I asked, "Why do you tolerate losses but can't tolerate gains, leaving with minimal profits?" What's the reason for this? The answer is long, so I'll try to summarize it because it depends on several points.

This is normal among traders, especially beginners, and its cause is psychological. Several factors explain why someone is patient with losses but not with profits.

The impact of previous experiences: if you previously lost large profits because you didn't close the trade, your mind learns that safety lies in quickly closing the profit, even if it's small.

The lack of a clear profit-taking plan and no specific profit-taking or stop-loss levels makes your decisions random and emotional, causing you to jump with the first profit, even if it's small, due to the psychological exhaustion of waiting.

When a trade becomes profitable, there's an internal fear that the market will reverse and you'll lose the profit you made. So you rush to close the trade to secure it, even if it could have been a bigger profit.

This is called FOMO (fear of missing out).

When a trade is losing, you start to think and contemplate that the price might rise again.

The human mind hates losses more than it loves gains. This means that the pain of losing $100 is much stronger than the joy of winning $100.

This is It makes you cling to a losing trade in the hope of making up for it, and you fear losing any profit, even if it's small.

The Solution:

Set a profit target and a stop-loss before entering and follow them without hesitation.

Use the strategy of adding a portion on a downside. $AKRO