Even when I prop traded and floor traded for tics - I never used a 5 minute chart. I used longer timeframes because I wanted the sense of perspective. Yeah, I could scalp off a 30 or 60 minute bar a long time ago.
No wonder you're so anxious and living and breathing with every uptic or downtic (at least to me I got that sense that you were incredibly emotionally invested in your trade as you described it in your posts - let me know if I'm not correct). My sense from reading your posts was that you were very uncomfortable holding a trade that was underwater.
Markets "breathe". Very rarely will you be able to put on a position and it not be underwater at some point during its' lifespan. At least half that volume you are trading against has a much different trade timeframe hold priority as compared to yours - they could be holding for hours, days, weeks, months. They iceberg orders - let's say within 5 tics a big trader wants to put on 1,000 lot position. You've got basket arbitrage going on with NQ. There's just so many participants with very different objectives than yours.
Some others here suggested charting longer timeframes. As you can probably tell, I would not disagree with that sentiment. Maybe keep your 5 minute chart, but put a 30 minute chart up next to it for context or perspective. Another possibility is to use stop limit orders for your loss and your profit levels - then minimize the screen or even walk away from the desk.
No wonder you're so anxious and living and breathing with every uptic or downtic (at least to me I got that sense that you were incredibly emotionally invested in your trade as you described it in your posts - let me know if I'm not correct). My sense from reading your posts was that you were very uncomfortable holding a trade that was underwater.
Markets "breathe". Very rarely will you be able to put on a position and it not be underwater at some point during its' lifespan. At least half that volume you are trading against has a much different trade timeframe hold priority as compared to yours - they could be holding for hours, days, weeks, months. They iceberg orders - let's say within 5 tics a big trader wants to put on 1,000 lot position. You've got basket arbitrage going on with NQ. There's just so many participants with very different objectives than yours.
Some others here suggested charting longer timeframes. As you can probably tell, I would not disagree with that sentiment. Maybe keep your 5 minute chart, but put a 30 minute chart up next to it for context or perspective. Another possibility is to use stop limit orders for your loss and your profit levels - then minimize the screen or even walk away from the desk.