Harry Dinkleburg just lost his beer money on a Cable short.
Instead of accepting the loss, he blames the market, cracks his knuckles, and immediately shorts every pound pair he can find with oversized positions. A few bad clicks later, his son’s college fund is gone too. Harry rage quits before lunch.
Harry lacks vigor.
Vigor is your ability to stay mentally functional under stress. In trading, it means keeping your head after a loss instead of letting emotions take control.
Rather than moving on from one losing trade, Harry tried to make the money back quickly. He traded emotionally, increased risk, and made things worse.
This is where trading psychology starts to matter.
Think of Rocky Balboa. He gets knocked down constantly. Bloody, exhausted, outmatched. But losing a round never makes him quit the fight or throw wild punches out of desperation. He gets back up, sticks to the plan, and keeps going.
Traders without vigor do the opposite. One loss feels personal. Frustration spills over. Decision-making suffers. That is when revenge trades happen, or traders freeze and stop trading altogether.
A healthier response is boring but effective:
- Review the setup
- Check the execution
- Identify what went wrong
- Move on
A trader without vigor cannot do this because the loss feels heavier than it really is.
Now imagine a losing streak or a deep drawdown. Without resilience, frustration can spiral into burnout or paralysis.
Vigor is built through time and experience. Losses feel overwhelming when they are new. Over time, they become familiar. Familiar problems are easier to manage.
Experienced traders know that a drawdown is a setback, not a verdict. Like Rocky, they know getting knocked down is part of staying in the game. Every setback is a chance to build vigor.
One useful habit is to imagine the worst-case scenario before entering a trade. Picture getting stopped out and how you would respond if you stayed calm and objective instead of emotional.
When a loss actually happens, it no longer feels shocking. You have already rehearsed the response, making it easier to review the trade, accept the outcome, and move on without spiraling.
That is what vigor looks like in practice.
A vigorous trader does not take losses personally. Like Rocky, they expect to get knocked down at times, but they stay disciplined, learn from each round, and keep showing up for the next one.


