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💡 IDEAS What Spiders Can Teach You about Forex Trading

It’s safe to say that spiders are one of the least favorite creatures. In fact there are thousands of people who have an outright fear of them, a specific phobia called arachnophobia.

Personally, I don’t love or hate spiders. I’m fairly neutral toward them. Although being a person who loves all living things, I do try to save them when I find them indoors.

Love them or hate them, when it comes to showing the qualities necessary to become a great Forex trader, spiders have no equal.

The comparison between spiders and Forex traders does sound odd, I admit. But by the time you finish reading this post, I’m sure you will agree that their qualities and way of life is perfectly adapted for many of the challenges we face as traders.

So as odd as it may sound, studying how spiders have adapted to survive just might teach you a thing or two about what it takes to successfully trade the Forex market.


The Patience of a Spider

Did you know that most sedentary spiders that spin webs to catch prey can go months without eating?

That’s right, months!

This means that they will sit for days, weeks or even months just waiting for their next meal to come along. During this time, they wait patiently in order to conserve energy for when it really matters.

I don’t know about you, but as someone who loves to eat that sounds like a terrible way to live.

But to the spider it’s just life, and they have evolved to be able to survive through long periods without food. It’s truly a remarkable feat when you think about it.

Like the spider, you need to evolve in a way which allows you to remain content while waiting for the next favorable trade setup to materialize. This is easier said than done, but it too is required if you intend to survive in the world of Forex.

As Bill Lipschutz once said, “if most traders would learn how to sit on their hands 50% of the time, they would make a lot more money.”

Truer words have never been spoken. When it comes to trading the Forex market, less is always more.

To be clear, this does not mean that you have to wait for months for an opportunity to come along. That said, having to wait several days for a favorable setup to materialize is fairly common. This is especially true for those who are trading the higher time frames.


Persistence of a Spider

Have you ever walked directly into a spider web?

Sure you have. It’s safe to say we have all experienced that feeling of walking right into a web that we didn’t see.

This unpleasant experience leads to something that is quite remarkable, yet seldom appreciated.

Instead of throwing in the towel and giving up after seeing its hard work be destroyed in an instant, the spider recreates the exact same web. In some cases it will create an even larger web than before. Remember, this is survival for the spider.

Forex traders need to view their trading experience in a similar manner. There will be times when it feels like the entire market is against you as it tears your trading plan apart and chips away at your account balance.

But just like the spider, you need to persevere in the face of misfortune. Taking time away from the market after a loss or a series of losses is always a good idea, but you should never walk away entirely.

The only thing that separates the successful traders from those who fail is that the successful never gave up. Always remember that it’s impossible to fail if you never give up.


Take When the Taking Is Good

mechanics-of-pyramid-trading1-300x263.jpg
One of my favorite trading quotes comes from Jack Schwager, author of Market Wizards. That quote is as follows


“If you don’t stay with your winners, you are not going to be able to pay for the losers.”

Having traded financial markets since 2002, I can tell you that staying with your winners is how you become consistently profitable. It doesn’t matter if you trade equities, commodities, Forex or any other financial market, the idea is always the same.

In fact if you really want to make considerable gains as a trader, you can take it one step further by adding to those winning positions as they begin to move in your favor. This is a technique called pyramiding, and it has been extremely effective for me as well as several of my members who have started to practice the same technique.

Ironically, spiders do the exact same thing. The only difference is that instead of trading, they are attempting to survive during times when food is not abundant.

Remember how I mentioned that some spiders can go months without eating? You may be wondering how exactly they are able to do this.

Aside from having evolved for thousands of years to survive during hard times, they take full advantage of food when it’s available. In other words, they make sure to fill up when they can because they don’t know when their next meal might come along.

Just like the spider, when something favorable comes along, in our case a favorable trade setup, it’s important to take full advantage of it.

To be clear, this does not involve risking more than your trading plan calls for.

Instead, you need to be aware of the bigger picture surrounding each trade setup. It just might be something you can stay with for quite some time and possibly add to if the market begins to move in your favor.

And as Jack Schwager reminds us, we need to stick with our winners in order to pay for our losers.


Spin Your Own Web

Another similarity between spiders and Forex traders is the idea that these web-spinning spiders do not chase their food. Instead they spin a web and then wait patiently for an insect to land in it.

As mentioned previously, this waiting could be days, weeks or even months. But regardless of how long it takes, these spiders never chase their food around the forest floor.

Why is that, you ask?

Because they know that if they choose a strategic location and build a quality web, an insect will eventually land on it. It has worked this way for thousands of years and continues to work today.

