Why Most Traders Lose Money (And How a Journal Fixes It) is most useful when it becomes a repeatable process instead of a one-time fix. Traders improve when they can measure behavior, not when they rely on memory.
Start with a simple baseline. Log every trade with entry, exit, size, setup tag, and one short note about execution. Then run one weekly review so your rules reflect real data.
Most performance gaps are process gaps. Common patterns are oversizing after losses, taking B-level setups late in the session, and skipping planned stops when volatility expands.

Primary view for this workflow
Use concrete numbers each week. Track expectancy, drawdown, average winner versus loser, and compliance rate for your own rules. If one metric changes sharply, check execution notes before changing strategy.

Use data to confirm behavior patterns
When working with prop accounts, separate evaluation and funded phases. This avoids mixed analytics and makes payout math, drawdown pressure, and consistency checks much easier to manage.

Translate findings into one clear rule
Build one rule update at a time. Keep the rule for two weeks before replacing it, unless it creates clear risk. This keeps your process stable while still improving.
Related reads: what is a trading journal; weekly review routine; metrics that matter.
Keep paragraphs short, keep logs complete, and keep weekly reviews consistent.