The start of the book seemed promising and it looked like there would be takeaways which could be applied to trading and improving trading. But then I started having a feeling that the book was a poor pitch for ridiculously overpriced Supertrader courses ($75,000 for a course is ridiculous; how desperate one must be to pay this to "achieve 95% accuracy in trading"?). Then the God-Buddhism mix irritated me a lot. My impression: miserable, unhappy, and suicidal people take $75,000 course and become successful, happy and super traders... Why I do not (and cannot) believe this narrative?
A chapter where god is in your hand telling you that he wants you to be rich is a prosperity gospel. You can go and listen to Joel Osteen. Some of the testimonies of unhappy people who miraculously became trading geniuses were truly laughable. I understand that psychology is important when trading but this book stressed it over the edge in my opinion. If you are looking for a decent sober assessment of how to become a successful trader and master yourself in trading, skip this book. There are only a few moments where you can hear what you need to hear (like the beginning of chapter 17) but it ends there. No further help or advice. All you will be hearing is testimonies of people who took "peak performance course", "TFM, course", "ACIM" course, this and that course... and after spending thousands on all sorts of courses they realized they needed to spend additional $75k on a super trader course. If you need to spend this money on a course in order to be a successful trader, then do not trade. It is not for you. Rather, if you have that money, take it, and trade it. Trade it small, regularly and often. Practice, practice, and practice, was probably the best advice in this book so far. I think, I finished the book just because of the narrator. He was good. The rest was a ballast.