Reading won’t change perception but drills do.
If you are earnest about it, start a journal, post the result of this drill and invite to comment.
The drill is called the 5x5 grid.
On a blank sheet of paper make a grid of 5 rows of 5 columns of equal vertical lines (25 in total) each that represent 1pt bars.
These 1pt bars have five horizontal ‘ticks’. One each at the high and low; three that divide each bar into 4 equal segments. Each segment represent a ‘tick’ (which for the ES is $.25).
The horizontal ticks represent a possible open and possible close at that tick.
This sheet is now a template, make copies as clean templates.
Drill 1
Begin to make a catalog of bars by drawing over this template one bar at a time.
Start on the left hand side either at the top or bottom going by rows or by columns in a logical progression to organize your result.
An example of the first bar could be, opens at the low, moves up to the high, moves down to the low and exits at the low, next bar opens at the low, moves up to the high, moves down to the low and exits one tick above the low. Next bar same open same sequence but exits two ticks from the low, etc.
There are other logical progressions by which to orient to process the drill.
By creating a limit of a 1pt bar, the drill excludes volatility for the moment so that one can discern the three parts of any bar. These parts are known as legs - basically a unidirectional graphical artifact. Observing a bar live is distinct from doing the drill. Exclude the live dynamic for now.
By viewing from the perspective of legs, the grid can be sorted so that the bars fall into three different piles otherwise known as types based on legs.
What are the three types?
How many of each type are there?
All bars start as a doji - the open and close are on the same tick.
Something happens on a bar when it transforms and adds a leg. It’s easier to see the more legs a bar has.
What is this thing that happens?
Drill 2
Add color.
Have one template colored as bars.
Have another template as candles.
By comparing and contrasting bars and candles, something is emphasized more in one than in the other.
What does each emphasize that the other does not?
Do the difficult things while they are easy and do the great things while they are small. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
-Lao Tzu
I'm trying to get it, but what has it actually to do with the tape? Like I draw bars with marks about its volumes with regard to info in the tape and in such a manner I learn the patterns? Or what?