Carlos
3.3K posts


🚨 The new Breakout Terminal just went global.
New web terminal. New mobile app.
Available to all traders worldwide.
This is what prop trading should feel like.
breakoutprop.com

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@breakoutprop @iampancho_ Never saw the option. Or is it because it’s not ready for Mexico?
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@iampancho_ That’s the old terminal (dxTrade)
You decide at checkout on all new evals to stay on this terminal or use the new Breakout terminal
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@breakoutprop Is the terminal working right now ? It just keeps loading but I can’t do anything
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We built the new Breakout terminal in-house.
That means when something breaks, we fix it.
When you ask for a feature, we ship it. Fast.
✅ Recent fixes already live:
Android chart bugs resolved
TP/SL show by default in positions table
Clearer error messages across the board
🔧 Releasing soon:
Move SL into profit
Order directly from the chart
On-chart SL/TP placement and modification
More coming. We're not done.
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Carlos retweetledi

Qué pedo con que el perro Bermúdez ahora narra las instrucciones de vuelo de @VivaAerobus
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With our demanding job as traders, is it worth trading your health for wealth? Are you even aware you’re making a trade-off? What are your boundaries?
Part of what Alex Hormozi so often preaches is the authentic raw truth. Many of you may have noticed on my YouTube videos that I start every single video saying that the reason why I'm now focusing on mentorship and teaching is that “I'm done trading my health for wealth. If you all are in the trenches and willing to trade your health for wealth, then I'm here, happy to teach you”. And I don’t view that hook as hyperbole.
I do think that trading comes at a real cost physically and emotionally, and I absolutely do think that cost can be worth paying. Many have asked me if I regret trading with the intensity that I did. I absolutely do not. Trading has given me a quality of life and a freedom that I never could have dreamed of as a young adult or child, the ability to never worry about money.
That said, I certainly wish I better prioritized sleep during those times and didn’t drink as much back then. I wish I got outside more and took more breaks. I do think the job has aged me and particularly my eye health. But we don’t know, what we don’t know.
The point I want to raise in this post is that the trade-off is real and with the push towards 24/7 trading, this is a topic more and more traders will need to come to grips with. Even if you are doing trading in its most healthy form, you inevitably increase your stress and lose your presence in everyday life. The job also tends to be highly sedentary.
At its more extreme forms, you are working crazy long hours, monitoring the markets overnight while being hit with cortisol and adrenaline again and again. This is triggering your fight or flight response, yet we are sedentary and going nowhere, which is one of the worst things for our body. Chronic stress mixed with sedentariness, while not getting outdoors, plus often that stress is associated with poor eating, alcohol, and other substances.
Now, look, if you are 22 years old or 25 years old or even 35 or 45 years old, that sacrifice can totally be worth it. The first $10,000 or $100,000 you make is absolutely life-changing if you don't have it. The first million you make is more marginal, but still absolutely life-changing.
My challenge to you all is to reflect on: what price are you willing to pay? The far harder part is being willing to accept the trade-off. If you are going all in, you need to accept that you will get sick more often. You will not feel great on many days. You will have very high emotional highs and very low emotional lows.
That being said, if you are willing to set boundaries on your trading, you must be okay missing out on performance and opportunities. It is totally okay to say that you will only trade the markets from 9:30 to 4:00, but then you must be okay missing moves in silver overnight or pre-market headlines or whatever else may be the case.
There are some traders out there that truly don’t have the temperament to be traders. The lows are too low for them. It ruins their well-being and quality of life. They get chronically depressed or suicidal. That price will never be worth paying.
I'm not here to tell you what the right answer is, because I don't think there is a right answer. It depends on your values and where you are in your life. The most important point is to make an intentional decision and then do your best to emotionally and psychologically accept the trade-offs.
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Carlos retweetledi

I just did my ass in this trade @Trader_Dante
Ton of confluence in my opinion. For me it’s 11:30 am as I’m in Mexico.
Also let me dm you, cunt.

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