Tag Archive for: amygdala

Today’s post is going to be a unique article on something rarely discussed in trading – sleep.

As a trader, your success is overly dependent upon your brain being healthy. And one of the primary factors which determines your brain’s health is sleep quality.

Recently Dr. Walker from the UC Berkeley Sleep & Neuroimaging lab began the first neural studies on the emotional brain without sleep. The results were impressive and could be behind why your trading performance is struggling.

Here is how the experiment went:

sleep and emotion 2ndskiesforex

After 1.5 days without proper sleep, the subjects neural activity resembled that of depression & anxiety.

Why?

When deprived of proper sleep, the amygdala (triggers fight-flight reactions) goes into hyperdrive.

Below is an image of the difference in neural activity from sleep deprived brains vs. normal sleep (source: UC Berkeley Sleep & Neuroimaging Lab).

brain after sleep deprivation image 1 2ndskiesforex

In the top group (people who got normal amounts of sleep) you can see the green circles. That is the neural activity in the amygdala. Compare that level of activity to the sleep deprived brains below.

The sleep deprived brains had far greater amygdala stimulation vs. those with normal sleep.

Why does this matter for your brain and trading performance?

A highly triggered amygdala cuts off access to your PFC (pre-frontal cortex). You need the PFC because it’s what helps you make logical decisions and remain calm while trading.

No access to the PFC = really bad trading decisions. It means having negative emotional reactions to any winning trade going against you or getting stopped out from a losing trade.

To show how important the PFC is, consider the following scenario:

amygdala and prefrontal cortex activity 2ndskiesforex

Basically you just lost about 10-20 IQ points in <1 second. In other words, you just went from smart to stupid. Good luck trading with stupid!

Ever been incredibly afraid to take a loss but couldn’t explain why? More than likely you were in a fight-or-flight response triggered by your amygdala.

Have you felt paralyzed to make the right decision in trading, even though you ‘knew‘ what to do? You were in a fight-or-flight response.

Even healthy brains showed how they could mimic pathological patterns from sleep deprivation.

In fact clinical evidence shows some form of sleep deprivation is present in almost all psychiatric disorders.

Can you now see how important getting proper sleep is now to your brain and profits?

Sleep Affects Your Positive & Negative Biases

In a correlated experiment by Walker, sleep deprived students tried to memorize a list of words. The words had either a positive or negative connotation.

Subjects who had less sleep than normal (6hrs or less) remembered 81% of the words with a negative connotation. Hence words like ‘cancer‘, ‘anger‘, and ‘pain‘.

How many words with a positive connotation could the same people remember? 31%

Getting less sleep than needed triggers a massive bias in your brain towards the negative.

It means trading on less sleep = noticing what’s wrong, not what’s right with your trading.

It leads to every pip the market moves against you feels ‘threatening’.

It translates to losses triggering negative emotional responses, and not being a part of the game.

How can you expect to trade profitably with this brain and mindset? How can you build a winning trading psychology with this brain and mind?

To hammer the point home, below is another image of sleep deprived brains vs. those who got normal sleep (source: current biology).

brain after sleep deprivation image 2 2ndskiesforex

The first three brains (sleep deprived) show red spots in the center of the brain (more primal functions). Contrast this to the yellow spots (those who got proper sleep). Notice how the location of activity is different (in the front)?

Most of the yellow spots of neural activity are in the pre-frontal cortex. You need the PFC active to trade successfully (image below).

pre frontal cortex for trading 2ndskiesforex

Sleep Debt is Cumulative

One last experiment on how sleep affects your trading performance before I discuss solutions.

At the Univ. of Pennsylvania, researchers got 48 men & women with normal sleep habits (avg. 7-8 hrs per night).

They split these people into 4 groups:

cognitive performance on sleep deprivation 2ndskiesforex

How did they perform?

Group 4 (8hrs of sleep) showed no declines in their cognitive performance, motor skills or attention.

Groups 2 and 3 showed steady declines in all categories each passing day.

Group 2 (4hrs of sleep) obviously performed the worst, however group 3 didn’t do much better.

Hence sleep debt with every passing day has cumulative effects. There is a neurological cost that accumulates in your brain over time.

