❌ 1. Trading Without a Plan
Jumping into trades without a clear strategy is like driving without a map. You might get somewhere… but probably not where you want.
✅ Fix: Always have a trading plan with entry, exit, risk, and profit targets.
❌ 2. Risking Too Much on One Trade
New traders often “go all in” hoping for quick profits. This can wipe out your capital.
✅ Fix: Never risk more than 1–2% of your trading account on a single trade.
❌ 3. Ignoring Stop-Loss
Skipping stop-loss is like skydiving without a parachute. You won’t land safely.
✅ Fix: Always set a stop-loss to protect your capital.
❌ 4. Overtrading
Trying to trade every move in the market drains your account and your mental energy.
✅ Fix: Focus on quality setups, not quantity.
❌ 5. Letting Emotions Control You
Fear and greed are the enemies of smart trading. Don’t chase losses or get overconfident after a win.
✅ Fix: Stick to your plan, no matter what.
❌ 6. Following Random Signals on Social Media
Many traders blindly follow “gurus” on Telegram or Instagram without understanding the strategy.
✅ Fix: Learn the why behind every trade. Trust your own analysis.
❌ 7. Trading Without Education
The markets are a battlefield. Without proper training, you’re unarmed.
✅ Fix: Invest in learning. Follow trusted courses like RAC Educator’s RMS Trading Series.
❌ 8. Not Using a Demo Account
Jumping straight into real money trading without practice is dangerous.
✅ Fix: Use demo accounts to test your strategy risk-free.
❌ 9. Not Reviewing Past Trades
How will you improve if you don’t know what went wrong?
✅ Fix: Maintain a trading journal. Review it weekly.
❌ 10. Expecting to Get Rich Quick
Trading is not a lottery. It’s a business. Those who treat it like gambling lose fast.
✅ Fix: Set realistic goals. Focus on consistent small wins.
✨ Final Thoughts
Success in trading is not about being perfect — it’s about being disciplined, informed, and consistent. Avoiding these mistakes can take you miles ahead of 90% of beginner traders.
If you want a guided path, join RMS: Reversal Market Structure series on our YouTube channel. Learn live with real examples and mentorship.
For a long time, it was set aside as an impractical ideal and most discussions of health returned to the practicality of the biomedical model.
Just as there was a shift from viewing disease as a state to thinking of it as a process, the same shift happened in definitions of health. Again, the WHO played a leading role when it fostered the development of the health promotion movement in the 1980s.

This brought in a new conception of health, not as a state, but in dynamic terms of resiliency, in other words, as “a resource for living”. 1984 WHO revised the definition of health defined it as “the extent to which an individual or group is able to realize aspirations and satisfy needs and to change or cope with the environment.
Health is a resource for everyday life, not the objective of living; it is a positive concept, emphasizing social and personal resources, as well as physical capacities”.
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