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1. Start From The Top
I begin with higher timeframes (1D, 4H) to understand the overall market direction â bullish, bearish, or ranging. This gives me the map before I start the journey.
2. Mark Liquidity Zones
Next, I highlight liquidity areas â where most stop losses and big orders sit. These are whale targets, and they often create fake moves before real ones.
3. Identify Key Levels
I draw support and resistance, supply-demand zones, and note previous highs and lows. Price always reacts to memory â and these levels are where that memory lives.
4. Study Market Structure
I look for higher highs/lows or lower highs/lows to define trend structure. A broken structure often signals a shift in trend â thatâs where opportunity starts.
5. Use Trendlines & Channels
I connect major swing points to form trendlines and channels. When the touches get tighter, I know a breakout or reversal might be near.
6. Drop to Lower Timeframes
Once I have my bias, I shift to 1Hâ5M charts to find entry confirmation â liquidity sweeps, retests, or candle patterns. This gives me sniper entries with small stop losses.
7. Set Risk & Targets
Every trade has risk-to-reward defined before entry. I place stop loss below structure and aim for liquidity pools or major zones as targets.
8. Stay Emotionless
Finally, I donât chase â I wait. Patience is my real edge. The chart is a mirror of psychology; if I stay calm, I can read it clearly.
Thatâs my process â structured, disciplined, and repeatable. Every setup tells a story, and my job is to listen, not to predict.