Group 3 had 25% of their subjects falling asleep randomly throughout the day only after 1 week. By week 2, there performance was so bad, it was as if they had not slept for 2 days.

But to sum up the results from the experiment, let me put it another way:

If you get 6hrs of sleep per night for two weeks, your mental & physical performance = that of not sleeping for 2 days straight!

Below is a great graph showing how many cognitive lapses subjects had based on how little sleep they got over time.

performance lapses from sleep deprivation 2ndskiesforex

Interestingly enough, when the groups had to evaluate their performance, they were off by a mile. They only thought their performance dipped for a few days. In fact it declined every day!

Here’s a great read on how people are really bad at evaluating their own performance.

6 Solutions To Getting More Sleep & A Better Brain

Now that I’ve convinced you (hopefully) how important sleep is for the health of your brain and success in trading, it’s time for solutions.

Below are 6 solutions or tips for getting better sleep and keeping your brain healthy.

#1: Develop A Schedule and Sleep Ritual

As someone who’s struggled with getting proper sleep for 4 decades, the best sleep I ever got in my life was in 2011.

What was so special about 2011?

I was doing a 1 year meditation retreat and had a strict schedule. Out of 365 days that year, I aced that schedule 350 of those days with two weeks of travel responsible for the rest.

meditation-for-trading-chris-capre

By 10.30pm every night, I was asleep (actually asleep, not just in bed). I got up at 6.30am sharp every day for my 7.30 morning practice. And go figure – I never slept better in my entire life.

Hence – develop a sleep ritual and schedule.

What is a key component of a sleep ritual?

-Dis-engaging from your work activities

The last thing you want to do is work up till the moment you fall asleep.

Ever had dreams of being in trades? My guess is you were trading up till the moment you feel asleep.

“What you think about right before sleep can prime your unconscious mind & what you dream about.”

I try to read something positive (about buddhism or meditation) before I fall asleep. This way I’m priming my mind to have conscious healthy activity while sleeping.

Whatever you do, try to clear your head and get into a positive relaxed space before falling asleep.

#2 Be Tired Physically

There is nothing that will help you sleep better than being physically tired. Doing some sort of physically challenging exercise a couple of hours before bed is a great way to sleep well.

Exercise helps do two key things for your sleep:

1) produce neurotransmitters which help your brain relax and

2) primes your body to ‘recover’ and thus sleep deeply

Hence take a yoga class, do martial arts, hit the gym or go for a walk to sleep deeply.

I started taking Wing Chun classes and my body feels better than ever.

(Photo of Ip Man – Founder of Wing Chun training Bruce Lee)

wing-chun-ip-man-2ndskiesforex

#3 Take A Nap

Europeans and Latin Americans seem to have this down pat. North Americans…not so much.

Trading and work causes stress and cognitive load (CL) on your brain.

Taking a nap will help reduce cognitive load while increasing alertness during your day.

It also prevents burnout, reduces the risk of heart disease and increases sensory perception.

Hence if you can find a way, take a nap.

Here is a picture below of my two cats helping me with such napping activities 🙂

cats napping with chris

#4 Temperature

The body and brain are trying to wind down before sleeping. Hot rooms tend to cause more disturbed sleep.

But cool rooms tend to promote greater sleep.

Ever notice on airplanes how they make it so damn cold? This is to help induce sleep (sleepy passengers = less work for the aircrew).

#5 Skip the Nightcap

Although it sounds sexy to invite the femme fatale in for a night cap, you’ll actually get worse sleep with alcohol in your system.

Alcohol dehydrates the brain and body. This can delay your REM cycle while also causing your adrenaline to spike (alcohol subdues the adrenal glands).

Hence avoid any alcohol (or caffeine) several hours before falling asleep to keep your adrenals relaxed.

#6 Meditation

The science is clear at this point – meditation gives you a better brain.

Meditation:

-strengthens your immune system

-improves neural structure

-slows brain degeneration

-increases IQ

-and raises cognitive performance.

It is also fantastic for falling asleep as it calms your mind.

Below is a great image of your brain before and after meditation.

brain before and after meditation 2ndskiesforex

The brain on the left (before meditation) is one that is overly active and definitely not relaxed.

The brain on the right however is as calm as a zen buffalo.

Click on the link below to learn a meditation practice for trading.

