Why Most Traders Don’t Grow (Even When They Do the Right Things)
- Michele Montorio
- 18 mar
- 2 Min. de lectura
The problem is not what you do, but when and why you do it
Introduction
At this point in the journey, we have clarified many fundamental aspects:
risk, drawdown, capital, demo trading, prop firms, and operational coherence.
And yet, there is an uncomfortable reality that many traders experience firsthand:
even when doing the “right” things, they don’t grow.
They follow rules.
They study.
They manage risk.
But they remain stuck.
This article aims to explain why this happens
and why growth in trading is never linear or automatic.
Doing the right things doesn’t mean doing them at the right time
One of the most common mistakes is applying correct concepts out of context.
Typical examples:
a valid strategy applied to an unsuitable capital size
correct risk applied to statistics that are not yet stable
forced discipline without real experience
The problem is not the rule itself.
It is the moment in which it is applied.
In trading, “when” is just as important as “what.”
Growth is not technical, it is structural
Many traders try to improve by:
changing strategy
refining entries
adding filters
But real growth rarely comes from there.
It comes when:
risk is coherent with experience
capital is coherent with risk
expectations are coherent with statistics
If one of these elements is out of scale, growth stops.
The false myth of immediate consistency
There is a dangerous idea:
“If I do everything right, results will come immediately.”
In trading, it doesn’t work that way.
Consistency:
comes after adaptation
comes after mistakes
comes after experiencing multiple market cycles
Demanding stability before going through instability
leads only to frustration.
Why many traders remain in the same place
Many do not fail.
They simply do not move forward.
They remain stuck because:
they don’t resize expectations
they don’t adapt risk to the current phase
they don’t accept periods of stagnation
Trading then becomes repetition,
not an evolutionary process.
Growing means changing roles
At some point, a trader must stop “trading”
and start managing a system.
This means:
making fewer decisions
protecting more than attacking
accepting that not every day is productive
Those who don’t make this transition
continue to operate like beginners,
even after years.
Conclusion
Growth in trading doesn’t come from doing everything right.
It comes when every decision is coherent with your current level.
There are no shortcuts.
There is no final destination.
There is only a path where:
strategy
risk
capital
behavior
must evolve together.
Those who understand this stop chasing results
and start building continuity.
And that’s where the difference becomes real.




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