1) Determine a Draw On Liquidity - where Price is likely reaching; like NWOG, PDH\PDL, Session H\L.
2) Wait for opposing liquidity raid, during or immediately after a 10\50 Macro.
3) Entry on 1st FVG in the present price structure or use IFVG in the run to opposing liquidity to your Draw On Liquidity.
4) Frame your risk to 1% or less, Hard Stop Loss placement beyond Candle #1 of the FVG you used for entry.
5) Take 50% of position off at half of the range between your entry and the Draw On Liquidty, the balance limit out just before your Terminus.
Wash, Rinse, Repeat... nothing fancy or complicated.
...Only focus on what price should be doing based on your model and submit to that, and that is how you hold on to winning trades.
ICTโs best ever speech.
You have the power to speak creation with your tongue. If you choose to think it is hard, difficult or impossible, it will be.
If you think you can accomplish your goals and ask God for the strength to accomplish them for more than your freshly desire, do you think He would shun you?
You can do all things, through Christ Who will strengthen you.
Believe in the God of way making. He has a record of doing some amazing feats and escapes for those who diligently seek and love Him.
Cake walk...
What if, as a new trader, you only made 75 bucks a day?
Instead of comparing that to other people's results, how much of a blessing would it be to you?
Humble beginnings change lives far more than one could ever imagine.
When I was learning how to trade, I was part of a big trading Discord.
There was a guy in the Discord everyone respected.
First to post charts.
First to mark levels.
First to explain why price should move.
If someone asked a question, he had the answer.
Honestly, if you judged trading ability by analysis alone, he was the best trader in the room.
But hereโs the part no one knew:
He never made money.
I found out after talking to him privately.
While everyone assumed he was funded, he was still blowing challenges.
Same pattern every time.
Perfect analysis โ no entry.
Missed move โ late chase.
Late chase โ emotional stop.
Or even worse:
Perfect setup โ smaller size โjust in case.โ
Mediocre setup โ full risk because it โfelt good.โ
On the chart, he was surgical.
In execution, he hesitated.
He wanted certainty before clicking buy or sell.
And certainty doesnโt exist in trading.
The market doesnโt pay you for being right.
It pays you for acting under uncertainty with controlled risk.
Eventually he admitted it:
โIโm scared to be wrong.โ
That fear kept him safe emotionally - but broke him financially.
Some of the โworstโ traders I know make money.
Some of the smartest never do.
Because trading isnโt about who understands the market best.
Itโs about who can execute a simple idea the same way over and over again.