Jim Clunn retuiteado

You don’t chase pumps or run from walls.
You wait, patient and hungry, watching the market set your table.
On the chart, there it is: a thick wall of sell-side liquidity. Some call it resistance. You call it lunch.
You eye the order book like a chef eyes a fresh cut of meat. It’s stacked, layered, daring anyone to bite. Most traders flinch. But you?
You bite.
Hard. Straight into the wall.
The book shudders.
Your fill doesn’t just nudge the price — it redefines it. That wall wasn’t there to stop you. It was there to feed you.
Suddenly, liquidity starts filling you in like broth poured into an empty bowl. Value rushes to meet you — not in defense, but in offering. You’re not taking slippage — you’re causing it. The bots see your size and panic. Market makers scramble to keep up. The book isn’t pushing back — it’s being pulled in.
You’re not just filling an order anymore.
You’re pulling gravity.
The pool widens, more plates arrive. Your bite was so powerful it summoned liquidity. Like the market realized who showed up and decided to serve its finest.
Price rips.
That thick wall? Gone.
That resistance? Absorbed.
You didn’t trade the move — you became the move.
You lean back, full. Not just fed — fed by the fear of others.
Because when you show up to the order book,
the market doesn’t offer crumbs —
it lays out a feast.
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