Resources

Tools for the disciplined.

Books, mental models, and frameworks that reinforce the core idea: the best traders are defined by what they don't do.

Essential reading

Trading in the Zone

Mark Douglas

The definitive text on trading psychology. Douglas explains why the edge is mental, not mechanical.

Reminiscences of a Stock Operator

Edwin Lefèvre

Jesse Livermore's story. The origin of "it was my sitting that made the big money."

The Disciplined Trader

Mark Douglas

Douglas's first book. More tactical than Trading in the Zone. Focuses on developing a winner's mindset.

Market Wizards

Jack D. Schwager

Interviews with top traders. The recurring theme: risk management and patience are what separate the best.

Thinking in Bets

Annie Duke

Not a trading book, but essential reading. How to make decisions under uncertainty and separate process from outcome.

The Art of Execution

Lee Freeman-Shor

What separates traders who make money from those who don't. Not stock picking. Execution discipline.

Mental models

Asymmetry of Loss

A 50% loss requires a 100% gain to recover. A 33% loss requires a 50% gain. The math always favors preservation over recovery.

Regime Awareness

Markets cycle through regimes: trending/ranging, expanding/contracting volatility. A strategy that works in one regime will destroy capital in another.

Opportunity Cost of Action

Every bad trade costs you twice: the loss itself, and the capital + clarity you no longer have for the next real setup.

Base Rate Neglect

90% of retail traders lose money. Before asking "will this trade work?" ask "am I doing something structurally different from the 90%?"

Process Over Outcome

A good process with a bad outcome is still a good process. A bad process with a good outcome is still a bad process. Judge the decision, not the result.

Inversion

Instead of asking "how do I make money trading?" ask "how do most people lose money trading?" Then stop doing those things.

Daily practice

Before the open

Identify the regime. Is the market trending or ranging? Expanding or contracting volatility? Write down which strategies are allowed today and which are blocked. If the answer is "none are allowed," that's the plan. The plan is to sit.

During the session

Every time you feel the urge to trade, write down why. Is it because the setup meets your criteria? Or because you're bored, anxious about missing out, or chasing a loss? If it's the second one, hands on lap.

After the close

Review every big mover you didn't trade. Did it pass your filters? Was it blocked only by regime? If yes, your engine is intact and you were disciplined. If no, your scanner needs work. That distinction matters.