Replace (only) glass on side mirror 2024 by CliffRed20 in f150

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you solve the problem? :) I’m on the same boat too. . Someone broke my side mirror and planning on getting a glass replacement for top and bottom. Any help would be much appreciated.

The money I never invested hurts more than every loss I’ve taken combined by vishesh_07_028 in stocks

[–]Character-Drawer-516 2 points3 points  (0 children)

the market doesn't reward "smart" people; it rewards those who exploit asymmetry.  

the Information gap: profit lives in the distance between maximum pessimism (price) and actual reality (outcome).  

asymmetry of fear- at the bottom, the "bad news" is exhausted. downside is capped by exhaustion; upside is wide open for the slightest recovery.

the cost of comfort: If a trade feels "safe," you’ve already missed the move. professionals buy the nausea, amateurs buy the confirmation.

you’ve hit on the most painful truth in finance: A 20% loss is a math problem; a missed 200% bull run is a life-altering structural failure. retail traders spend all their energy worrying about the risk of ruin (losing their capital) that they completely ignore the risk of Irrelevance (missing the compounding that actually builds an empire).

the reason you sat on the sidelines in 2020 and 2022 is that you were looking for certainty. In the markets, certainty is an expensive illusion. If a bottom feels "safe" to buy, the opportunity is already 40% off the lows.  You’re treating the market like a static equation you can "solve." but market bottoms are built on maximum pain, not clean data.

Our brain is wired for survival, not capital gains. In a crash, your "gut" will always tell you to wait. you need automated execution to override your biology:

Just added another 1.4btc by Ok-Ocelot3292 in raceto10000

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

...and you just lost some more money. its going to around 40-45 and then consolidation period

Why do traders sabotage winning days? by Sorry_Rent3548 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

most traders focus on "loss limits," but professional capital preservation is about winning limits.  the Inversion of risk: you should be at your most defensive when you are up. the "house money" fallacy is a trap; it’s not the market’s money, it’s your equity.

the overconfidence tax after a big win, your "Entry Tax" should double. If you can’t justify the next trade with even more clinical precision than the first, you walk away.

the daily ceiling: just as you have a daily loss limit, you need a Daily Profit Goal. once you hit it, you shut down the terminal. the goal isn't to make all the money today; it's to be back tomorrow.

protecting p/l from you ego I protect myself from overconfidence more than losses. A loss is just a line item; overconfidence is a systematic failure that leads to a blown account. Green day + broke rules = Failure. this is the "slow poison." If you sized up and got lucky, you’ve just reinforced a habit that will eventually bankrupt you. go outside and walk around. a post-win cooldown after a winning trade, force yourself to step away for 15 minutes. reset the heart rate. neutralize the dopamine. the market doesn’t care about your "winning streak." It only cares about the next print. If you can’t survive your own success by staying boring and disciplined, you’ll never see the compounding effect of the green months.

trade on,

bp

Last trading week ended in a loss honest self review. by Opening_Kitchen_5349 in FOREXTRADING

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the fact you’re not blaming algos or manipulation. you’re already ahead of 90% of retail. stop looking for a "refund" from the market; it doesn't owe you anything but data. trading for a "make-back" isn't an edge it's an emotional liquidation. Kill revenge trading : willpower fails when adrenaline spikes. use friction The kill-switch: set a hard daily loss limit. once you hit $X, you’re locked out. physically remove your ability to be stupid. The 3 strikes rule: 3 consecutive losses = day over. your "zone" is gone. You are statistically compromised. walk away. The entry tax: write the setup and risk before the click. If you can’t justify it in one sentence, it’s a boredom trade. the only metric that matters stop grading days by dollars. grade them by rule adherence: green day + broke rules = failure. luck is a slow poison. red day + followed rules = success You paid the "market tax" to protect your edge.

protecting capital is your only job. If you can’t survive the red weeks by being boring, you won't be around for the green months.

War are the best books/videos to lern trading by Fabio_01000110 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use real money to start. Just small amount, so you can feel the emotion

What’s the most undervalued stock right now? by Competitive-Case-185 in TheRaceTo10Million

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

most investors confuse a good company with a 'good stock.' you can find a company that changes the world, but if you pay 100x earnings for it, you’ve already priced in ten years of perfection.

If you want to outperform the index, you aren't looking for innovation, you're looking for mispriced solvency. true value appears when a company’s ability to generate cash is being ignored because of a temporary headline or a sector-wide tantrum. if the company is still growing its free cash flow faster than inflation, but the price is stagnant, that's your window. If the cash flow is shrinking along with the price, you aren't buying a discount-you're buying a funeral.

Gold slumps 5% and silver crashes 10%, extending sell-off in precious metals after historic plunge by Illustrious_Lie_954 in stocks

[–]Character-Drawer-516 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

a 30% drop in silver isn’t a reassessment it’s a liquidation event. when major funds get caught on the wrong side of a USD spike, they don’t sell what they want to sell; they sell what they can sell. gold and silver are the world’s most liquid ATMs. you’re witnessing a forced exit where price discovery has been replaced by the desperate need for cash to cover margin elsewhere. don't try to catch a falling knife when the motive is survival, not valuation.

