The $60 Lesson I Needed: A Week of Trading Psychology
It started with $101.75. After this week, the account sits at $162.54.
That 60% growth sounds impressive. But here’s the truth: I got lucky on some trades and sloppy on others. The portfolio grew despite my mistakes, not because of discipline. This weekend, I’m writing the hard story—the one where breaking my own rules cost me more than the numbers show.
Monday: The Nuclear Thesis Still Burns
I opened the week holding positions I’d built the previous week. Nuclear stocks—OKLO and friends—have been my conviction play, as I wrote about in my February 21 deep-dive. That thesis is working. Nuclear shows institutional accumulation, government tailwinds, and a genuine generational energy transition.
But conviction without risk management is just gambling with extra steps. By Monday afternoon, I’d learn that lesson again.
The Technical Damage: AIRE and MU
Let me be specific about the failures.
AIRE: 13 shares at $0.34 avg, now at $0.32. That’s a 6.82% unrealized loss—past my 8% stop loss threshold.
MU: Micron was supposed to be a quick semiconductor play. 0.11 shares at $415 entry (I’m trading fractional shares), now sitting at $412. Only down 0.91%, but it violated my rule: don’t hold through drawdowns without a plan.
These aren’t just numbers. They’re evidence of something worse: inaction. I knew the stop losses were triggered. I didn’t execute. The trades moved against me while I watched, telling myself “it’ll come back.”
Sound familiar?
The Psychology of Sitting on Your Hands
There’s a peculiar pain that comes from watching bad trades get worse. It’s different from the immediate sting of a stop-loss hit. That stings and it’s over. This? This is the slow bleed of rationalization.
- “I’ll sell tomorrow when the market opens.”
- “It’s only a small position, the percentage doesn’t matter.”
- “Fundamentals haven’t changed—why panic?”
Every one of those sentences is a red flag I ignored. The entire point of mechanical stop losses is to remove me from the decision. My lizard brain wants to hold losers and cut winners. The rules exist to override that programming.
And I overrode the override.
What Else Moved This Week
In case you think I’ve just been staring at red positions:
NVDA reported earnings and promptly dropped 3% on a “blockbuster print,” as Reddit called it. The market wanted guidance that blew doors off. They got solid execution. Sometimes “great” isn’t “good enough” when expectations run too hot. I sat that one out—NVDA at these levels is above my risk tolerance for position sizing.
Netflix and Warner Bros Discovery gave us a masterclass in deal dynamics. NFLX poised to get a $3 billion breakup fee? That’s not trading—that’s corporate drama worth watching. I noted it, learned from it, stayed away from trading it. Earnings-driven volatility without an edge is just noise.
DUOL cratered 22% after hours prioritizing user growth over monetization. Classic growth stock repricing. Another one I watched from the sidelines—no position, no FOMO.
What I Got Right
Not everything was self-sabotage.
The RKLB position (Rocket Lab) I accumulated throughout February paid off. Revenue at $180M quarterly, $602M annual, 38% growth. That’s execution. Space infrastructure isn’t hype when the numbers back it up.
PLTR sits in green territory. 0.15 shares at $132.84 avg, current $137.19. Small position, solid gain, letting it run with trailing stops.
NCLH (Norwegian Cruise): 1.78 shares at $24.17, now $24.79 with solid unrealized gains. Travel demand recovering, pricing power returning.
The lesson here isn’t complicated: when the thesis is clear and the risk is controlled, I’m fine. The problem comes when I abandon that second part.
The Numbers That Matter
- Starting Equity: ~$101.75
- Current Equity: $162.54
- Open Positions: 7
- Cash Available: $0.38 (fully deployed)
That cash number is a problem. I’m 99% invested. No dry powder for opportunities. No cushion for mistakes. This is a portfolio built for action, not survival.
That’s changing Monday.
The Fix: What’s Different Next Week
Three concrete changes:
- Bracket orders on every trade. Enter position, automatic stop-loss leg, automatic profit-taking leg. I’m removing the option to second-guess.
- MOO execution discipline. Market-on-open orders for any position past 8% drawdown. No exceptions, no rationalization.
- 20% minimum cash. Period. Opportunity cost is real, but so is the ability to buy when blood’s in the streets. Can’t do that with $0.38.
What I’m Watching for Next Week
Fed chatter is heating up. PPI data surprised to the upside—”hotter than expected” means rate-cut hopes pushed further out. That’s headwind material for growth stocks.
Defense names (LMT, NOC, RTX) caught rotation flows on geopolitical risk. I’m watching but not chasing.
Nuclear remains my conviction sector. The thesis is multi-year, the volatility is weekly.
Trading isn’t about being right. It’s about being disciplined when you’re wrong. This week, I got the first part backwards, and barely squeaked by on the second.
The $60 gain is nice. The lesson it’s teaching me is worth more.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.