Rushabh.Khirani

2.6K posts

Rushabh.Khirani banner
Rushabh.Khirani

Rushabh.Khirani

@Timeparadox17

Katılım Ocak 2013
1.3K Takip Edilen31 Takipçiler
Vikram Pai
Vikram Pai@vikpai·
Fuck I can’t believe I lost both my dogs in 9 days. I miss them 💔
Vikram Pai tweet media
English
17
0
79
3.1K
Rushabh.Khirani
Rushabh.Khirani@Timeparadox17·
@itzarunca Hi arun, on the weekend could you please do some sectors? Especially Cnxrealty?
English
0
0
0
5
Rushabh.Khirani
Rushabh.Khirani@Timeparadox17·
@itzarunca Much needed arun! Thank you putting it out without asking for it, was going to but got your notification before that! Cheers
English
1
0
1
59
Shai |
Shai |@Am_Shai·
2 FA's now in Nifty The 23430 Failed auction has pushed the index up 400 points The previous one at 24042 of the 11th is on T+4 locked auction between the 2 FA's something has to give. FA's are powerful references to enter low risk trades Use them well
English
4
2
41
4.9K
Yuvraj Shah
Yuvraj Shah@YuvrajShah02·
@Pareengala1 Need a news trigger for that but in terms of downside I think limited downside. Mainly because earnings were not too bad so markets shouldn't fall too much more than they did a few weeks back
English
2
0
0
90
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Atal
Atal@Atalburhani·
Nobody talks about what trading actually costs you. Not the money. The money is the easy part to measure. I'm talking about the stuff that doesn't show up on a P&L. Trading cost me my mental health. Not in one dramatic moment. Slowly. Over years. The kind of slow where you don't notice it's happening until you're standing in the middle of your life wondering why nothing feels good anymore. I stopped enjoying things that used to make me happy. Music didn't hit the same. Hanging out with friends felt like a distraction from what I should be doing. Weekends weren't weekends. They were just days the market was closed and I couldn't prove myself. Everything that wasn't trading started feeling pointless. Not because it was. Because I'd tied my entire sense of self to something that kept telling me I wasn't good enough. And when you hear that message every day for years, it doesn't stay in the charts. It bleeds into everything. I didn't notice the shift because it was so gradual. One month I was a normal kid with interests and energy and people around me. A year later I was someone who sat in his room, stared at screens, and measured his worth by whether the day was green or red. The worst part wasn't the losing. It was realizing that even on the days I won, I didn't feel anything. The wins stopped registering because the baseline had dropped so low. I wasn't celebrating green days. I was just temporarily not hating myself. That's what years of failure does. Not to your account. To your identity. You start the journey believing you're someone who can figure this out. Three years in, you're not sure you're someone who can figure anything out. I pushed through it. Not gracefully. Not with some method or framework. I pushed through it the way you push through a wall in the dark. No visibility. No guarantee there's anything on the other side. Just the refusal to stop moving. Every day was a problem to solve. Every week was another loss to process. Every month was another stretch of wondering if this was all a waste. And the only person keeping me going was me. No mentor. No coach. No one in my life who understood what I was carrying. That builds you. I won't pretend it doesn't. The person I am today was forged in those years. My ability to sit with discomfort, to question my own beliefs, to keep showing up when everything says stop. None of that existed before trading broke me down and forced me to rebuild. But I wouldn't trade the lessons. I just wish the tuition was cheaper. If you're in the thick of it right now. If the things you used to love don't feel the same. If you're measuring your worth by your P&L and everything outside of trading feels grey. That's not permanent. That's the cost of a journey most people will never have the courage to take. And the person you're becoming on the other side of it is worth every dark day you're sitting in right now. But please. Don't lose yourself completely in the process. The charts will be there tomorrow. The person you are outside of them needs attention too.
English
33
38
249
11.7K
Arunkumar 🇮🇳
Arunkumar 🇮🇳@itzarunca·
#Nifty - 23815 650+ points declined from our level #Banknifty - 54440 1800+ points declined from our level Not any recommendations. #Elliottwave #Stockmarket
Arunkumar 🇮🇳@itzarunca

