
Episode #11 - The Social Media Mirage
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📘 Episode Description:
In this episode, we dive headfirst into the world of curated success, FOMO, and the mental pitfalls social media creates for traders. If you've ever felt behind, overwhelmed, or not "good enough" after scrolling through endless posts of winning trades and luxury lifestyles, this episode is for you.
We'll explore how social media skews our perception of success in trading, how to identify when it's triggering anxiety, and - most importantly - how to reclaim your focus, confidence, and peace of mind. Learn how to build trading confidence grounded in personal growth and process, not profit screenshots. And walk away with real strategies to curate your information intake, protect your mental game, and thrive in a social media-saturated world.
Whether you're a new trader feeling discouraged or a seasoned one looking to protect your edge, this episode will help you rise above the illusion and stay locked into your journey.
📌 Topics Covered:
The Psychology of Curated Success
Recognising Social Media-Induced Trading Anxiety
Building Authentic Confidence as a Trader
Strategies for Healthy Information Consumption
Practical Tools to Reframe Your Social Media Experience
💬 Final Message:
Stop comparing. Start focusing. Your trading journey is valid, valuable, and uniquely yours. Let social media fuel your learning—not your self-doubt.
📝 References & Sources:
Antonacci, G. (2023). Selling the Dream: The Psychology of Trading Gurus on Social Media. Financial Psychology Journal, 14(2), 131–137.
Barber, B. M., & Odean, T. (2013). The Behavior of Individual Investors. Handbook of the Economics of Finance, 2, 1533–1570.
Gasiorowski, D. (2020). How FOMO Impacts Trading Performance: Experimental Evidence. Journal of Behavioral Finance, 21(2), 77–85.
Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Kirkpatrick, C. D., & Dahlquist, J. R. (2010). Technical Analysis: The Complete Resource for Financial Market Technicians. FT Press.
Pinker, S. (2018). Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress. Penguin Books.
Ritholtz, B. (2019). Social Media and the Problem of Survivor Bias in Trading. Bloomberg Opinion.
Ross, L., & Sicoly, F. (1979). Egocentric Biases in Availability and Attribution. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37(3), 322–336.
Statista. (2024). Percentage of Retail Traders Who Are Profitable Long-Term. Retrieved from www.statista.com
Twenge, J. M., & Campbell, W. K. (2018). The Narcissism Epidemic: Living in the Age of Entitlement. Atria Books.
Ward, A. F. (2020). Why Scrolling Makes Us Miserable. Harvard Business Review. Retrieved from www.hbr.org
Zweig, J. (2021). Your Money and Your Brain. Simon & Schuster.