Week 12 Recap: When One Week Feels Like Two
Some weeks are easy to explain. This wasn’t one of them.
Week 12 split itself into two very different halves. Same markets, same approach, but completely different outcomes. Early on, it felt like nothing was really working. By the end, things had settled, and the week closed green. Not dramatically, just quietly solid.
Looking at the numbers, Monday finished flat at 0R across five trades. Tuesday and Wednesday followed with controlled losses of -1.81R and -1.32R. Then the shift came. Thursday returned +3.49R from two trades, and Friday added +5.28R from three trades. Net result, a green week, but that doesn’t quite capture how it felt midweek.
A Flat Start That Wasn’t Really Flat
Monday is a good place to start because it highlights something that’s been showing up more often. It was a flat day on paper, but not in reality. There was a solid unrealised gain early in the session that slowly got given back. Not through one mistake, just a gradual erosion.
That raises a useful question. Am I managing downside better than upside?
Right now, it looks like the answer is yes. Losses are controlled. Risk is respected. There’s no sense of things getting out of hand. But locking in gains, especially when they’re there early, is still inconsistent. Both sides matter, and at the moment they’re developing at slightly different speeds.
Midweek Pressure, Controlled but Not Comfortable
Midweek is where things got uncomfortable, but also where some real progress showed up. Three red days in a row if you include Monday’s flat result. Confidence dipped a bit, especially trading metals, which felt slightly out of sync. Entries would trigger, but follow through wasn’t there, and moves stalled just before they should extend.
It’s a frustrating environment. Not chaotic, just enough friction to wear you down.
The important part is what didn’t happen. There was no revenge trading, no increase in size, and no deviation from the plan. Losses were capped under 2R each day, consistently. That’s not luck, that’s structure holding up under pressure. It might not feel like a win in the moment, but it is. It’s what keeps a rough patch from turning into a damaging week.
Then Something Shifted
The second half of the week felt different, but not in a dramatic way. Trade frequency dropped, execution felt cleaner, and outcomes improved.
Thursday delivered +3.49R from two trades, and Friday followed with +5.28R from three. A five trade win streak closed things out. Fewer trades, better outcomes. That combination usually points to something subtle improving rather than anything major changing.
The Goldilocks Problem
If there’s one idea that stands out from this week, it’s this. Not all zones are worth trading, even if they look valid.
Earlier in the week, there was a tendency to engage with tighter zones. They looked clean and precise, but didn’t carry much weight in live conditions. Price would interact, but not respect them in a meaningful way, which led to getting tagged in and then chopped out.
Later in the week, the focus shifted toward more balanced zones. Areas with enough structure to matter, but also enough space for the trade to develop properly. Not too tight, not too broad. That change alone reduced the need to take marginal setups and improved follow through on the trades that were taken.
You can see it reflected in activity as well. Early in the week there were 5, 7, and 3 trades per day. Later, that dropped to 2 and 3. Less activity, better outcomes. That’s usually a sign that selection is improving.
The Quiet Win (That Doesn’t Show in R)
It would be easy to point to the green PnL as the highlight of the week. It wasn’t.
The real win was getting through three difficult days without any emotional escalation. No spiral, no urgency to recover losses, no shift into reactive trading.
That wasn’t always the case, and it’s the kind of progress that doesn’t show up in a results column but shows up everywhere else over time.
So What Actually Improved
Not the strategy. Not the market. Just execution.
Better zone selection, less overtrading, and continued discipline around risk. Profit protection still needs work, especially on days where gains are there early, but the foundation feels stronger.
Final Thought
Progress doesn’t arrive cleanly. It shows up in fragments.
You improve one side, like loss control, while another still needs work, like protecting profits. You go through rough patches, then things start to click, not perfectly, but enough.
Week 12 wasn’t perfect, but it was honest. And more importantly, it felt like progress that can actually be repeated.
Trade well. Stay ordinary.