#Nifty - 24150 300+ points declined. Expected resistance was 24460 and the actual high was 24480 #Banknifty - 55550 750+ points declined. Expected resistance zone was between 56230 - 56400 and the high made was around 56330. Not any buy or sell recommendations. #Elliottwave #MagicFibs

English
13
3
50
10K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
iain
iain@ohiain·
Every time the market gets hot again, I see traders suddenly become volunteer rehab counselors for terrible stocks. “This one hasn’t moved yet…” Yeah. Probably because it sucks!? Meanwhile, the actual leaders are sitting there pulling back 10-15% into the 9/21EMA after a +150% move, tightening beautifully, and people ignore them because they’re busy trying to resurrect stocks that don't need any attention. For ex., $ BE is a name I'm watching after making a 160% run off the lows and tightening right into the 9/21 EMAs. Some of you treat laggards like toxic exes: “They’ve changed this time.” No they haven’t. They’re still emotionally unstable and bad for your portfolio. The market already told you where the real money wants to be! Stop trying to outsmart obvious strength. Chart: $BE.
iain tweet media
English
25
15
252
17.6K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Guy Spier 🇮🇱 🇺🇦 🇨🇭🇬🇧🇮🇷🇦🇪
"If you have to walk through the streets crying for a few hours every day as part of soldiering through then go ahead and cry away." But you can't quit. Post my GBM / glioblastoma diagnosis I understand Charlie Munger's words so much better that I did before. "The iron rule of life is that everybody stuggles. Everybody has some tough stretches." CNBC Cures.
True market Leader@TmarketL

Charlie Munger reflects on death, struggle, and how he found strength to move forward. This timeless advice can help anyone facing tough times

Zurich, Switzerland 🇨🇭 English
45
91
843
133.2K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Take Testosterone
Take Testosterone@maxyourtest·
Lesson in there
Take Testosterone tweet media
English
0
31
571
9.1K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
iain
iain@ohiain·
That's my entire process, which revolves around putting myself near potential leadership constantly: > tracking relative strength names > monitoring sector rotation > identifying Stage 2 b/os > watching for tightness > focusing on strong themes > waiting for compression → expansion This recent market environment has been a great reminder of how powerful leadership concentration can become once momentum expands. Semis, AI infrastructure, storage, and data-related themes have consistently produced some of the strongest opportunities in the market. I’m not trying to predict exactly which name becomes the next monster move. I’m simply trying to consistently position myself where those moves are statistically more likely to emerge.
iain@ohiain

Some traders are out here taking 167 trades a week like they’re getting paid hourly by the market. At that point, you’re basically a full-time 9-5 employee stuck at the desk. Meanwhile, 1 trend in $MU or $SNDK can make more money than 6 months of revenge trading random garbage at 11:42 AM because “the setup looked kinda good.” Newer traders should understand that trading frequency and profitability are not the same thing. The market could literally hand them a future monster leader sitting above the 9/21EMA in a perfect Stage 2 breakout… and they’d still sell it after +6% to go chase some microcap stock named after a vitamin supplement. To each their own, I guess.