Meditation for Trading – My 15 Years Of Practice

In Conclusion

Your brain is the most dominant variable which determines your success in trading.

One of the most important factors which can affect your brain’s performance is sleep.

Losing a few hours sleep each day has a cumulative effect upon your brain and can literally lower your IQ.

The good thing is you now have 6 techniques which can improve your sleep quality and time.

Hopefully now you can see how important sleep is to your mental well-being and trading performance.

With that being said, are you often emotional or reacting negatively while trading?

What techniques do you use to get some deep sleep?

Make sure to comment and share below.

And if you want to overcome your emotions while trading and improve cognitive performance, make sure to sign up for my Advanced Traders Mindset Course which opens in a few weeks.

Being the last in a line of 6 kids, my closest brother growing up (Mike) was 2.5yrs older. This translated into him being a lot bigger (and taller) than me.

In my early years, my parents would often go to the movies and leave us home. Back then, cable TV was not like what it is today. After 2pm, there was no more TV, and only 30 channels were available.

Movies were not as ubiquitous as they are today, so many of those would repeat. One such movie was ‘Rocky‘. Ever inspired by such flicks, my brother and I would take all the furniture in the living room, push it to the walls and create a ‘ring‘.

We didn’t have boxing equipment, so we’d dig into our winter gear – grabbing ski hats and two sets of snow gloves. Minutes later we were going 5-10 rounds.

The problem with this scenario was the massive height advantage my brother had. He could simply fire away at range before I could even make contact, let alone cause damage.

This translated into me getting hit first, taking punishment on the way in. I had to fight through before I could start to cash in.

I definitely got knocked down more than he did. But every time I got knocked down, something in me emerged more as the fights went on.

At first it was frustration. This then transformed into anger. However the next step wasn’t an escalation in this line of feeling (which would have been rage).

Instead, I started to embrace the challenge – embrace the fight. I would relish in my abilities to take punishment while keep fighting on. I had to get smarter, learn to endure, and fight through the obstacles.

Without a doubt, I lost many of those battles. But I was determined to get my damage in, and keep on fighting.

Afterwards we’d take off the ski gear, move the furniture back as if nothing had happened. Next in the routine was to look at our faces in the mirror – observing the damage.

None of us said much, we just appreciated these little battles, and whatever scars came with. Why do I share such personal sentiments?

Mental Toughness for Trading

From all the emails & comments I get: the questions, worries, and doubts from struggling traders, I think a strong dose of mental toughness would be a game changer.

This article is going to be a 250 cc shot to kickstart a change in your mindset, build up confidence, and help you see victory.

Before I give my key tips to helping you build mental toughness for trading (and life), I have to share this disclaimer:

I do not claim to be the pinnacle of mental toughness. I experience doubt, worry & fear. Sometimes in these moments, I crack, falter or fall. But I will get up & try again. Often times, my first reaction when things go badly, is to get frustrated. Next I get angry. Luckily, that fuse burns quick and transforms into a particular focus (which I’ll share later).

Disclaimers aside, let’s jump into building your own mental toughness gear to survive and thrive in trading and life.

#1 Coping Is Not the Endgame

There is one trade you can bet on being 100% accurate – that you will encounter obstacles, losses, and setbacks in life and trading.

Most of the trading psychology and mental strategies I see other ‘gurus‘ dish out like microwave psychology meals is to ‘cope‘ with such moments. And herein lies the problem.

“Coping by itself is not the endgame, nor an effective overall strategy for dealing with losses, obstacles & setbacks.”

mental toughness for trading coping strategy 2ndskiesforex

It is a part of the strategy, but it is only one stage in dealing with mental, emotional or physical stress. You could equate it to treading water among crashing waves when you need to swim for shore.

This leads us to our next wilderness tool to survive and thrive in trading and life.

#2 Embracing the Challenge

embracing the challenge 2ndskiesforex

The next part of building mental toughness is to embrace the challenge. This means expecting it as being a given, while preparing for it in advance.

Big piles of dog-shit will land right on the front door of our lives, often times when we least expect it. Being prepared will help you step over such moments.

Embracing the challenge = an understanding that discipline & hard work builds a successful mindset.

