Support and resistance levels are among the simplest yet most misunderstood concepts in technical analysis. The longer a price zone holds over time, the greater its practical significance tends to be. The difference between an inexperienced trader and an experienced one lies in their approach: the former seeks the perfect level, whilst the latter observes how the market reacts within a zone of interest.
Liquidity sweeps, deviations, reclaims and structural confirmations are often the elements that allow us to distinguish a simple reaction from a high-probability opportunity.
Ultimately, support and resistance levels are not used to predict the future, but to identify areas where it is worth paying closer attention and waiting for the market to reveal its intentions.
Study these slides and they will be useful to you
A retweet would be helpful
“I don’t understand why women don’t just report it if it really happened.”
When I was 19, I reported mine. I had bruises. Hospital photos. Text messages of him apologizing the next morning. My friends drove me to the station because I could barely stop shaking. I thought evidence would make it simple. I thought truth would be enough.
Months later, I was the one on trial. His lawyer printed my Instagram photos and held them up in court. Asked why I wore crop tops. Asked why I drank that night. Asked why I didn’t scream louder. He replayed my police interview and pointed out every time I hesitated, every time I cried, every time my timeline wasn’t perfectly linear. “If it was traumatic,” he said, “why can’t she remember clearly?”
Sitting there while strangers debated my pain like it was a group project felt like being stripped again. My messages were projected on a screen. My body was described in detail. My character was picked apart like that was the real crime.
He walked out on bail. I walked out with panic attacks.
That’s why some women don’t report. Because even with bruises. Even with screenshots. Even when you do everything “right.” You still have to survive the assault twice, once in private, and once in public, just to maybe be believed.
Ultimately, everything we are discussing ….scenarios, liquidity, possible cycles for ETH and altcoins – hinges on one thing: how the Fed decides to proceed and what message it sends to the market.
There is no such thing as 'safe' in trading.
I can tell you one thing with certainty, simply because I have been in this business for almost 25 years: every time you convince yourself that you are right 'no matter what', the market will put you in your place.
Over time, you realise that the real job is not to guess the future, but to know how to read what is changing: the tone of the FED, liquidity coming in or out, shifting sentiment, price behaviour at key levels.
Above all, you realise that:
you cannot become attached to a scenario
you cannot fall in love with a coin
you cannot remain stuck on an idea just because you tweeted it
You need to be disciplined enough to manage your emotions when the market goes against you, and humble enough to say:
"OK, something has changed, I'll adapt."
This is the point:
it is never the market that bends to your narrative.
If you want to stay in the game in the long run, you have to bend to the market, listen to it and update your plan based on what it does, not what you hope it will do.
@eliz883 Lost some gold jewelry that was from my great uncle by selling it and leveraging an ETH position.
You've said so many times capital preservation is the most important and I think I now fully understand it. I want it to be a new start, and 1k would greatly help with that.
So Crypto Rover tagged Grok to select a winner for a giveaway and it began replying about his involvement in pump and dump schemes and sketchy promotions and is refusing to select a winner.
@eliz883 You loved the trend line. The first trend line has been broken not only on 1h but also on 4h. Now you move it to make it look like the first trigger you gave didn't happen before the retest of 75.
I thought you were more honest.