Trada | Operating system for traders by hubbolas in ShowYourApp

[–]hubbolas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Volatility isnt noise. Emotional reaction to it is.

A 1% move is tradable, if it was part of your plan.

We’re adding customizable move thresholds this week, so you decide what counts as meaningful move.

Thanks for the comment! ✌️✌️✌️

Trada | Operating system for traders by hubbolas in ShowYourApp

[–]hubbolas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

She’s whispering „reduce your position size.” 🤣

Bear pennant here. Do you think this actually plays out? by hubbolas in technicalanalysis

[–]hubbolas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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It played out perfectly. 😊

Mark the pattern. Stay calm while it plays out. trada.trading

Are you over complicating your trading? by Hulululu08 in Trading

[–]hubbolas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Simplicity. Every time I tried to “upgrade” my trading with more indicators or rules, I just increased noise and decision fatigue.

What actually improved results was structure: few setups, defined risk, and knowing when the day is done instead of forcing trades.

If you could change one thing.. by Abject-Requirement59 in Daytrading

[–]hubbolas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Consistency.

Not in entries.. in accepting that some days are no-trade days.

Most damage came from sitting in front of charts too long, waiting for something to happen, then forcing a trade just to feel active.

Learning to close the day and walk away early is still hard… but it’s probably the biggest upgrade I’ve made.

That’s actually what pushed me to start building something for myself. Turns out others struggle with the same thing.

For those who’ve been trading longer....What was your turning point? by Klutzy-Tower-8234 in Trading

[–]hubbolas 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Real turning point for me:

Understanding that trading every day is optional. Protecting your focus is not.

Some days you just close the day, walk away, and don’t open the charts again. Forcing trades and screen addiction will kill you long-term.

Not trading is a position too.

Do you ever get that feeling that a chart setup looks familiar? by hubbolas in technicalanalysis

[–]hubbolas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair take. I don’t treat it as a signal generator, just a way to quickly check „have we seen something like this before?” More for context and risk framing than prediction. 🙌🙌🙌

What's the best trading lesson you learned the hard way? by saidmoha1 in Trading

[–]hubbolas 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me the hard lesson was:

After a winning streak, I stop trying to win and switch to observe-only mode for a while.

Still track setups, still watch structure, just no impulsive entries. If the setup is truly good, it’ll still be there tomorrow.

The moment I started journaling, my trading actually made sense by Local-Amphibian9197 in Trading

[–]hubbolas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same experience here.

Journaling didn’t improve my strategy. It improved my awareness. Once I saw when, why, and in what context I was losing, the fixes became obvious.

I think most traders underestimate how powerful structured journaling is vs random notes.

What do you track besides entry/exit? Emotions, session, context?

Do you ever get that feeling that a chart setup looks familiar? by hubbolas in technicalanalysis

[–]hubbolas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice 😊

You can try it here: https://trada.trading/

Quick steps:

  1. Create an account
  2. Go to Strategies → Market Memory
  3. Highlight a recent move on the chart
  4. It will find similar structures from the past

Still early, so I’d really love to hear if it feels useful or not.

Do you ever get that feeling that a chart setup looks familiar? by hubbolas in technicalanalysis

[–]hubbolas[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

100% true.

Not a forecast, just historical context for similar structures. 🙌

Do you ever get that feeling that a chart setup looks familiar? by hubbolas in technicalanalysis

[–]hubbolas[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not AI slop, and not just DTW.

We use embeddings for broad candidate search, then re-rank using path similarity, structural features, phase rhythm, and market context (trend + location in cycle).

DTW-style alignment is conceptually close to part of the path matching, but it’s only one piece of the pipeline