July 31, 2025
Why the Best Traders Don’t Dwell on Mistakes—and How You Can Shift Gears When You’re Stuck. Top traders don’t dwell on mistakes. Learn how to shift mental gears, break self-destructive patterns, and trade with clarity and control.
Imagine this.
You’re driving up a steep hill, full of ambition. You slam the car into high gear, thinking you’ll reach the top faster. But instead, the car slows down… and stalls.
That’s exactly how many Indian traders feel in their trading journey. They start with excitement. They go big, aim high, and take huge trades—without realising their engine (skills, mindset, capital) isn’t strong enough yet.
The result? They stall. Worse, they repeat the pattern until their trading account—and confidence—gets wiped out.

But here’s the truth:
The best traders don’t get stuck.
They don’t obsess over past losses. They don’t fear future mistakes. They live in the present, adjust quickly, and shift into the right gear when needed.
In this blog, we’ll explore why being stuck is more psychological than technical, how your past may be affecting your trades today, and how to build the awareness and courage to downshift and start again—without shame or self-doubt.
Recurrent trading mistakes—like oversizing positions, revenge trading, or entering without confirmation—are often symptoms, not causes.
So what’s really going on?
“We don’t trade the markets. We trade our beliefs about the markets.” – Dr. Brett Steenbarger
According to Steenbarger’s The Psychology of Trading, many traders unknowingly carry emotional baggage from childhood. You might crave validation, recognition, or attention—and trading becomes the arena to prove your worth.
Raj, a 34-year-old IT professional from Pune, started trading part-time. After a couple of wins, he began placing huge trades. He told himself, “If I hit it big, my family will finally respect my passion.”
He blew up 40% of his capital in 3 months.
What Raj didn’t realise was that he wasn’t trading the charts—he was trading for approval.
This is how emotional patterns can creep in and sabotage you without you even noticing.
You’ve read the advice: Trade small. Be consistent. Risk only 1–2%.
But when emotions take the wheel, logic gets left behind.
The real issue?
Your ego refuses to acknowledge your current limitations.
Admitting that you’re not ready to size up feels like failure. So you keep pushing harder, even when it’s costing you.
“Losses in trading are inevitable. But how we take them determines if we grow or go broke.” – Anonymous Trader
If you try to accelerate in 4th gear on a steep slope, the engine will choke.
But in 1st or 2nd gear? You climb steadily, even if slowly.
Trading is no different.
When you’re stuck:
When we’re in the mess, we rarely see it. That’s where the Observer mindset helps.
“Between stimulus and response, there is a space. In that space lies our power to choose.” – Viktor Frankl
Seeing yourself from a neutral perspective isn’t easy—but it’s the most powerful skill a trader can build.
Let’s be honest:
Slow, steady trading feels dull.
It doesn’t give the thrill of chasing big winners. It doesn’t feed the fantasy of quitting your job in 6 months.
But it works.
“The goal is not excitement. The goal is profitability.”
If you truly want to win, accept that:
Step 1: Pattern Recognition
Step 2: Emotional Inventory
Ask:
Step 3: Downshift
Step 4: External Guidance
“What feels like a setback is often just your mind telling you: you’re in the wrong gear.”
If you’re stuck, stop trying to brute-force your way out.
Slow down. Shift gears. Relearn. Rebuild.
There is no shame in going back to the basics.
In fact, it’s the only way many successful traders eventually make it.
Many traders in India feel like they’re always behind. Always chasing. Always proving.
But trading isn’t a race. It’s a skill-based journey where self-awareness is your biggest edge.
So if you’re stuck, acknowledge it without shame.
Shift gears, not blame.
Trade small, learn big—and live to trade another day.
Drop your thoughts in the comments—what mental gear are you in right now?