Trading should be boring

Most people come into trading looking for excitement. Fast moves. Big wins. Adrenaline. That expectation is usually where things start to go wrong.

The best trading days I’ve had are forgettable. No drama. No stories worth telling. Just routine.

I sit down at the same time. I look at the same markets. I follow the same process. There’s nothing clever or impressive about it.

When a trade works, it doesn’t feel amazing. It feels expected. When it doesn’t, it’s accepted, logged, and left alone.

Emotion is expensive in trading. Excitement leads to oversizing. Frustration leads to overtrading. Boredom, it turns out, is much safer.

As my routine became more consistent, I felt less during the session. That isn’t a flaw. That’s the point.

I’m not trying to read the market in real time. I’m trying to execute a process I’ve already thought through. The thinking happens before the session. During the session, I follow instructions.

Repetition builds trust. Trust in the setup. Trust in the risk. Without that, every trade feels like a gamble rather than a decision.

Most deviations start small. A slightly early entry. A slightly wider stop. In the moment, they don’t feel like mistakes.

They show up later in the journal. Not because the trade lost, but because the routine broke.

Boring trading looks the same every day. Same risk. Same rules. Same response to wins and losses. No improvisation.

If I feel excited, something is off. If I feel rushed, I stop. If I feel the urge to make something happen, I’m already done for the day.

This isn’t about removing personality. It’s about removing noise. The market provides enough uncertainty on its own.

Trading shouldn’t feel like a highlight reel. It should feel like work. Quiet, repetitive, sometimes dull work.

And that’s exactly why it works.

Trade well. Stay ordinary.
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