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Collo

@Collinsmaven

BORN TO TRADE...... proud gooner Reborn Consistency

Kenya Katılım Haziran 2025
309 Takip Edilen172 Takipçiler
Boss
Boss@BossMohitt·
Unpopular opinion. 1:2 is the king of all RRs.
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AC
AC@ACtradesfx·
Risking 0.5% in a prop challenge can actually cost more than risking 2%. The reason is opportunity cost. Every week you spend grinding through the evaluation is lost profit potential.
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BNF
BNF@bnf_039·
I met a trader who gave up on ICT, tried CRT, never worked. He then fell in love with SMC, worked for a while but couldn’t retire him. He got back to trading simple support & resistance. That’s the moment he became a consistently profitable trader. Now making $75,000 a year.
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Collo
Collo@Collinsmaven·
@Deartrader1 Full time trading haikupei pressure?
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DearTrader
DearTrader@Deartrader1·
Almost most 4 months kutoka niwachane na hii sector Saa hii fuel ingikuwa inanitesa kweli kweli
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Kev
Kev@admiral_kelvin·
💹NAS100 +2R (D)OLHC (4H)OLHC (1H) SWING + PSP M5 SHARP TURN + CSD Simple. Mechanical. Repeatable.
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Jhin
Jhin@jhinweb3·
@Rizzy1c Time in the game really is the method, who’s still building?
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Rizzy
Rizzy@Rizzy1c·
Sorry bro, there’s no "method" You owe the game at least 2 years before you see any real money.
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Collo
Collo@Collinsmaven·
I'll just close my trading week..nimejaa ngori
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Kingrar
Kingrar@lordkingrar·
Mbevoo yeye hukuwa amekubali his poverty situation. Yeye mentorship ni upande kitanda huyo msee haangalii gender.
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Collo retweetledi
∅
@Mbevoo·
Otieleh wa tx walked so that @ WigglyPips could fly mamae 😭😭🤣
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Soufflette
Soufflette@m07062780·
@Nick_tradesKe1 "Come out pretending to be the saviour so that you can rugpull and scam people with a new idea that you have" Marketing 101. Mnatuonanga aje aki😂😂??
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Eze Kingsley Ohaji
Eze Kingsley Ohaji@ohajielom·
A trader can know every pattern on the chart and still lose money. He can spot support and resistance, mark out liquidity, understand structure, and still fail when real money is on the line. Why? Because trading is not just a chart game. It is a behaviour game. The chart shows you what the market is doing, but your mind decides what you will do about it. If you cannot control your fear, greed, impatience, and ego, then all your technical skills will keep getting sabotaged by your own actions. That is why self-mastery takes a trader further than chart mastery alone. A lot of traders think the problem is that they need one more setup, one more indicator, or one more strategy. But many times, that is not the real issue. The real issue is that they do not follow what they already know. They enter too early because they are scared of missing out. They move stop losses because they do not want to be wrong. They close winners too fast because they are afraid the market will take profits away. Then, when they lose, they blame the market or the setup, when in truth the mistake came from a lack of discipline. A trader who masters himself can take a simple system and make money from it because he knows how to stay calm and execute properly. Self-mastery in trading means emotional control. It means you do not let one winning trade make you feel like a genius, nor let one losing trade make you feel broken. It means you stay level-headed. You understand that one trade means very little in the big picture. What matters is the next 50 trades, the next 100 trades, and whether you can keep applying your edge with consistency. A trader who has mastered himself does not chase the market after a loss. He does not get overconfident after a win. He stays focused on process, not feelings. That is the kind of trader who survives long enough to grow. The market has a way of exposing every weakness in a trader. If you are impatient, the market will show it. If you are greedy, the market will punish you. If you need always to be right, the market will humble you fast. Charts do not care about your emotions, but your P&L does. That is why mindset, discipline, and risk control matter so much. A trader who has mastered himself knows when to sit on his hands and do nothing. He knows that not trading is sometimes the best trade. He knows that protecting capital is part of the game. That kind of patience is not easy, but it is what separates professionals from gamblers. Many traders spend years trying to master entries but very little time mastering their habits. Yet habits are what shape results. Do you journal your trades honestly? Do you respect your risk on every single setup? Do you accept losses quickly and cleanly? Do you wait for confirmation, or do you force trades because you want action? These are the questions that really define a trader. The trader who masters himself builds routines that protect him from his own bad tendencies. He does not rely on motivation. He relies on structure. And in trading, structure beats emotion every single time. In the end, charts can give you an edge, but self-mastery is what allows that edge to pay you. Without discipline, knowledge is wasted. Without patience, good setups are ruined. Without emotional control, even the best strategy can fail in your hands. The trader who masters himself will always go further because he is stable, consistent, and hard to shake. He understands that success in trading is not just about reading the market right. It is also about reacting to the market effectively. Master the chart, yes. But more importantly, master the person looking at it. That is where real growth begins.
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