It means giving up any ‘victim mentality‘. It means the death of you saying such statements as why me?‘, ‘if I only had this, I’d be successful…, or becoming religious during a losing trade.

It means not beating yourself down when you make a mistake or things go wrong, which only intensifies our negativity bias in trading, leading to more losses.

We have to be employing a positive mindset when our trades go south and life gives us a gut shot.

Embracing the challenge helps us bring a gun to a knife fight vs. those with a negativity bias. It also leads to the next key step in building mental toughness.

#3 Thriving on Adversity in the Face of Obstacles

thriving on adversity forex trading 2ndskiesforex

Once we’ve embraced the challenges in front of us, we now have a steering wheel to turn this vehicle in the right direction. To complete the turn, we have to shift into a new gear, which means thriving on adversity in the face of obstacles.

I could have easily come up with excuses why I couldn’t beat up my brother. It would have been far more convenient to look for a way out instead of getting punched in the face.

But something inside me said ‘fuck this…I’m going to damn well land my share regardless of how much I take on the way in‘.

Thriving on adversity while facing obstacles flips the coin with our mindset and the blue-light specials peddled as ‘trading psychology‘.

It takes the situation and turns it on it’s head, meaning you now look for solutions instead of focusing on the problems. It eliminates any victim responses which only deflate your self-image, or ability to rally your forces when behind in the game.

What would happen if instead of saying ‘poor me‘, or making excuses in trading, you grabbed the charging bull by its sharp horns and said ‘I’m going to mount you on my wall when this is done‘?

What would that do to your mindset the next time an obstacle got in your way.

Every time you overcome an obstacle, you build trust & confidence in your self-image & abilities.

Every time you give an excuse for why you didn’t succeed, you deflate your self-image.

“Overcoming is the real currency of success.”

Start investing in that – of embracing your obstacles and using them to test yourself as you climb the mountain of success.

#4 Drop the Problem Focused Mindset

Our negativity bias is quite strong in our brains. How strong?

If we were to map out all the neural connections and real-estate in your brain, you’d have 500% more networks dedicated towards a negative bias vs. a positive one (on average).

You can read more about the negativity bias self-image and comfort zone here.

Focusing on the problems only activates this negativity bias even more. It does so via two predictable neurological responses:

1) Your brain will search it’s database for other problems that matched (or were similar) to the current experience

2) Your brain will become more likely to trigger the fight, flight or freeze response

Why does your brain do this?

Regarding the first problem (no pun intended), the brain is a pattern recognition machine. Every input it experiences will be referenced for similar data points in our memory banks.

Focusing on problems only re-activates these neural networks.

If you remember from my last article, I shared two key points about the brain and neuroplasticity:

1) Neurons that fire together, wire together

and

2) Passing mental states become lasting neural traits

What this means is if you continually reactivate the neural networks which stored your problems, you only make these stronger and more dominant (thus increasing our negativity bias).

This leads back to point 2 – whereby your brain becomes more likely to trigger the fight, flight or freeze response.

The primary part of the brain which activates this reaction is your amygdala, a little almond like structure of neural tissue near the middle of your brain, and part of the limbic system.

parts of the brain 2ndskiesforex

The amygdala is super fast to react to any threat. The more you do this, the larger the grey-matter and brain tissue becomes. This only increases your propensity to react to said threats.

This is a major reason why every pip the markets moves against you creates a far greater psychological (& neurological) response vs. when the market moves in your favor.

It’s the basis behind every negative psychological bias you have, whether it be the recency bias, loss aversion bias, or pretty much any ‘bias‘ behind our bad trades.

Another problem with continually activating the amygdala is it actually reduces grey matter!

A triggered amydala takes us out of the PFC (pre-frontal cortex). The PFC is critical to analyzing the price action context, pulling the trigger when we need to, and making profitable trades.

Done enough times, and your hippocampus (helpful for regulating emotions and making calm/calculated decisions) will see a reduction in grey matter, thus making you more prone towards emotional (read: fearful, worrisome, doubtful) decisions.

In a few less words – set off the amygdala + fight or flight response, and you’ve lost about 10-20 IQ points. Good luck making profitable trades with that!

Hence drop the problem focused mindset as it will only increase your negativity bias and trading losses. The solution is the next tool in building mental toughness.