As a Forex trader, your trading plan becomes your web. You need to develop trading strategies that give you an edge in the market and then craft a trading plan that allows you to “catch” favorable trade setups.

There is never a need to chase a trade around the market just as the spider does not chase its dinner around the forest floor. Instead, you wait patiently for a favorable setup to fall perfectly into your plan. Only then do you consider putting capital at risk.

If that trade setup does not materialize, you move on. You don’t chase and you certainly don’t risk any capital until all of the criteria in your plan has been satisfied by the market.


Conserve Your Energy for When It Really Matters

How many times do you check your charts each day? Is it 10, 20, maybe 50 times a day?

If you are like most traders I have worked with over the years, that number is probably somewhere between 20 and 50 times a day. That is a lot of wasted time and energy.

If you are using a stop loss (I hope this is the case), there is no need to check your charts more than a handful of times each day. Even if you trade the 4 hour charts, there are only six new periods in each session, and at least two of those periods take place while you are asleep.

This means that the most you should ever check your charts while trading the higher time frames is 4 times a day, maybe 5 or 6 if it is a day with a large amount of event risk. But even 6 times a day is a far cry from the 20 to 50 times a day that most Forex traders take a peek at their charts.

Why does it matter, you ask?

Aside from wasting valuable time and energy, checking on your trades too often inadvertently allows emotions to creep in, also called emotional fatigue. This causes you to question a trade setup that might otherwise be valid as well as convince yourself that an unfavorable setup is indeed worth taking.

This emotional fatigue never bodes well for your trading, regardless of how you spin it (pun intended).

Going back to our comparison of traders and spiders, do these spiders that spin webs run around all day waiting for an insect to land on it?

Of course not.

They know that if they are strategic in their approach, an opportunity will eventually come along. So instead of expending their energy chasing, they wait patiently for the next favorable opportunity to come to them.
 
Dude, your whole spiders-meets-Forex traders analogy? Absolutely killer. Never thought I'd be nodding along to spider wisdom, yet here I am, picturing a patient arachnid schooling me on chart patience.

Honestly, spiders are the OG zen masters. Just chillin’, sometimes for weeks, months—no DoorDash, no delivery, nada—just sittin’ and waiting for their prey. That’s what a real trader should be doing: actually sitting on their hands, not fidgeting around chasing every green candle like a caffeinated squirrel. I mean, you ever see a spider frantically spinning for every fly it sees? Nah, it waits for the right one. Bill Lipschutz had it right: If traders would just chill out half the time and wait, they’d probably lose way less money. Trading isn’t about hustlin’ non-stop... it’s about knowing when to do absolutely nothing.

The persistence thing? Oh man, anyone who’s walked through a spider web at six in the morning knows the pain—and those little monsters never take the hint. Web’s gone? Rebuild. Rainstorm? Rebuild. Annoying toddler? Rebuild, only angrier. If only traders bounced back like that after the markets wallop ‘em. Take the L, dust yourself off, try again. The folks who quit are the ones who miss out on the next big run—they don’t stick around long enough to get to the good part. The spider’s a whole mood: stubborn in the best possible way.

And “take when the taking is good”—YES. Print that on a t-shirt for every new trader. Too many people chicken out and snatch profits early, instead of riding something juicy all the way. Not the spider! When a fat fly lands—party time. You gotta do the same thing, let those winners cook, maybe even pile on (responsibly
 you know what I’m saying). There’s never any guarantee when the next meal (or trade) is coming along, so when it shows up, you better not fumble it.

Now, about that web—having your own setup, sticking to it, and not jumping around chasing every shiny thing the market throws at you. Seen too many folks burn out, FOMOing into trades because “the market’s moving!” Like, alright bro
 but is it moving for you? Spiders pick their spot, set up, and vibe. Shouldn’t traders do the same? Build your trading plan, find your edge, and just wait for the market to come to you.

Oh, and the energy stuff—don’t get me started. People checking charts every five minutes like the next candle’s got a secret message just for them. Newsflash: that’s how you burn out, not how you win. Better to trade higher timeframes, set your stops, and go do literally anything else for a while. Trust me, your sanity will thank you.

Bottom line, your spider-trader mashup nails it. Patience, resilience, knowing when to strike, chilling until it’s time, and not wasting energy on nonsense—those are the real survival tools in the market jungle. Take a page from the spider handbook, and who knows—maybe we’ll all catch a few more “flies.”

Seriously though, appreciate the reminder. Sometimes, we look everywhere for trading wisdom except where it’s been hanging (literally) right in front of our faces.
 

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