DisciplineBeginner

Journal Review

A trade journal is a structured record of every trade, including not just the result but the sizing, stop, reason and whether the risk rules were followed, so that review can separate process quality from outcome and expose the behaviours that break discipline.

Quick answer: A trade journal is a structured record of every trade, including not just the result but the sizing, stop, reason and whether the risk rules were followed, so that review can separate process quality from outcome and expose the behaviours that break discipline.

In simple words

A trading journal is a written record of every trade you take, and reviewing it is how you learn from your own behaviour instead of repeating mistakes blindly. The important part is that a good journal records more than profit and loss: it records whether you sized correctly, placed your stop, followed your plan, and how you felt. Reviewing it lets you see patterns you cannot feel in the moment, such as that your worst losses all come from trades you took after a loss. It is the feedback loop that turns experience into improvement rather than just accumulated scar tissue.

Purpose

A journal and its review exist to create an honest feedback loop, so a trader can distinguish good decisions from lucky outcomes, detect recurring behavioural leaks, and improve process rather than merely react to the last result.

Professional explanation

A journal records process, not just profit and loss

The defining feature of a useful trading journal is that it captures the decision, not only the outcome. For each trade it records the setup and reason for entry, the planned risk in rupees, the stop and target, the actual size, whether the risk rules were followed, and the emotional state around the trade. Profit and loss alone is nearly useless for learning, because a winning trade can be a badly executed one that got lucky and a losing trade can be a well-executed one that simply drew the losing tail. Recording process is what lets a later review judge decision quality independently of the noisy result.

Review separates decision quality from outcome

Because outcomes are probabilistic, a single result reveals little about whether a decision was sound, and the mind is prone to learning the wrong lesson, praising a reckless trade that won and punishing a disciplined trade that lost. A structured review corrects this by scoring trades on process: was the risk defined and within limit, was the size correct, was the plan followed, regardless of the outcome. Over a sample, this reveals whether your edge and discipline are real or whether recent results were luck. Judging process rather than outcome is the same principle that underlies thinking in probabilities, applied to your own record.

The journal exposes behavioural leaks

Patterns that are invisible trade by trade become obvious across dozens of journalled entries. A review might reveal that your largest losses cluster on trades taken immediately after a loss, that your rule violations concentrate on expiry days, that you oversize when you are winning, or that you cut winners far sooner than losers. These are the specific behavioural failure modes, revenge trading, overtrading, FOMO, that a general resolution to be disciplined never catches. The journal makes them measurable, and only what is measured can be deliberately corrected.

Tracking rule adherence, not only results

The most powerful column in a risk-focused journal is a simple record of whether you followed your own rules on each trade: was the size within limit, was the stop honoured, did you stop at the daily loss limit. Reviewing adherence separately from profit and loss reframes success: a disciplined loss is a good trade and an undisciplined win is a warning, because the undisciplined win teaches the account to repeat the behaviour that will eventually cause a large loss. This inversion, treating process adherence as the real scoreboard, is what makes a journal a discipline tool rather than a diary.

Honesty and consistency are what make it work

A journal is only as valuable as it is honest and consistently kept. The temptation is to record the flattering version, to omit the impulsive trades, to round the losses, or to stop journalling during a bad stretch, which is exactly when the data is most useful. A sparse or sanitised journal produces sparse or misleading lessons. The discipline of logging every trade, especially the embarrassing ones, and reviewing on a fixed cadence is itself part of the trading discipline the journal is meant to build; skipping it during drawdowns removes the feedback precisely when correction is most needed.

A profit-and-loss log vs a process journal

AspectProfit-and-loss logProcess journal
RecordsOnly the result of each tradeSetup, risk, size, stop and rule adherence
JudgesWhether the trade made moneyWhether the decision was sound
RevealsWhether you were up or downRecurring behavioural leaks and violations
A lucky reckless winLooks like successFlagged as a rule violation
Main useTax and totalsImproving process and discipline

Practical example

Illustrative example (Indian market)

A trader with Rs 5,00,000 reviews a month of journalled trades and, because each entry notes whether the risk rules were followed, spots a clear pattern: of Rs 42,000 in total losses, Rs 30,000 came from just five trades, and all five were taken within an hour of a prior loss, at sizes above the 1 percent, Rs 5,000, limit. The winning trades, by contrast, were mostly disciplined and correctly sized. No single trade felt like a problem in the moment, but the journal makes the revenge-trading pattern unmistakable. The corrective is specific and enforceable: a rule to stop for the day after two losses, which the journal review directly justified and which future reviews can verify is being followed.

For an active NSE options trader, a journal that tags each trade with the day of the week often reveals that rule violations and the biggest losses cluster on weekly expiry day, when the temptation to gamble is highest. That pattern, invisible trade by trade, is exactly what a scheduled review is designed to surface.

Limitations

  • A journal only helps if kept honestly and consistently, including the embarrassing trades
  • Small samples can mislead; a few trades cannot confirm or reject an edge
  • Journalling records behaviour but does not by itself change it without deliberate correction
  • Over-analysis of noise can lead to tinkering with a sound process after normal variance
  • The effort of detailed logging tempts traders to abandon it during busy or losing periods

Common mistakes

  • Recording only profit and loss, so process quality cannot be judged
  • Omitting the impulsive or embarrassing trades that hold the most lessons
  • Stopping journalling during a drawdown, exactly when the data matters most
  • Judging trades by outcome, praising lucky reckless wins and punishing disciplined losses
  • Never scheduling a review, so the journal accumulates but is never learned from
  • Overreacting to a handful of trades and changing a sound process on noise

Professional usage

Professional desks treat record-keeping and post-trade review as mandatory, not optional. Every trade is logged with its rationale and risk parameters, performance is attributed to process and to specific setups rather than to gut feel, and rule breaches are reviewed as incidents. Trader evaluation weighs adherence to mandate and risk limits alongside returns, precisely because a profitable but undisciplined trader is a future large loss. The review is scheduled and structured, so learning is systematic rather than left to the memory of whoever had a good or bad week.

