Before the new week starts, do these four things:
• Review last week’s trades.
• Identify what worked and what didn’t.
• Mark your levels.
• Decide your risk before the market decides it for you.
Most people think consistency comes from discipline.
It doesn’t.
Consistency comes from reducing the number of decisions you have to make when the market opens.
By the time Monday arrives, you shouldn’t be asking:
“What should I do?”
You should already know.
Because the traders who constantly react eventually become liquidity for the traders who came prepared.
Prepare tonight.
Your Monday self will thank you for it. ✔️
Meanwhile
I’ll be sharing my trade ideas this week on my telegram channel. Link in bio.
Did you study today?
Let me know in the comments.
Happy father’s to all the real fathers out there.. 🥂❤️
And for those who need father, I’m here for you🙂↔️🙂↔️…
gm to those that still gm.
Happy weekend.
Here’s a tip if you’re struggling to get visibility on X:
As a small account, your first goal isn’t just followers — it’s visibility.
One of the fastest ways to get noticed is by replying to larger accounts. Leave thoughtful, creative, or engaging replies that make people want to check out your profile.
Turn on notifications for popular accounts in your niche and be among the first to reply when they post. Early replies get the most exposure.
A simple daily target:
• 100+ quality replies
• 25+ quote posts
• 25+ original standalone posts
Stay consistent with this for 30 days, and your account will become more visible, recognizable, and easier for people to discover.
Visibility first. Growth follows.
Trading is just risk management.
Winners survive.
Losers blow up.
GM CT.
Winners of this giveaway soon, stay active and engage with my posts.
Turn on my notifications.
If you’ve never taken a prop account to payout stage, then this post is for you. ‼️
I’ve put together a list of the personal rules that have helped me keep my funded accounts and make consistent payouts for over a year in this post.
I’ve traded prop funded accounts for years and one thing I’ve learned is that staying funded has very little to do with finding the perfect setup because every trader gets good entries from time to time.
The difference however, is what happens when you’re wrong. That gap is what drains accounts so I created a list of my rules that you can easily copy to keep your accounts.
Here are the risk rules I follow before placing a trade. 👇
-: I decide how much I’m willing to lose before I enter a trade and that number doesn’t change once I’m in.
Some setups look so good that you’re tempted to size up halfway through. Don’t.
Good risk management only works when the rules are set before emotions get involved.
-: I don’t increase risk after a loss.
A losing trade doesn’t make the next setup more likely to work and the market doesn’t care that you’re trying to recover what you just lost.
Some of the biggest drawdowns I’ve seen started with someone trying to make back one loss in a single trade, forgetting that the market has no limits on what it can take from you.
-: My stop loss goes where the trade idea is wrong.
If price reaches that level, then the reason I entered the trade is no longer valid. I’ve learned that taking the loss is usually cheaper than trying to give a bad trade more room to work.
-: I only risk an amount that allows me to think clearly.
The easiest way to know you’re risking too much is when the trade starts affecting your behaviour. You’re checking charts every few minutes, watching every candle and looking for reasons to interfere with a plan that was perfectly fine before you entered, that discomfort is simply your body telling you that you’re doing too much. 1% is okay.
-: I don't judge trades by whether they win or lose.
Some of my best trades have been losses and some of my worst trades have been winners. A good trade is one where I followed my plan from entry to exit, regardless of the outcome.
Risk management isn't the most exciting part of trading.
It's also one of the biggest differences between traders who survive long enough to become profitable and traders who keep starting over.
Here’s the updated version of just that closing section:
The market will still be here next week. Make sure you are too, because it is easier to get another entry than it is to get another capital.
Remember to apply and not just bookmark.
Follow me, @Starr_gael, and turn on post notifications to stay updated and be the first to see whenever I make a post.
You’ll find trade documentaries, breakdowns, insights, results and my personal thoughts on my WhatsApp. Click the link below to connect.👇
https://t.co/HOc1mv5KrZ
The scary thing about progress is that it keeps moving.
That is why one of the biggest lies we tell ourselves is that we’ll finally “arrive.”
The same way the BlackBerry once felt untouchable, there will come a time when what you currently consider a dream becomes your normal.
That’s why celebrating milestones is important, but getting too comfortable with them is dangerous.
Growth has no finish line.
What feels extraordinary today may simply become your baseline tomorrow.
Keep raising your standards. 📈
A small loss only becomes painful when your ego refuses to let it stay small.
Most blown accounts started with someone saying:
“It’ll come back.”
“Let me remove the stop loss for now so it wouldn’t take me out.”
“I can’t end the day in a loss.”
Sometimes the best trade management is accepting that you were wrong.
GM💜