Steph
1.3K posts


@Steph_sr71 Eres una inspiración. Llevo bastante tiempo estudiando y siguiendo tu página. ¿Te importaría responder algunas preguntas por mensaje directo, por favor? 🙏
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Today I wanted to share a bit of tape reading — and how ICT concepts truly come alive when you apply them in execution, not just in theory.
I recorded one of my trades from the beginning (6am). No cuts, no sudden “I’m already in” moments — just clean, transparent process. Because that’s how trade videos should look if the goal is to actually teach, not perform.
It always makes me wonder… why do most clips start after they’re already in a position? Why not hit record from the beginning of the session, when the narrative, bias, and reasoning are actually built?
Maybe it’s easier to press record once the trade’s already running — after resetting the demo a few times, or after switching to a new challenge account.
But the truth is, credibility is built before the entry, not after it. Every second you record before pulling the trigger shows confidence, structure, and understanding.
That’s what I want to see more of in this space — traders showing process, not just outcomes. Because anyone can post an arrow… but only a few can show the story behind it.
This is just a sample of how an execution should be shared.
GLGT.


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Question for the trading community
Lanto just made 1.5 million 3 days
So about 500k copied across all accounts per trade
Lets say some random guy on twitter has a 90% win rate makes $500-$1000 per trade and he’s been doing it for years and he supports his family and lives a nice life
And then lanto makes 1.5 million in 3 trades the past 3 trades on a live account and has an overall 60% win rate
My question is: Is it even possible to compare them as traders and find who’s “better” if they are sizing completely different have completely different trading goal?
I see a lot of people say how the more you make in one trade, the better trader you are, but is that the right way to measure it?
What are everyone’s thoughts on this?
Is that even a possible metric? Or is it a combination of things?
I have no opinion and no bias here
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@Corleone_Trades Yeah, I thought it was bullish too. Something to study a lot this weekend🙏🏻
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Bernoulli’s equation only holds if the flow is incompressible, inviscid, and steady.
In reality, those conditions change: the fluid can heat up, accelerate, or turn turbulent.
The general equation —Navier–Stokes— always holds; Bernoulli is just its local version, valid under certain assumptions.
Markets flow the same way. Their conditions shift every day.
Your system must be the general equation —able to adapt—
while models are the simplified forms you use when those conditions apply.
“Simple” or “complex” isn’t a property of the phenomenon,
but an opinion of the observer.
Forexearlywarning@forexearly
@Steph_sr71 Too complicated. trading should be simple, see the system below for todays best trades using currency strength: x.com/forexearly/sta…
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Red - Premium Arrays
Blue - Discount Arrays
Orange - Inversion Arrays
Grey - No Narrative Arrays
Light Grey - Previous ORG
Light Orange - Important ORG
Dark Orange - Current ORG
Black - NWOG
White - Important NWOG
Purple - NDOG
Pink - Important
Teal - Previous FPFVG & FPFVG
Cyan - Important FPFVG
Light Purple - Midnight Opening Ranges.
(Different Layouts)
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If you've studied what he teachs here: Advanced ICT Liquidity Concepts / October 11, 2025. youtu.be/C_0Jh7HwCUI?si… You could've understood RTH Chart on ES :)

YouTube

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Beautiful Sick Sister Delivery.

Steph@Steph_sr71
Following up on yesterday’s video — today’s price action was a clear Sick Sister Theory narrative. There wasn’t really an OB on NQ, but it lined up perfectly with ES as the stronger sibling. For scalping, I like watching GC and NQ, as you could see.
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@officeuse101 I’m out, it’s basically about 3 Days look back PDHs and PDLs and NY Midnights with the Monthly and Weekly Open.
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@Steph_sr71 Helpful to me. I have all but the Weekly Profile laid out. Shoot me a pic of yours if you would, TIA! (any indy's that you use on it would really speed me up). I do like the 15S and have gotten used to it (mainly because I'm a tight stop kind of trader).
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Aviation safety reminds me a lot of risk management in trading.
It’s not just about what happens in the air — safety is built into everything. From how an aircraft is designed and assembled, to the maintenance after each flight, to the meticulous pre-flight checklist every pilot must complete — safety isn’t an act, it’s a culture. It’s embedded in every single phase.
Trading should be the same. Risk management isn’t only what happens during a live session — it’s how you feel before you trade, how you prepare your charts, how you review your performance afterward. It’s the never-ending discipline that keeps you alive in the long run.
Most traders overlook this. But just like in aviation, it’s what guarantees continuity.
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@Steph_sr71 Exactly, Ive coded it all. Take a look at my inner circle designs. Bias and Bot's

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ICT has hundreds of videos and hundreds of concepts — This is my opinion about how to face his work.
Obviously, you can’t study and memorize every single video or every note he makes. That’s theory. From there, you have to design a system that aligns with the theory, so you can then focus on the rules of that system — whether it’s simple or complex. There’s no need to remember every single thing he says; that would just lead to paralysis by overanalysis.
You need to understand the concept, the theory, and then build a system that leverages it. When you define one function, then another, and keep building your code, at some point you “forget” how each function is written — but you know why it exists and what purpose it serves. As you keep coding, you start seeing each function as a black box: you know what input goes in, and what output comes out. You don’t care about the internal details at that point because you trust it was defined logically in the first place.
ICT is the same. You have to assemble your own system — a system that, in my opinion (unpopular one), the market demands to be quite complex, counterintuitive, and deeply integrated with your own personality and “opinions” formed over months or even years.
Just like an engineer doesn’t need to remember every single formula or theorem from aerodynamics, thermodynamics, or structural analysis to know that the tools he uses — which are based on those theories — actually work. He knows that if he revisits how those tools were built, he’ll remember the theory behind them.
That’s how your interaction with your own system should be. When you define it, you’re working with the theory. But when you apply it, all that matters is focusing on the guidelines — the outputs — your system provides.
That’s how I see it.
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@officeuse101 I have the Layouts that Michael says us:
- Weekly Profile
- NDOGs/NWOGs Layout
- ORGs & FPFVG Layout
- HTF OrderFlow Layout (W1/D1/H1) where H1 is “LTF”
- LTF OrderFlow Layout (H1/m15/m5/m1)
I don’t use the Layout m3/m2/m1/s30/s15/s5. (Sub-one minute Layout)…yet.
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@Steph_sr71 Dumb q but helpful to me...how many screens do you have in your trading? Above I see the GC on 1H/1M and then the MGC on 1M. Seeing what you are doing is making me think I might need to change mine to HTF on left and LTF on right, just like you/ICT do.
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@officeuse101 My annotations and future commentary will be in English. When I decide to share it. Don’t worry 🙂
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@Steph_sr71 beautiful! I only wish I'd studied Spanish as hard as I'm studying ICT! Perhaps there's a way for you to record your voice chat in Spanish as you think/type it, then I can use Google Translate on that?
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Steph 리트윗함

Scaling isn’t a sprint
It’s slow, intentional and uncomfortable
Everyone wants “bigger size”
Very few earn the right to use it
While you dream of 6-figure payouts
Real traders slowly build skill, confidence and size
You don’t need to jump from 1 lot to 10
You scale when your discipline scales
Big capital isn’t hard to get
Managing it without losing your mind is.
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