Trading requires 'delayed gratification.' Once you make a mistake and incur a loss, you may rush back into the market hoping to recover quickly, at least to break even. This is a common issue for newcomers in the market.
To put it bluntly, the history of the trading market is longer than your age; even after you are gone, the market will still exist, so opportunities will always be there, and there’s no need to rush.
Moreover, after a loss, one often becomes emotionally unstable, leading to more mistakes and increasing urgency.
If you get liquidated, you won't even have the chance to sit at the table again. Therefore, trading requires the ability for some delayed gratification. Even if not losing, some traders lack patience, wishing that after opening a position today, it would hit the limit up tomorrow, and then they would close it and immediately short it, hoping it would drop limit down.
If the market were that simple, everyone would be billionaires. What does it matter if there are unrealized losses after buying? As long as the reason for entering hasn’t changed, just be patient and wait. The market rewards those who understand delayed gratification; if you incur a loss, step back, calm down, review your trades, and come back when ready. The market is never short of opportunities, so there's no need to rush.
The way of trading