge to widen your stop creeping in, that might be your internal alarm going off. It could be your cue to cut the loss or scale back the position before things get worse.
Basically, instead of letting it take over you, you end up using your emotions as a signal to make better trading decisions.
So you see, looking at a problem from a different angle can go a long way in helping you improve your forex trading.
It can offer you new insights on how to approach a problem, and heck, it can even help you turn your perceived weaknesses into strengths!

