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Description

In the fast-paced world of options trading, the past can be a quiet assassin that suffocates consistency. Anchoring bias is one of the most common psychological traps, causing traders to fixate on historical reference points—like their entry price or an old all-time high—long after they’ve ceased to be relevant.

In this deep dive, we unpack why our brains seek the "cognitive ease" of round numbers and why ego makes us wait for the market to "admit it was wrong" and return to our entry price. You’ll learn actionable strategies to cut the rope, including the "Price Blind" chart exercise and the ultimate future-oriented gut check. From understanding the "Tara" dynamic to reframing losses as "tuition," this episode provides the toolkit needed to trade the current reality, not a flawed memory.

Tools & Frameworks Discussed: Price Blind Chart Studies, Multiple Timeframe Analysis, Opportunity Cost Audits, and the "Fresh Entry" Litmus Test.

The market is ruthlessly forward-looking; it doesn't know where you got in. If you didn't already own your current position, would you buy it fresh at this exact price right now? Subscribe to the Options Trading Podcast for more step-by-step guidance!

Key Takeaways

"Traders see their entry price as the 'fair' price. When the market goes against them, they wait for it to apologize and come back. But the market doesn't even know you exist."

Found an anchor in your portfolio today? Share this episode with a friend who's holding too long! Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify and tell us: what’s your toughest price level to forget?

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