Skip to content

The Daily Trading Coach Review

Elias opened his journal. Today wasn't about the S&P 500; it was about the man staring back at him in the screen's reflection.

The blue light of the terminal was the only thing illuminating Elias’s face at 4:00 AM. For months, he had been a "revenge trader," chasing losses until his account bled dry. He had the charts, the indicators, and the news feeds, but he lacked the one thing the TraderFeed blog (run by Dr. Steenbarger) always emphasized: .

That evening, Elias didn't count his dollars. He counted his "A-plus" setups and his "A-plus" reactions. He realized that the "Daily Trading Coach" wasn't a book on his shelf; it was the voice he had finally developed inside his own head. He was no longer just a trader; he was his own psychologist. The Daily Trading Coach

Elias began with a "self-coaching" ritual. Instead of looking for "the big win," he identified his emotional state. He was anxious. In the past, he would have ignored this, fueled by caffeine and greed. Today, he used a technique from The Daily Trading Coach: Deep Breathing and Visualization . He visualized the market moving against him and practiced staying calm, focusing on his stop-loss rather than his ego.

At the opening bell, the market surged. Old Elias would have jumped in—fear of missing out ( FOMO ). New Elias waited. He saw a pattern, a "flag" he’d back-tested a hundred times. He entered the trade. Elias opened his journal

" The Daily Trading Coach: 101 Lessons for Becoming Your Own Trading Psychologist " is a renowned book by . It focuses on the psychological aspects of trading, teaching traders how to coach themselves through market volatility and emotional hurdles.

He didn't exit in a panic, nor did he hold in hope. He checked his plan. The price hadn't hit his stop-loss, but the reason he entered the trade—the momentum—had vanished. He closed the position for a tiny, insignificant profit. For months, he had been a "revenge trader,"

Below is a draft story inspired by the book's core principles—discipline, self-awareness, and technical mastery. The Mirror on the Monitor