Wed Mar 4 Trade Signals and Journal

20200304
Short 2 RTY 1506.5, 1506.5, +1.0, +4.8
Long 1 RTY 1497.5, -0.2
Long 1 NQ 8669.0, +5.0
Long 1 NQ 8668.0, -2.25
Short 1 ES 3051.0, -0.25
Short 1 ES 3052.75, -0.5
Short 1 ES 3055.0, -0.25
Short 2 YM 26447, 26447, +20, -4
Short 2 YM 26478, 26478, -7, -7
Short 2 YM 26500, 26500, -7, -7
Short 2 YM 26500, -7, -7
Short 2 ES 3063.75, 3063.75, +3.5, +5.5
Short 3 RTY 1511.3, 1512.0, 1511.8, -0.0, +2.1, +3.0
Long 1 NQ 8750.0, -1.5
Long 1 NQ 8747.25, -2.25
Long 1 NQ 8740.0, +10.25
Total ES +8.0
Total YM -26
Total NQ +9.25
Total RTY +10.7

Say goodbye to one-and-done.... for the moment, anyway. Conditions in the market tend to be consistent. That is, when turns and breakouts are crisp, they tend to stay that way for the whole frame.. and when conditions are whippy and full of stutter-step, they also tend to stay that way for the frame... just so did I approach my entries today as if I was still riding the wave of early, clean volatility as has been seen for some 7 days prior... but not today. Stop-outs must be tolerated... to trade without them is to make HUGE assumptions about the underlying trend that no trader should ever make... Instead, welcome your stop-outs. Learn to love them. For in that brief pause of being on the side and out of the trade, a quick glance of technical conditions affords you the time to assess just whether the event concept you were triggered into is still valid, or has now faded away. If still there, be persistent with your re-entries. If not, stay put, and await the next signal to then appear... it always does.... eventually.