English
6
13
118
9.5K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Gary Brecka
Gary Brecka@thegarybrecka·
Muscle memory is not just a figure of speech. When you build muscle, you add nuclei to your muscle fibers. These nuclei persist even after you stop training and the muscle shrinks. This is why people who were athletic in their youth rebuild muscle dramatically faster than those who have never trained. The nuclei are still there. Waiting. This means the muscle you build in your 30s and 40s creates a biological advantage you can draw on for the rest of your life. The best time to build muscle was years ago.
English
14
19
251
16.4K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Atal
Atal@Atalburhani·
There's a moment in trading that changes everything. You don't go looking for it. You just see it one day and you can never go back. For me it was losing trades where I did everything right. Not sloppy trades. Not impulsive entries. Not revenge trades I could blame on my emotions. Clean setups. Perfect structure. Entries I'd take a hundred times over. And they lost. The first few times, I explained it away. Bad luck. Wrong session. Market was weird today. There's always a reason if you look hard enough. But it kept happening. Perfect setup. Loss. Perfect setup. Loss. Not every time. But enough times that the pattern became impossible to ignore. I did everything right and it still didn't work. That sentence broke something in me. Because my entire trading identity was built on the belief that if I just got good enough at reading the charts, I could control the outcome. That skill determined results. That a perfect entry deserved a win. It doesn't. It never did. Winning and losing on any individual trade have nothing to do with skill. A perfect setup can lose. A garbage entry can win. The outcome of the next trade is genuinely independent of how good your analysis was. You can do everything right and still lose. You can do everything wrong and still win. Once I saw that, I couldn't unsee it. And something unexpected happened. I stopped trying to be right. Not gradually. Not as a decision I made and had to discipline myself into. The need just dissolved. Because what's the point of trying to be right about something that was never knowable in the first place? I stopped entering trades expecting a win. I stopped feeling betrayed when a good setup lost. I stopped needing the market to validate my analysis. Because my analysis was never meant to predict the outcome. It was meant to filter for setups where the math is in my favour over a hundred trades. Not this one. A hundred. That shift didn't make me a better analyst. It made me a better trader. Because I finally stopped fighting the one truth that the market was trying to show me from day one: You were never in control of the outcome. You were only ever in control of the decision to show up and execute. Everything after that was always out of your hands. The traders who see this stop chasing. They stop forcing. They stop grieving every loss and celebrating every win. They just trade. Quietly. Consistently. Without needing permission from the P&L to feel okay about themselves. That's not a technique. That's not a mindset hack. It's something you see once and carry with you forever.
English
6
18
128
5K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Bracco ⚡️
Bracco ⚡️@Braczyy·
@Stephen_Trades1 “The biggest drawdowns will always happen after big runs. If you don't have a drawdown that means you aren't taking any risk and not making any money!” - Qullamaggie
English
2
11
129
9K
Day End Trader
Day End Trader@dayendtrader·
Small loss on the short: 1R Big profit on the long: 7R Paisa lo aur ghar jao Wapas kal phir aao! 🫡
Day End Trader tweet media
English
4
0
40
3.3K
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
X Freeze
X Freeze@XFreeze·
Elon Musk: "If you punish people too much for failure, then they will respond accordingly, and the innovation you will get will be very incrementalist Nobody's gonna try anything bold for fear of getting fired or being punished in some way. So risk-reward must be balanced and favor taking bold moves, otherwise it will not happen"
English
1.4K
4.5K
26K
18.9M
Rushabh.Khirani retweetledi
Atal
Atal@Atalburhani·
My client called his recent losses 'banger setups.' Perfect entries. Clean structure. Everything aligned. He said he'd take every single one of them again tomorrow. And they all lost. Eleven in a row. His first reaction was doubt. 'Is my edge decaying? Has the market changed? Is my system still valid?' 500 trades of data said yes. His emotions said no. That's the trap. When good setups lose, your brain doesn't process it as variance. It processes it as evidence that something is broken. Because how can a perfect setup lose? If everything was right, the outcome should have been right too. But that's not how probability works. Probability doesn't care about your confluences. It doesn't care how clean the entry was. It doesn't owe you a win because you followed the rules. A perfect setup with a 60% win rate will lose four out of ten times. String enough trades together and eleven losses in a row isn't a malfunction. It's a mathematical certainty waiting to happen. His system didn't break. His system did exactly what a 40% win rate system does when variance runs cold. The only thing that almost broke was his belief in it. And that's the real test. Not whether your system survives a losing streak. Whether you do.
English
1
2
16
996