The Resilience Trap: Why “Never Giving Up” Can Destroy Your Trading Account
One of the biggest trading psychology mistakes is misunderstanding resilience.
Think about it.
A baby learns to walk by falling — over and over again.
Riding a bicycle? Same story.
Sports? You lose, you train harder, and you come back stronger.
From childhood, we are programmed with one message:
👉 Don’t accept defeat. Try harder.
We admire it in athletes like Michael Jordan, in inventors like Thomas Edison, and in entrepreneurs like Colonel Harland Sanders.
And in most areas of life, this mindset works.
When Strength Becomes a Weakness
I grew up in sports.
- competitive basketball
- swimming coaching
- skiing
In every environment, one rule worked:
👉 If you’re losing, try harder.
I took that same mindset into my career — and it worked there too.
But then I started trading.
And surprisingly, the same mindset became my biggest problem.
The Real Reason Behind My Losses
It took me years — and a significant amount of money — to understand what was happening.
Every time my stop loss was hit, my instinct kicked in:
👉 “Don’t accept the loss. Enter again.”
Sometimes it worked.
And that made it worse.
Because it reinforced the belief that persistence would eventually win.
But over time:
👉 it didn’t.
It drained my account.
Trading Is Not Like Life
Here is the truth most traders never realize:
👉 Trading is one of the few environments where the rules of life are reversed.
In life:
- persistence creates success
In trading:
- persistence without control creates destruction
Redefining “Trying Harder”
This does NOT mean you shouldn’t work hard.
It means:
👉 you must apply effort in the right place
Where effort SHOULD go:
- backtesting your strategy
- building a written trading plan
- improving your psychology
- enforcing discipline
Where effort should NOT go:
- fighting the market
- re-entering after losses
- trying to “win back” money
The Hardest Skill in Trading
The hardest thing I had to learn was this:
👉 accepting a loss
It felt unnatural.
It went against everything I believed.
But in trading:
👉 a planned loss is not failure
👉 it is protection
This is one of the most common trading psychology mistakes traders make.
Aviation Perspective
In aviation, a pilot does not try to fight a storm to prove resilience.
They:
- reroute
- delay
- or stay grounded
👉 They protect the aircraft.
In trading:
👉 your capital is your aircraft
The Real Problem Behind Overtrading
If you struggle with overtrading, the issue is not technical.
👉 It’s psychological.
Ask yourself:
- Do I hate losing?
- Do I feel the need to “win back”?
- Do I believe stopping means failure?
👉 These beliefs are not wrong in life.
But in trading:
👉 they must be controlled
Final Thought
Resilience is a strength.
But in trading, it must be redefined.
You don’t prove strength by fighting every loss.
👉 You prove strength by walking away when your plan says stop — this is where real trading discipline is built.
Avex Traders
Trading is not about never losing. It’s about surviving long enough to win.