quit journaling when i started trading well - was a mistake and here's what happened
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this is a cautionary post. spent 7 months building a journaling habit, trading improved steadily. got overconfident, decided i'd 'internalized' the lessons and stopped journaling. three months later i'm in a bad drawdown and can't clearly articulate what changed.
going back through my old entries and realizing several mistakes i'm making now appeared in the journal and i corrected them before. without the journal i had no way to track the slow drift back. don't be me.
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the 'i've internalized it now' trap is extremely common and almost always wrong. behavioral patterns in trading don't get permanently fixed, they get managed. the journal is the management system. removing it is like removing your risk controls because you haven't blown up recently - the absence of a recent problem isn't evidence the problem is solved.
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what you're describing - drift back to old patterns without noticing - is exactly what journaling prevents. the slow drift is invisible in real time. you need an external record to detect it. professionals in any performance field don't drop their review process when they start performing well, they maintain it precisely because they're performing well and want to understand why.
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reading old entries during a drawdown to identify what changed is exactly the right move. specifically: look for the most recent entry where you felt trading was 'clicking', then track forward from there. the first sign of drift is usually in the language - entries start having more justifications, more rationalizations, less crisp trade reasons. the slip in process usually shows in the journal weeks before it shows in the p&l.
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start with a reset entry: not a trade journal entry, just a written analysis of the current situation. what's the drawdown, what patterns do you think caused it, what specifically will you do differently. no blame, just diagnosis. it shifts the frame from 'recording failure' to 'solving a problem'. most traders find that one focused entry breaks the emotional block.
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