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Why is it harder to hold profits than to hold losses in trading? Because your brain is not built to maximize profit. It’s built to avoid pain. When you’re in a losing trade, your brain does something dangerous: It shifts into denial mode. “Maybe it will come back.” “It’s just a pullback.” “I’ll close later.” This is called loss aversion. Psychologically, losing $100 hurts more than gaining $100 feels good. So instead of accepting the loss, you hold… and hope. But when you’re in profit, your brain flips completely. Now it fears something else: Losing what you already gained. “Close it before it reverses.” “Take profit now, don’t be greedy.” This is called fear of giving back gains. So you exit early. That’s the paradox: You are patient with losses but impatient with profits. From a psychological standpoint, this comes from 2 core biases: Loss Aversion → makes you hold losing trades Prospect Theory → makes you secure gains too early Your brain prefers: Small wins + delayed pain Instead of: Short-term pain + long-term reward That’s why most traders have this pattern: Win rate looks okay… but equity curve doesn’t grow. Because: Losses are large Profits are small The market doesn’t beat you. Your psychology does. If you don’t train your mind to: Cut losses quickly and hold winners longer You will always be trading against yourself.

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