Key takeaways

  • A journal must record process, sizing, stop and rule adherence, not just profit and loss
  • Review separates sound decisions from lucky outcomes over a sample
  • It exposes behavioural leaks like revenge trading that are invisible trade by trade
  • It only works if kept honestly and consistently, especially during bad stretches

Frequently asked questions

What is a trading journal?
A trading journal is a structured record of every trade, capturing not just the result but the setup, the planned risk in rupees, the stop and size, whether the risk rules were followed, and your emotional state. Reviewing it turns raw experience into specific, correctable lessons about your own behaviour.
Why should I keep a trading journal?
Because it creates an honest feedback loop that memory cannot. It lets you separate good decisions from lucky outcomes, spot recurring behavioural leaks like revenge trading, and verify whether you are actually following your rules, none of which is visible from profit and loss alone.
What should I record in my journal?
For each trade: the setup and reason for entry, the planned risk in rupees, the stop and target, the actual position size, whether you followed your risk rules, the outcome, and how you felt. The rule-adherence and risk fields matter as much as the result, because they let you judge process.
Why record more than profit and loss?
Because profit and loss alone cannot tell you whether a decision was sound. A winning trade can be a badly executed one that got lucky, and a losing trade can be a well-executed one that drew the losing tail. Recording the process lets a later review judge decision quality independently of the noisy result.
How does a journal reveal behavioural problems?
Patterns invisible in a single trade become obvious across many. A review might show that your biggest losses all follow a prior loss, that violations cluster on expiry days, or that you oversize when winning. These specific leaks, which a vague resolve to be disciplined never catches, become measurable and correctable.
How often should I review my journal?
On a fixed cadence, typically a short daily glance plus a deeper weekly review, with a broader monthly review of the whole month's behaviour. A regular schedule matters more than intensity, because the point is a consistent feedback loop rather than an occasional deep dive.
Should I track whether I followed my rules?
Yes, this is the most valuable field in a risk journal. Recording rule adherence separately from profit and loss reframes a disciplined loss as a good trade and an undisciplined win as a warning, because the undisciplined win teaches you to repeat behaviour that will eventually cause a large loss.
What if I only journal my good trades?
Then the journal is worse than useless, because the omitted impulsive and embarrassing trades hold the most important lessons. A sanitised journal produces flattering, misleading conclusions. Logging every trade, especially the ones you would rather forget, is what makes review honest.
Can a journal help with a losing streak?
Yes, if you keep journalling through it. A review during a drawdown can reveal whether losses come from rule violations you can fix or from normal variance you should size through, which is exactly the information you need. Abandoning the journal during a bad stretch removes the feedback when it matters most.
How is journal review different from checking my account balance?
The balance tells you the outcome; the journal review tells you why. Reviewing process and rule adherence explains whether results came from sound decisions or from luck, and points to the specific behaviour to correct. The balance reacts to the past; the review changes the future.
Does journalling by itself improve my trading?
Not on its own. Journalling records behaviour, but improvement requires acting on what the review reveals, such as adding a rule to stop after two losses. The journal supplies the diagnosis; the deliberate correction supplies the cure.
How many trades do I need before the journal is meaningful?
Enough that patterns are more than coincidence, usually several dozen at least. A handful of trades cannot confirm or reject an edge or a behavioural pattern, so avoid overreacting to a tiny sample; look for leaks that recur across many entries rather than lessons from any single result.
Should I record my emotions in the journal?
Yes. Noting your emotional state around each trade often reveals that your worst decisions cluster with specific feelings, such as frustration after a loss or excitement in a fast market. Making that link visible is how a journal connects psychology to concrete risk outcomes.
What is the biggest mistake in journalling?
Judging trades by outcome instead of process: praising a lucky reckless win and punishing a disciplined loss. This teaches exactly the wrong lessons and reinforces the behaviour most likely to cause a large loss later. The journal's value comes from scoring the decision, not the result.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Journal Review.

What is a trading journal?
It is a written record of every trade, including your size, stop, reason and whether you followed your rules. Reviewing it shows you patterns in your own behaviour you cannot feel in the moment.
Why should I write more than profit and loss?
Because profit and loss alone cannot tell you if a trade was smart or just lucky. Recording your process lets you judge whether the decision was good, not only whether it made money.
How does a journal find my mistakes?
By making patterns visible across many trades. You might see that your biggest losses all came right after another loss, something no single trade would ever reveal.
Should I write down when I broke my rules?
Absolutely. Tracking rule breaks is the most useful part. A disciplined loss is a good trade, and a lucky win where you broke a rule is a warning sign.
What if I only log my winning trades?
Then the journal misleads you, because the trades you skip are usually the ones with the biggest lessons. Log everything, especially the embarrassing trades.
How often should I review my journal?
A quick look daily and a deeper review weekly works well, plus a bigger monthly review. Being consistent matters more than doing one huge session now and then.

Sources & references

    Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.

    Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and simplified models. Risk-management techniques reduce but never remove risk, and trading derivatives involves substantial risk of loss. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.