Thanks tech/a, you explained it perfectly.
Bottom line rb250660, a stop is a process. When it is placed it is there to protect you from a loss if you are wrong.
Should a stock or whatever turn back up after your stop has been triggered then if you can choose to re-enter, it is now a whole new trade process.
The only thing that is the same is the name of the entity (and maybe your stop trigger point if the last point is still a valid one).
Treat it as a mechanical process using numbers, start involving woulda, shoulda or coulda and its gambling.
Not having a go at you, if you look back at it just look at why it turned up.
Was your stop too tight, was there positive news, should I have looked at a longer time frame, did the Dow jump 500 points and carry it on the wave of emotion etc etc.