Five, six, seven, eight. I was doing the steps I knew like the back of my hand. With my lips stretched into a smile, lungs heaving for air, I looked at my partner, Julia. It was her time to captivate. I let go of her hand as she did her final pirouette. The audience filled the room with a thunderous applause. The spotlight beamed even brighter. Hand-in-hand we approached the end of the stage as we bowed in gratitude. I looked out into the crowd of the hotel ballroom. People were clapping, others were lifting their champagne glasses in approval. My heart is still racing with adrenaline, neurons firing up. Feelings I’ve always reveled in. We were in Calcutta, thousands of miles away from home. Yet, I’ve never felt lighter. I was touring the world while doing something I’m very passionate about—dancing. It was a fairytale. But the happily-ever-after did not end there. The year is 1958. My name is Nicolas Darvas and I had just made over $300,000 dollars.
I was 3 when I started dancing. I was 32 when I started trading the stock market. In 1952, I received an offer to perform in Toronto. But instead of paying me money, the two club owners offered to pay me stocks instead. It was unusual, intriguing. I did not know anything about the market. They gave me 6000 shares of a mining company I did not even know existed. The shares were valued at $3000. The name of the company is Brilund. I went on in my career thinking nothing of it. Two months later, after a dancing engagement in New York’s Copacabana, I nonchalantly glanced at the daily paper. It was then that I learned I had just made a profit of $8000. My jaw fell on its own. I sold all my Brilund shares faster than a lightning. I did not win the lottery, but I might as well have. My eyes have been opened. What is this thing that I had been missing all my life?
It was with the same ball of excitement that I committed one
of trading’s gravest mistakes. After my first accidental win on the stock
market, I was constantly on my toes looking for the next big hit. Do you know a
good stock, I was asking people left and right.
And I was also getting answers left and right. It seemed like everybody
knew something. I was in pursuit of the next “hot tip”. I realized that in
order to know which stock to buy, I must have the needed information. I must
know a secret. I listened eagerly to people dressed to the nines but were
almost as clueless as I was. Stock ABC will skyrocket to 50% in 5 weeks, said a
guy in a velvety blue fedora hat. He looked like he owned a yacht, or maybe a
50-acre farmland in Texas. He was drinking scotch. I met him after one of my
performances. As I have all of my other stock “advisers”. I buy when they say
buy, I jump when they say jump. Even if it was over a cliff. I followed all
their tips religiously. I would get another Brilund if I only ask the right
people, I kept repeating on my head as I saw my profits plunge. I owned 25-30
stocks at a time. I have developed an emotional attachment to most of them. I
triumphed over my small gains. I turned a blind eye on my huge losses. I was
losing and losing but I didn’t care. It took me time and a couple thousand
dollars to realize I was doing everything wrong. But I guess I was still lucky.
Some people never realize they are blindly following false prophets.
I was 40 when I had a rude awakening. I was trading in New
York amongst all the Wall Street plutocrats. My previous gains floated my ego
up in the air. I thought I had it all mastered. Little by little, my carefully-thought
out system was surrendering in helpless abandon. I regressed to my amateur
trading days. I listened to rumors, I followed advices blindly. I had a plan, a
system. But they seemed like distant memories. I bought at the highs and sold
at the lows. In months, I have lost almost $100,000. I was depressed, I was
frustrated. I could not understand what had happened. Or maybe, maybe I did. My
ears were my enemy.
People like me who lost a lot of money in a very short span of time
almost always want to get back in the game immediately in the hopes of
recuperating losses. Every trade becomes a means to breakeven, not to gain. Senses
are forsaken, in its place are emotions and greed. I realized that the importance of trade vacation is often underrated. Thankfully, I still had some
sliver of sense left in me. I paused. I took a time off. I reflected on all my
bad trades and I realized, yet again, what I have known years ago: I am the
captain of my own ship.
In May of 1959, I made two million dollars.


One of my favorite books.
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