Imagine the worst: job loss, sharp downturns, scary headlines. Then specify actions: pause discretionary spending, maintain contributions if possible, deploy cash bucket as planned, consult rebalancing policy. These if-then scripts shrink chaos into manageable steps, replacing catastrophic imagination with prepared responses that protect both capital and confidence.
Record decisions, reasons, feelings, and expected outcomes. Later, compare results honestly. Journaling exposes hindsight bias, clarifies triggers, and strengthens rules that actually help. Over time, the diary becomes a teacher, revealing patterns you can refine, and reminding you that calm, written intentions outperform anxious, improvisational market reactions.
Practice negative visualization thoughtfully: picture a severe decline and notice emotions arise, then rehearse your exact response. By normalizing discomfort, you reduce its power. The mind learns familiarity, and the portfolio benefits from actions guided by commitments rather than the transient thunder of collective fear.
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