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Chapter 2 - Attitude survey

1. To make money as a trader you have to know what the market is going to do next. 

Agree Disagree 

2. Sometimes I find myself thinking that there must be a way to trade without having to take a loss. 

Agree Disagree 

3. Making money as a trader is primarily a function of analysis. 

Agree Disagree 

4. Losses are an unavoidable component of trading. 

Agree Disagree 

5. My risk is always defined before I enter a trade. 

Agree Disagree 

6. In my mind there is always a cost associated with finding out what the market may do next. 

Agree Disagree 

7. I wouldn't even bother putting on the next trade if I wasn't sure that it was going to be a winner. 

Agree Disagree 

8. The more a trader learns about the markets and how they behave, the easier it will be for him to 

execute his trades. 

Agree Disagree 

9. My methodology tells me exactly under what market conditions to either enter or exit a trade. 

Agree Disagree 

10. Even when I have a clear signal to reverse my position, I find it extremely difficult to do. 

Agree Disagree 

11. I have sustained periods of consistent success usually followed by some fairly drastic draw-downs 

in my equity. 

Agree Disagree 

12. When I first started trading I would describe my trading methodology as haphazard, meaning some 

success in between a lot of pain. 

Agree Disagree 

13. I often find myself feeling that the markets are against me personally. 

Agree Disagree 

14. As much as I might try to "let go," I find it very difficult to put past emotional wounds behind me. 

Agree Disagree 

15. I have a money management philosophy that is founded in the principle of always taking some 

money out of the market when the market makes it available. 

Agree Disagree 

16. A trader's job is to identify patterns in the markets' behavior that represent an opportunity and then 

to determine the risk of finding out if these patterns will play themselves out as they have in the past. 

Agree Disagree 

17. Sometimes I just can't help feeling that I am a victim of the market. 

Agree Disagree 

18. When I trade I usually try to stay focused in one time frame. 

Agree Disagree 

19. Trading successfully requires a degree of mental flexibility far beyond the scope of most people. 

Agree Disagree 

20. There are times when I can definitely feel the flow of the market; however, I often have difficulty 

acting on these feelings. 

Agree Disagree 

21. There are many times when I am in a profitable trade and I know the move is basically over, but I 

still won't take my profits. 

Agree Disagree 

22. No matter how much money I make in a trade, I am rarely ever satisfied and feel that I could have 

made more. 

Agree Disagree 

23. When I put on a trade, I feel I have a positive attitude. I anticipate all of the money I could make 

from the trade in a positive way. 

Agree Disagree 

24. The most important component in a trader's ability to accumulate money over time is having a 

belief in his own consistency. 

Agree Disagree 

25. If you were granted a wish to be able to instantaneously acquire one trading skill, what skill would 

you choose? 

26. I often spend sleepless nights worrying about the market. 

Agree Disagree 

27. Do you ever feel compelled to make a trade because you are afraid that you might miss out? 

Yes No 

28. Although it doesn't happen veiy often, I really like my trades to be perfect. When I make a perfect 

call it feels so good that it makes up for all of the times that I don't. 

Agree Disagree 

29. Do you ever find yourself planning trades you never execute, and executing trades you never 

planned? 

Yes No 

30. In a few sentences explain why most traders either don't make money or aren't able to keep what 

they make. 

Set aside your answers as you read through this book. Afte you've finished the last chapter ("Thinking 

Like a Trader"), take the Attitude Survey again—it s reprinted at the back of the book. You may be 

surprised to see how much your answers differ from the first time. 

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