Options Trading Podcast
Ready to trade options? The Options Trading Podcast is the go-to source for options traders who want clarity, consistency, and control in their trading journey. Built on the trusted educational foundation of OptionGenius.com, this show delivers straightforward, no-fluff insights to help you master the world of options trading.
Options Trading Podcast
How Do I Avoid Becoming Emotionally Attached to a Trade?
That gut-punch feeling of a losing trade, the urge to hold on "just until breakeven," or the greed to chase a winner... these are not just feelings, they are the root of trading sabotage. This episode is a deep dive into the psychology of detachment and answers a critical question for every trader:
How do I avoid becoming emotionally attached to a trade?
We provide a complete toolkit for outsmarting your own emotional brain. Discover the psychological traps—like ego, hope, and confirmation bias—that hijack your rational plan. Learn why the solution isn't to eliminate emotions, but to control their influence by treating your trading like a business, not a personal quest. We'll give you practical, actionable strategies like building a "blueprint for detachment" (your trading plan), the power of a "loss ritual," and why you must always judge your process, not the P&L.
This is your guide to building the emotional resilience of a professional. The market doesn't care about your feelings, but your strategy does. Subscribe to learn how to keep your emotions in check.
Key Takeaways
- The Antidote to Emotion is a Written Plan: Emotional attachment thrives in ambiguity. The best defense is a solid, written trading plan with predefined rules for your entry, exit (stop-loss), profit target, and risk (position size). This forces you to make decisions when you are calm and rational, not in the heat of the moment.
 - Redefine Success: Process Over Outcome: You can do everything right and still have a losing trade. Judge your success based on your execution—did you follow your rules?—not the monetary outcome. This decouples your self-worth from the random nature of any single trade and builds long-term discipline.
 - Reframe Losses as a "Cost of Doing Business": A loss is not a personal failure or an attack on your intelligence; it's a data point. Like a restaurant paying for ingredients, losing trades are a normal, expected business expense within a profitable system. This mental shift takes the emotional sting out of individual losses.
 - Use "Circuit Breakers" for Your Emotions: To stop a downward spiral, use non-negotiable rules. Take a "crucial pause" (a 15-30 minute break) after every loss to stop "revenge trading." Implement "containment rules," like a max daily loss limit, that force you to shut down for the day.
 - Your Journal is a Data Analysis Tool for Your Brain: A trading journal isn't just for logging P&L. Its real power is in tracking your emotions (fear, greed, impatience) before, during, and after a trade. Reviewing this log reveals your personal sabotage patterns and is the first step to fixing them.
 
"A trade isn't your baby. It's a calculated decision. If it hits the criteria, great, take the profit. If it doesn't, you cut it. Move on. The second you start defending it like it's part of your identity or intelligence, objectivity is gone."
Timestamped Summary
- (03:25) The 3 Mental Traps That Cause Attachment: A breakdown of the psychological forces that hijack your trading: Ego (fear of being wrong), Recency Bias (obsessing over the last trade), and Over-leverage (risking too much).
 - (04:37) The Antidote: A Written Trading Plan: Discover why a detailed, written plan with predefined entry, exit, and risk rules is the ultimate "blueprint for detachment."
 - (05:48) Position Sizing: The Emotional Volume Knob: Learn the most practical way to reduce the emotional pain of a loss: risk so little (1-2% of your account) that it's a "shrug, not a meltdown."
 - (08:16) Redefining Success: Process Over Profit: A deep dive into the game-changing mindset shift of judging your performance on your executi