LMFAO HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH HAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHHAHAHA
Do you see the second entry on the chart? LOL HAHAHAHA
LMFAO HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH HAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHHAHAHA
you can laugh but you are the joker.LMFAO HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAH HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
What is Al Brooks doing on the charts?


He was an Eye Surgeon. So he obviously has a very good Brain and attention to detail.All this seems unnecessarily complicated and not worthwhile. There's first, second and third entries, failures, failed failures, failed failures of failures, this and that.
Why not just buy near a swing low and sell near a swing high?
Mark up the major levels and catch a piece of the day's larger moves instead of trading noise and largely random chart patterns.![]()
He was an Eye Surgeon. So he obviously has a very good Brain and attention to detail.
He said he had to learn the ES by himself by marking up Charts everyday and cataloging them. That would explain the complexity and detail.
But extracting the Principles among his Writings is a nightmare. I find myself skimming and scanning. He makes other trading books look like basic Children's picture Books. But his Publishers would love it, gives them three Books to sell.
My opinion ATM, he's just conveniently verbose.You're too kind. I'm an engineer and I can tell you there's plenty of stupid people working at my firm where I find it amazing they even made it through school.
Regardless, a good brain and attention to detail may not be sufficient for trading profitably.
As long as it works, I have no complaints. Question is - does it?
Seems to me Al Brooks is at an advantage keeping things complex and diffuse as the student is always at fault for not having understood it or studied diligently enough.