The chart above is a 1000 tick chart, but I have found that the time-frame doesn't make much difference. I draw the Fibonacci levels before the market opens and use the same ones all day. I think observers can see how price reacts to those levels on the chart. Maybe I'm wrong about that. Nonetheless, losing trades are rare using this system. I thought it would be obvious, but I'm told it's not.
I have been told that my idea of journaling is different from others, that others will enter statements like "I got in here and got out there with profit". Of course there would be no way for readers to know whether the statements were actually true. My idea--which seems not so easy to display in the journal--was to put down the levels at which I was putting in orders BEFORE the price got there so that anyone watching could see what happened when the order was filled. There would be no doubting the veracity of claims of profit.
For example, I currently have orders in to buy ES at 2903 and 2900.25
I have been told that my idea of journaling is different from others, that others will enter statements like "I got in here and got out there with profit". Of course there would be no way for readers to know whether the statements were actually true. My idea--which seems not so easy to display in the journal--was to put down the levels at which I was putting in orders BEFORE the price got there so that anyone watching could see what happened when the order was filled. There would be no doubting the veracity of claims of profit.
For example, I currently have orders in to buy ES at 2903 and 2900.25