#5 Adopt A Solution Focused Mindset

positive mindset

Remember how I talked about your brain scanning the database for similar experiences when encountering a problem? A solution focused mindset by default bypasses the negativity bias.

This approach leads your brain to actively scan for solutions. It will look for either identical (or related) situations whereby you encountered the obstacle, yet found a solution.

This has the triple benefit of:

a) building up your neural networks for finding solutions,

b) reducing your negativity bias

c) adopting a positive mindset.

I’m guessing you can see the benefits of creating this trio above. One key thing to note is adopting a positive mindset means you are less likely to take a victim mentality in the face of adversity. It also helps to build up your self-image.

Focusing on problems only tells you what’s wrong with the situation – it doesn’t tell your brain what to do. Contrast this to a solution based mindset which specifically tells your brain what to do when you experience difficulties, losses or adversity.

Done enough times, you build a brain which is wired to solve, overcome and achieve. After many laps and repetitions here, you have laid the foundation for the sixth tool in building mental toughness.

#6 The No-Obstacle Mindset

no obstacle mindset 2ndskiesforex

NOTE: Before I jump into this next tool, grab a beverage + something to snack on as this is a juicy (but good sized) story.

In July this year, Aruna (my partner) and I taught the Singapore Seminar – Change the Way You Think, Trade & Perform at the Ritz-Carlton Millennia.

This was supposed to be a 2-day event. What ended up happening was a movie-like Us vs. the Volcano.

A week before the event we were in Bali, mostly relaxing and getting ready for the event.

The flight from Bali is only a few hours to Singapore.

The day of the flight was also the day before the seminar was to start, so we decided to fly out early, get to Singapore by lunch, and have plenty of time to do our final prep. Nature had other plans.

Getting to the airport early, we quickly find out our flight is delayed. The airline attendants said ‘you’re flying out today, there’s just a small delay‘.

I thought – Ok…2hrs gives us plenty of time to still get there well ahead of schedule.

While waiting, I started to notice during these 2 hours how the airport was getting more full by the moment. Pretty soon, the flight board was showing more and more flight delays (see below).

all flights cancelled

Bells going off in my head that something was wrong, I went back to the airline counter. What I found out was the worst news we could get.

Hundreds of kilometers west of us, there was a volcano. It wasn’t spewing lava, but it was ‘active‘ and puffing out huge plumes of smoke from the bowels of the earth. Although the skies looked fine, flights were still grounded as the smoke pillows ventured west…right towards our airport!

The real danger in flying with volcano smoke isn’t the visibility…it’s the ash getting sucked up into the engines, which then crystallize, and pretty much destroy the engine from the inside out.

The thing about it is – the airline attendants knew about the volcano the first time they told us of the delays, they just decided to not inform us of that fact.

When I came back the second time, I investigated what was really going on, and they finally told us why. Needless to say, I was furious as losing those 2hrs reduced my options tremendously. It was now the afternoon and no flights were likely getting out for the rest of the day, perhaps even a week.

My first response (like when I was a kid) was frustration…which led to anger…which led to me practically yelling at the guy (who was nice throughout the whole process, even though they f-d up in not telling us earlier IMO).

I was about to teach a 2-day seminar, with people coming from over 10 countries, one of them flying over 10,000 kilometers to be there.

This was more than just the money & reputation I’d potentially lose from cancelling the event.  It was about all those who spent their hard earned benji’s, taken off work, booked flights and hotels, which were now non-refundable.

How long was I frustrated, angry and feeling like I wanted to take someone out mafia style? About 1 minute. However, considering I’ve had an abundance of obstacles, problems and adversities in my life (some self-inflicted), I went into my general default mode – which is to look for solutions.

Because I’ve done this so many times, my mindset quickly resets and doesn’t see the obstacles, or get stuck. It works to go around, climb over, see through, or solve them…whatever it takes.  It is the same mentality Navy Seals have, and it is one you need to succeed in trading and life.

no obstacle mindset mental toughness 2ndskiesforex

This is called the No-Obstacle Mindset. It means that no matter what the obstacle is, you see it for what it is – an illusion. It means you see the solution and all the steps in between that get you there right from the beginning. It means you actually see yourself solving the problem, and doing everything you have to to make it happen.