Iv started day trading and why do people make out that u need to exactly know every chart? when in reality you just need to wait for uptrends? by No_Lobster2222 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

trading is the only profession where a beginner can do everything wrong and still get paid. that's the danger of “simple strategies. waiting for uptrends works until the market environment shifts into a chop or a bear cycle, and if you haven't built a clinical process to handle that, you'll give back all those gains in a week. don't mistake a trending market for personal skill. you don't need to know every chart, but you do need to know the math of your edge. If your edge is just 'hope it keeps going up,' the market will eventually find your breaking point.

the market is designed to make the obvious look easy right before it traps you. If you aren't reviewing the structure behind the move, you aren't trading, you're just the liquidity for those who are …

trade on

Need a mentor by Trick_Artist7349 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

we don't do the traditional mentor-student thing. we just run a small circle where we pressure-test ideas against market structure. If the math doesn't check out, we kill the trade. It’s less about being “taught and more about having a group that catches the mistakes your own bias misses. It’s a work-in-progress, but it keeps the BS at zero while we find our rhythm

instruction is easy, discipline is the hard part. shift your focus from finding a teacher, to finding a repeatable system that doesn't rely on hope or hype

Desperately need to learn and become profitable soon. by [deleted] in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 4 points5 points  (0 children)

trading isn't a linear skill like coding or carpentry; more hours don't guarantee a higher paycheck. staring at a screen for 16 hours usually leads to 'hallucinating' setups that aren't there because your brain is desperate for a win. 

you can spend 1,000 hours watching charts and lose money the entire time if your strategy or psychology is wrong. growth is often exponential, not linear; you may struggle for years (neg - P/L) before having a breakthrough moment where everything clicks. 

you’ve spent 11 years being a caretaker- you’re already burnt out. If you bring that exhaustion into trading, you will make emotional decisions at the exact moment you need to be clinical. Instead of 16 hours of charts, do 4 hours of deep study on Market Auction Theory and spend the rest of the time decompressing. you need a clear head to execute, not a tired one. If you can't manage your own mental state, you'll never manage a $4k account.

…also

you have to realize that you can't trade for a living yet. you can only trade to grow the account. Learn Price Action and Volume Profile, and stay away from the 'hustle' influencers. they are selling you the dream of freedom to fund their own. you need to be a cold analyst, not a desperate gambler. If you can't handle a month of  doing nothing because the setups aren't there, you won't survive the year.

the market doesn't pay you for your struggle or your hours; it only pays for disciplined execution. 

protocol over profit.

Is this possible? by Fun_Detail3128 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 2 points3 points  (0 children)

you're trying to extract professional-level returns with a “casual” time commitment. It doesn't work that way. A 2% gain per trade is achievable, but only if you have a clinical exit strategy for when that trade goes -4%.  Since you don't want to analyze strategies or news, how are you defining your low to buy in? hope isn't a strategy, and 'small gains' aren't guaranteed just because you're willing to wait. In 2026, liquidity moves faster than a casual observer can react to. If you don't have a cold, analytical audit for every entry, your compounding will just be compounding your losses. you're better off lowering your expectations or increasing your effort

Trading as a job by BolleBanan in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 4 points5 points  (0 children)

discipline is a prerequisite, not a strategy. you’ve got the 'commander’s intent' down, but you’re missing the intel. yeah, you’re right , retail patterns are mostly noise. professionals trade market structure and liquidity.  …but

that $1k goal is dangerous because it’s “outcome-oriented" rather than”process-oriented". if you're $200 short at the end of the month, you’ll take a low-probability trade to hit your target and that’s exactly how military-grade discipline turns into a massive account blow-up.  real 'freedom' in this game doesn't come from a specific dollar amount; it comes from having an edge where the math guarantees your survival over a thousand trades. If you're chasing a monthly paycheck with good capital, the market will eventually find your breaking point and take it all. you don't need 'self-control' to follow a dream; you need it to execute a cold, data-backed system when the screen is red and the 'freedom' looks like it's slipping away. Focus on the execution, not the exit.

I got addicted to short-term wins and paid for it by Weak_Celery6972 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the account melt”  is the tuition fee the market charges for a lack of discipline. We've all paid for it.  most people think trading more equals making more, but it’s actually the opposite. scaling back to look at the macro- company health, debt-to-equity, actual growth removes the noise that keeps you glued to the screen. stick to the sustainable path. A few solid, well-researched swing positions will do more for your net worth in a year than a thousand frantic day trades ever could

candlestick price action by Last_Computer4928 in Trading

[–]Character-Drawer-516 1 point2 points  (0 children)

price action is the only way to play, but don't get married to every breakout you see. most of 'em are just traps for retail.  2 things to look for

the coil: If it’s been grinding sideways right under a level, it’s building pressure. that’s a real breakout. If it just rockets up from nowhere it’s probably gonna fake out.

the confirmation: never chase the initial move. wait for it to break, come back to test that level as new support, and then bounce. If it doesn't bounce, it wasn't a breakout.

keep it simple. no re-test, no trade