# A Common But Rarely Discussed Phenomenon in Trading



There's a very common but rarely seriously discussed phenomenon in trading.

When making money, trading is often very "normal":
There's a plan, there's rhythm, positions aren't large, and stop-losses are executed decisively.
But the moment you have a few consecutive losses, the entire system seems to change.

What used to be trading only one pattern suddenly becomes wanting to try every opportunity;
Fixed position sizes suddenly become bigger with each trade;
Stop-losses that were previously set are suddenly reconsidered when price reaches them—"let me wait a bit more."

Later, when looking back at those losing trades, even you feel like a stranger:
Did I really make those trades?

Actually, most people don't lose because of the market.
They lose because of—
**That period of time after the losses.**

Many problems aren't that the system changed, but that **people changed.**

## I. Trading Distortion Often Starts with "I Need to Make Back That Money"

The most natural reaction after losing money is:
"I have to make back what I lost."

This sounds normal, but it has quietly changed the logic of trading.

Originally, trading was about waiting for opportunities;
But once the thought "I need to make it back" enters your head, things gradually start to go wrong.

You're no longer just waiting for opportunities—you start actively searching for them.
These two sound similar but are completely different.

Then many things begin to shift:
More "opportunities" appear, trades become more frequent, position sizes gradually expand.
On the surface it looks like effort, but it's actually desperation to break even.
And desperation to break even is often where trading starts spiraling out of control.

## II. After Consecutive Losses, People Start Doubting Their System

There's a very subtle psychological shift in trading:
When making money, we believe in the system;
When losing money, we doubt the system.

Many strategies actually allow for drawdowns by design.
But when several consecutive trades go against you, the brain automatically produces an explanation:
"Is the method not working?"

So you start:
Changing timeframes, changing indicators, changing entry methods.
On the surface it looks like optimization, but often it's just escaping the discomfort caused by losses.

The system is supposed to be executed long-term,
But driven by emotion, many people make frequent changes at exactly the time they shouldn't.

Gradually, trading stops being driven by the system and starts being driven by emotion.
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