Back to the airport fiasco, the situation was quickly degenerating with the crowds growing by the second. There were literally news cameramen filming the situation inside the airport. So what did we do?

After quickly assessing the situation, we had to setup a better base camp. Through the tortuga paced internet, already strained by more users than it could handle, we booked a hotel room nearby.  Needless to say, rooms were going up fast (along with the price) by the second.

We then contacted our agent on the ground (Ivan Delgado) who works with FXstreet, and ironically, was going to the event. So now we were both in the same situation.

The reality was this – all flights east of the volcano were grounded. That means the nearest airport (which only flew domestic) had no flights as well. We simply couldn’t get out. The nearest airport was in Surabaya (Java), which was a 10+ hour drive by car.

I called the only local helicopter service, but he had a full book already, so no go there regardless of what price I offered him. There was only one other option – we’d have to wade through the Indonesian jungles, and jam-packed over-populated cities.

Ivan came up with a great plan and talked to his brother-in-law, a former truck driver who was part Jack Bauer-part Michael Schumacher. If the airlines told us at 6:30 am the next day all flights were grounded, we’d activate plan B and make the drive (which included a ferry to the island of Java).

Sure as sh!t, 6:30 am came, with the news all flights were grounded for the entire day. 30 minutes later, we had booked the last flight out of Surabaya to Singapore. However this was not the end of the adventure though.

To make the last flight out, we could only take 3 loo breaks, 2 of which had to be during gas refills. This plan B also meant we’d have to re-arrange the event with the attendees, catering and hotel till the next day since we’d only arrive at 2 am.

On top of this, we had to arrange for the hotel dry cleaning service ready to press our travel-wrinkled suits. At best, we’d have 3.5hrs of sleep for a 12 hour event. Somehow, we’d jumped over all the obstacles, and had an amazing event with the traders coming out completely different than how they came in.

Below is a photo of all the attendees (notice the blood shot eyes from no sleep with me – far left?)

singapore seminar 2ndskiesforex

Photo of Ritz Carlton in Singapore where we we were staying at.

ritz carlton singapore 2ndskiesforex

Having a problem focused mindset would never have gotten us through this situation with flying colors (perhaps not even at all). It would have led to us being worried, fearful and complaining about what was wrong with the situation.

A solution based mindset was the only way we could have handled this, but there was one missing ingredient. We had to have the mindset of no-obstacle. We had to see the solution, and every step in between.

There was no space for doubt, which would only lead to delays, and we had no time to spare. Everything had to fall into place with dozens of small steps and decisions to make it work. It took everyone having a positive optimistic mindset that we could handle this situation.

The power of having a mindset of no-obstacle means you have the confidence, experience and belief there is nothing you can’t solve, figure out, or handle. Imagine how your trading process would be if you adopted this approach and made it the bedrock of your mindset.

 

In Closing

chris capre trading office 2ndskiesforex

I’ve just shared with you what I’d consider to be a solid foundation in building mental toughness for life and trading.

This is certainly not meant to be the end of it, nor the last article I do on it.

However, the methods, strategies and models in here can completely change your brain, mindset and performance.

To recap, you learned how:

1) Coping is not the endgame, but just a small step in the process
2) To embrace the challenges which helps you expect, prepare and take them on
3) How thriving on adversity flips the equation on its head and helps you to look forward to obstacles
4) Why you need to drop the problem focused mindset as it increases your negativity bias
5) That the answer is to adopt a solution focused mindset so you only concentrate on what you need to do
6) How the no-obstacle mindset gives you a mentality which overcomes

Take on all the above, and you can re-wire your brain for success in trading and life. This is a very real thing.

Mental toughness can turn your mind, thoughts and actions from losing trades to making money.

It can give you strength, resilience and confidence to meet your challenges of trading head on, replacing your fears, doubts and worries.

It will put intangible weapons at your disposal, increase your confidence to take on greater challenges, and sharpen your mental edge to cut through almost any obstacle.

With that being said, have you been using coping as your only strategy?

How fully have you been embracing the challenges you meet in trading, and are you seeing obstacles as opportunities?

Do you focus more on problems or solutions?

Make sure to comment and share your thoughts below.

For those that want to discover the power of mental toughness, make sure to sign up for my Advanced Traders Mindset Course where we teach you how to specifically wire your brain for success and build a positive mindset.

