Okay, let’s talk about going back to basics, what folks call a “vanilla position”.

My Journey Back to Simple
So, I’d been messing around with all sorts of complicated trading strategies for a while. You know, trying to be clever, combining different things, trying to squeeze out extra profit here and there. Honestly, it was getting exhausting. Keeping track of everything, the conditions, the ‘what ifs’… my head was spinning most days.
One day, I just had enough. I looked at my screen, all these complex setups, and thought, “This is nuts.” It felt like I was spending more time managing the complexity than actually understanding what I was holding.
Stripping It Down
I decided right then to simplify. Drastically. I wanted something plain, something easy to understand at a glance. That’s when I landed on just taking a simple, straightforward position. Just buy something and hold it. No fancy footwork, no hedging with fifteen different things. Just a plain ‘vanilla’ deal.
Here’s what I did:
- Picked something solid: I looked for a company I felt I understood, something I believed had decent prospects. Nothing too wild or speculative.
- Bought shares: Went onto my platform, typed in the ticker, decided how much I was comfortable putting in, and hit ‘buy’. That was it. No complex order types, just a market order to get it done.
- Held on: Then, the ‘hard’ part. I just let it sit there. Didn’t check it every five minutes. Didn’t try to time tiny dips and peaks.
What Happened Next
You know what? It felt… good. Like a weight off my shoulders. Sure, it wasn’t as ‘exciting’ maybe. There weren’t massive swings every day (well, sometimes there were, but my approach was simple). But I wasn’t constantly stressed.

The main thing was clarity. I knew exactly what I owned and why. If the price went up, great. If it went down, I understood my basic risk. It wasn’t tangled up in five other dependent trades.
It didn’t guarantee profits, obviously. Nothing does. But the mental energy I saved was huge. It let me focus on other things, rather than being glued to charts trying to micromanage some overly intricate strategy I barely understood anymore.
Sometimes, keeping it simple, going ‘vanilla’, is the best move. It brings things back into focus. For me, it was a necessary step back from the brink of complexity overload. Just thought I’d share that little experience.