@Tiplayer236
Most members here can relate to the frustration of putting in the time and still not seeing results.
There may be a short-coming in your approach.
Here’s a quick set of standard questions, which generally can help pinpoint exactly where things might be breaking down.
1. How did you create the corrals of instruments to trade each day?
(Is it systematic, or more “whatever looks active”?)
The decision-process, in choosing what to trade, is the greatest determinate of success.
https://usethinkscript.com/threads/the-premise-of-trading.21386/
2. How would you describe your trading style—scalping, day trading, or swing trading?
(Being clear here helps avoid the “I just trade” trap.)
3. What do you analyze and confirm and what
timeframes do you use, before entering a trade?
For example, checking higher and lower timeframes for trend and support zones, and your middle chart for entry.
4. What indicators or signals do you rely on, before making entry and when you exit.
—and are they giving independent confirmation, or
collinear; basically saying the same thing?
Are they part of every good basic strategy?
https://usethinkscript.com/threads/good-strategy-basics-in-thinkorswim.8058/
5. Please go here:
https://usethinkscript.com/threads/review-my-setup.18402/
And share a recent trade with a shared chart links of your timeframes and your reasoning?
(This is usually where the gap between theory and execution shows up.)
6. How much do you risk per trade as a percentage of your account?
(Are you consistent, or does it vary depending on mood/conviction?)
7. Do you have written trading rules, what are they? —and do you actually follow them?
8. How do you handle the emotional side—things like FOMO, revenge trading, or chasing losses?
Answering these honestly should help shine a light on whether the main issue is strategy, risk management, or psychology. Most struggling traders discover it’s a mix of all three, but identifying which one dominates is the first step toward fixing it.