Tell me if this trading situation below has happened to you before.

You’ve just had your largest loss ever (or big one), and you are feeling incredibly risk averse, almost to the point where nothing looks good to trade. With each new setup that comes, you find yourself still recalling that big loss and hesitate, or fail to pull the trigger.

This common experience amongst traders has a biological root, and most often creates a negative psychological effect on you. These biological and psychological causes can have a tremendous impact on your trading mindset, perhaps writing the future history for your trading career. The good thing is, your brain and trading future can be changed.

Biological Reactions to Stress in Trading
Losses no doubt can have an effect on your trader psychology, but also your biology and brain. Cumulative losses can create a huge increase in cortisol in your system. Too much cortisol over a long enough period can cause neurons to fire, where you can no longer concentrate effectively to make a good trading decision.

But take a huge loss, and now your brain is likely re-wired for more losses – minimally in a poor state for trading.

What Happens When You Take A Huge Loss?
There are two regions of the brain that work together in remembering stressful events. They are the ‘hippocampus‘ and ‘amygdala‘. We’ve actually talked about the amygdala and how it impacts your trading which you can read about here.

To clarify between the two, the hippocampus will record the factual details of the big trading loss, while the amygdala will encode the emotional significance of it. Both of these are affected by stress, which releases stress hormones that can heavily affect brain performance.

Now as stress and cortisol levels rise, with continued exposure, our tendency to recall any trading events stored during this neurological state increases.

For a really good graph about performance and a stress curve, see the graph below.

stress performance curve trading 2ndskiesforex
Getting back to the big loss, the experience becomes quite intense emotionally, almost as if it was burned into your brain. This is because of the intensity of those hormones present during this loss. This imprinting in your mind becomes corrosive to your trading, particularly your mindset.

You start to remember negative experiences, that may or may not have anything to do with trading. Just recalling these memories will affect your performance, but there are additional consequences.

Anytime you are analyzing the price action in real time and a new setup forms, you will with greater intensity, draw upon those negative feelings and memories, one of them being the big loss itself. This only makes you increasingly risk averse and afraid to lose, almost to an irrational level. This could happen despite a high-quality signal being right in front of you. In essence, you become paralyzed by this risk aversion, unable to pull the trigger.

Another scenario could be that you are ‘shell-shocked‘ from the trading loss, yet still are able to make a trade. Unfortunately, your trading decisions are totally off kilt. You think you see setups, and start making trades, only later to realize there was no price action setup at all. While reviewing your trades, you actually see now there was no pattern at all.

This is from a biological reaction to the stress you experienced. In some traders, without the proper tools, it becomes so damaging, that it affects them for weeks, months, perhaps even years. Some traders may never even recover from this. Even though that huge loss was ions ago, you still remember it vividly and often recall it when trading. Has this ever happened to you before?

stress in trading 2ndskiesforex
If so, do not worry, as most have had this experience.

Can You Change This?
The good thing is you can re-wire your brain, almost like re-writing your hard drive on a computer. Neural connections can be rebuilt and tuned for success. You can also build new connections which overpower this experience, to regain your confidence and make great trades.

One Way to Change Your Brain for Success
One of the best ways to re-wire your brain for success, and erase these negative trading experiences is to enter a ‘Whole-Brain State‘. This is where your brain operates in an integrated balance. Your left and right hemispheres are working well together. You are not pumping unnecessary stress hormones into your system. You avoid entering a ‘fight or flight‘ response, or being overly emotional, or too intellectual.

whole brain state ERT Training 2ndskiesforex
In essence, your brain operates in a balance which the Whole Brain State induces. When you think about it, which state would you want to be in for trading? A fight or flight state? Being too intellectual or emotional? Having massive amounts of stress hormones pumping through your brain? Or be in a balanced whole brain state?

Yoga and meditation are notorious for helping to put you into a whole brain state, while tuning your central nervous system.

Another powerful method is ERT Training, which we’ve specifically built for traders. If you’ve had similar experiences to the ones I listed above, and still keep recalling negative trading experiences even today, then you’re likely not in a whole brain state. But if you want to learn how to be in a whole brain state while trading, then you definitely have a tool to build a successful trading mindset.