You're right of course...darchas wrote: ↑Tue Nov 03, 2020 8:09 pmThere's a 100 pages in this thread now, tons of good advice but the whole approach to me looking from the outside in is random. You need to know how to make money in a market to start to understand how you need to improve. Just opening trades over and over again and feeling positive when they're green and negative when they're red just isn't getting anywhere. I know it's hard but i think less time randomly trading and more time researching, delving deeper will pay dividends. I've seen posts saying to just keep on trading - for two years at least, for 8,000 markets. Is this right? I can't imagine this is an efficient use of time.
Like Morbius I play poker, the approach seems equivalent to the poker player playing 12 tables for hours on end hoping that experience will make him play better. It won't. He should play two tables max and think through every decision in as much depth as he can. When he hits a spot where he doesn't know the correct decision he should take this away from the tables and work on this until he understands what's going on. In poker and trading my approach is to focus on what I don't know and to work on that and practice until I do. If I stick a stake in without a plan and end up in green, then that's no good for me, it's random. I need to know where the money is made and that's where I'll work. In poker I study and realise my check back range is unbalanced, so I focus on improving this, in trading I study and recognise recurring scenarios and I step back and think about how I might exploit that. The point is the work is in the study and thinking, not playing mindlessly or opening trades just because a race/match is on.
And this relates to stake as well. I get the idea about meaningful stakes but actually you're learning. The money doesn't matter. If I spot a recurring situation on the ladder I think I can exploit then my practice might involve using 2 quid stakes to get a better feel for things and to record my results. This phase has nothing to do with making money, it's about testing out what I've been working on away from trading. When I have a spot where I know I'm playing well then I'm out of the learning phase and can trade with my usual stakes.
I wish you the best of luck I really do, but I think focus on working smarter and not harder and reflect on how you best use your time so you don't end up two years down the line and doing the same thing.
I think I said a while back if I've made no significant progress by Christmas, I'm giving up.... For the very reason you state.
I'll try and be smarter