how do you explain trading to family who think its gambling
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my parents still ask me 'are you done with the gambling thing yet' even though ive been consistently profitable for 3 years and trading is now my primary income. they cant separate 'trading' from the casino-style image they have of it from movies.
for anyone whose family eventually understood, what shifted their view? showing them returns didnt work for me (they think i was 'just lucky'). explaining risk management bores them.
curious if others have found a frame that lands.
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what helped with my family: comparing it to running a small business. 'i analyze markets, i take calculated positions with defined risk, i measure performance, i adapt strategy'. when framed as 'business operator' instead of 'trader' my parents understood it as work and stopped calling it gambling. semantic but effective.
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+1 on the small business framing. 'gambling' implies random outcomes you cant influence. 'running a quantitative trading business' implies skill, discipline, measurable improvement. same activity, fundamentally different mental model for non-traders.
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i say 'i run a small private trading business' or 'i do quantitative research on currency markets'. its honest but doesnt trigger the gambling associations. for casual social settings, sounding professional matters because people make snap judgements. for close friends and serious conversations, the full truth is fine.
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took my mom 5 years to stop worrying about my trading
what eventually worked: consistent monthly income going to my bank account for 18 months straight. she stopped seeing it as risky when she saw it functioning like any other job -
thats a definitional argument that ignores the practical difference. yes there's randomness in trading like in business. running a restaurant has randomness too. nobody calls that gambling. its risk management plus skill. labeling it 'gambling' obscures the actual nature of what skilled traders do.
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the conversation that converted my family: i showed them how i would have lost money if i didn't have specific rules, then showed them what happens when i follow rules. seeing the discipline aspect made them see it as skill not luck. the rules were the proof.
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framing. time. consistency. they come around.
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