That excludes at least 90% of trading book authors.Don't take advice from people who can't prove in REALTIME that they can trade.

First I would like to thank you for taking the time to post, but I'm afraid that I don't quite see what you're getting at, which you predicted anyway.I don't often try to have a dialogue with individuals that come across like you do. You talk so much, and you think so much, that your ability to listen and contemplate suffers.
Your current thought patterns won't lend themselves easily to successful trading, as we've already seen. Whenever I come your posts, they show that you're still not thinking right about how to trade successfully and how to partner with the market.
You're missing the forest for the trees; but I don't know how I or anyone else would be able to help you see that. Your overwhelming focus on plotting entries, theorizing about mechanics, and referencing micro-interval charts are evidence to this. If you can unwind yourself, and start trying to understand and familiarize yourself with how the market itself actually moves; and not just regard it as a series of continuous data points that you need to apply rules and statistical procedures to, you might make some progress.
Those things definitely have their place, but you're putting the cart before the horse, and you've been doing it for quite some time. Difficulty getting a foothold into consistent trading despite numerous attempts at system design and execution is an indication that your broad-level hypothesis and beliefs about the market are inferior. Start trying to understand when and why you should even begin to be looking to position yourself in a certain direction.
You seem so comfortable with data, statistics, and mechanical, that I wouldn't be surprised if you read this post and conclude that it's incredible vague and of no concrete use to you within a few moments after finishing it, never to re-read or think about it again. Unless you learn how to understand the message that people occasionally attempt to convey to you on how to trade successfully without letting it pass right over your head, let all the noise go, and start dreaming and revising your core-level, fundamental understanding of what the market is and how it moves, I think you're going to keep spinning your wheels.
Einstein wrote to a companion that a good deal of his observations regarding theoretical physics came from a thought experiment he conducted by pretending to be a photon traveling at the speed of light, and then he went back and ironed out the formulas to describe the insights he discovered from the experiment. He often used to leave his study when particularly stumped and play piano until the answer came to him. You've got to learn to think differently if you want to succeed in this arena.
And furthermore, all this sentence does is prove your superiority. If you were really interested in helping me not spin my wheels any further, you would actually try and tell me what this magic message is. All you're saying is that I don't understand, which isn't all that useful. What message have people been trying to tell me?Unless you learn how to understand the message that people occasionally attempt to convey to you on how to trade successfully without letting it pass right over your head, let all the noise go, and start dreaming and revising your core-level, fundamental understanding of what the market is and how it moves, I think you're going to keep spinning your wheels.
A lot of the new traders trying to learn or who have been failing for some time seem to spend an obsessive amount of time trying to understand perfect entry mechanics. Entry specifics are probably one of the least important components of a good trading procedure, in my opinion.
I fully agree, but of course we will just be told we don't understand the entire market structure.I'll never understand this mindset, this notion that entrances don't matter or are entirely secondary to other parts of a trading plan. Makes no sense to me. The reason most losing trades are losers is precisely because of lousy entrances. How could it be otherwise? Cutting Losses Short is all well and good but how about minimizing the number of losses in the first place by starting out in the right direction? In other words, how you enter a trade matters a great deal.
I certainly don't want you to give me homework.
You have to share something that is a bit more tangible.
I'll never understand this mindset, this notion that entrances don't matter or are entirely secondary to other parts of a trading plan. Makes no sense to me. The reason most losing trades are losers is precisely because of lousy entrances. How could it be otherwise? Cutting Losses Short is all well and good but how about minimizing the number of losses in the first place by starting out in the right direction? In other words, how you enter a trade matters a great deal.
Not clear to me what you mean here. For example, I'm a trend trader. So my entry rule is simple: "Trade with the Trend." The development of the trade is secondary to the entrance because there is no trade until there is an entrance. The development of a continual understanding of the nature of the trade sounds like Jack Hershey talk, which was far too often cryptic rather than revealing.Regarding this mindset; what makes the entries of secondary importance is the development of a continual understanding of the nature of the trade, in my opinion.
Of course. You were forced to trade against the trend and had to execute the primary exit rule (Cut Losses Short) to prevent a small loss from becoming a large loss. How you entered the trade mattered. It determined how you exited the trade.For example, if someone forced me to open a short at a given time when there was a clear long bias, I would be managing my trade, and instantly exit for maybe 2-3 tick loss.
Here you entered the market correctly: in the direction of the trend. No need for some hypothesis, just apply the second exit rule: Let Winners Run. Again, how you entered the trade matters. It determines how you exit the trade.If there was a long bias, I would set up some hypothesis about market conditions, actively control my risk and monitor my trade, and likely come out with a profit.
I thought random entries had random direction as well as random times. If you're trading in the trend direction, then the randomization of entry time just determines whether you get a small or a large portion of the potential profit.Random entries into a trending direction will profit in a short amount of time; if you're able to identify market conditions and manage them properly without choking successful trades out.
Thank you. Good trading to you.You seem like an intelligent individual and I think it's commendable that you are open to asking questions and exploring ideas you have an opposing opinion about. Best of luck to you.
And I'm very aware that you have just as much of a closed mind as I do. I asked you several times to describe to me the nature of the market. I even offered my explanation in a few sentences, and instead of taking the opportunity to be helpful, you just take the time to write how little I know, yet again, and how lost I am, and just blame me for it.Yes, I am aware that you are averse to homework.