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Why do we trade? To
be sure, trading allows us independence, the opportunity to work for
ourselves. Trading also offers the
prospects of a lifestyle in which evenings and weekends need not be consumed by
work. Some of us crave the competitive
aspect of trading, doing fresh battle each day.
Others approach trading as a puzzle to be solved, deriving a sense of
intellectual achievement. Finally, there
is income. A successful trader can make
seven figures in a year — and many of the traders I work with are living proof of
that.
So why do they
trade? Once you have the money, all of
trading’s lifestyle advantages could easily be yours. Needs for competition and intellectual
stimulation could be met in so many other ways.
Why do traders remain traders long after they’ve won the game?
Perhaps we
can illuminate this question by asking it of practitioners in other
fields. Why do artists continue their
craft long after they receive recognition for their paintings, novels, or
films? Why do elite Special Forces
troops stay in units that test their mettle even after they’ve earned their
coveted badges?
A gifted athlete such as
Michael Jordan earned plenty of money and honors and, in fact, did retire on a
couple of occasions—only to return to his game.
Why?
There is
something deep here that speaks to the nature of productive work. People retire from jobs and even careers, but
they never abandon their callings.
For some, work means something more than earning a living or achieving a
lifestyle. Work is their path in
life. It is the way they have chosen—or
perhaps that has chosen them—for self-expression and self-development.
Suppose the
pastor of a large, successful church wrote a book, made significant money, and
promptly retired from the clergy and all religious life. What would that say? Surely, we would think, this person’s faith
could not have been too heartfelt.
But
why should our productive work mean less to us than the clergy means to a
devout pastor? Presumably, the religious
life meets deep, important needs for the pastor. Is it really so different for the
artist? The athlete? The trader?
The great
professions are those that serve as personal playing fields. They are the arenas we choose to express and
develop ourselves. In mastering a
discipline, we cultivate self-mastery.
In writing a poem or placing a large trade, we capture—in a single
act—our vision of how we see the world at that moment. The great occupations are great precisely
because they are such meaningful playing fields.
Long after we’ve earned fame and fortune, the
calling remains to be more than we are, to return to the arena and do battle
with our limitations. The profound urge
to extend the human grasp is common to all the great callings. To run faster, to capture more beauty, to
predict ever better: in no small
measure, our work is our pursuit of the godlike, however fleeting.
Maybe it is
our different images of the godlike that animate our career choices. If my deepest view of godhood is that of a
meek and all-forgiving Christ, perhaps I will be drawn to an occupation of
service. If my deepest view is more akin
to the ancient Greeks, whose gods sent heroes on quests, then my calling may be
on a battlefield or a playing field.
Either way, in work we find something divine within ourselves. Whether as scientists, monks, or traders, we
strive for those moments when we are just a little closer to perfection, a
little nearer to immortality. That
is why we trade.
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