Lesson 69 — Beginner Workflow


Meet Beginner Workflow

Imagine walking into a messy kitchen and trying to cook a five-course meal.
Where do you even start? The oven? The fridge? Crying in the corner?

That’s how most beginners feel when they open a chart for the first time.

A workflow gives you a calm, repeatable way to look at the market — like a checklist for your brain.

So let’s create a simple, beginner-friendly routine that ties everything together from Modules 1–4.

👉 Comic Illustration Idea #1:
An astronaut floating above a chart, calmly checking boxes on a clipboard while planets shaped like candlesticks orbit — symbolizing order amidst chaos.


How Beginner Workflow Works

Here’s the simple process:

**1. Spot the environment:

Trend or range?**

Is price generally moving upward, downward, or sideways?

A few candles or swing points tell you this — don’t hunt for secret formulas.

2. Mark obvious levels

Look at recent highs, lows, or boundaries where price reacted.
Clean lines — not a spaghetti bowl of 20 zones.

3. Observe candle behavior

Are candles building momentum, slowing, or hesitating around those levels?

4. Avoid over-analysis

If you catch yourself staring at a chart like it’s a magic eye poster, stop.
Simple is powerful.

👉 Infographic Idea #2:
A vertical flow diagram showing four steps (trend → level → candle behavior → simplicity), using icons only — arrows connecting each.


Why This Matters in Real Trading

Because without workflow, beginners do the dangerous thing:

Draw everything, believe nothing, and click impulsively.

Common beginner mistakes:

  • Overdrawing charts like a cosmic coloring book
  • Trying to trade every wiggle
  • Believing patterns always deliver
  • Jumping to conclusions after one candle

What helps?

  • Keep analysis minimal
  • One idea per chart: trend or range
  • Observe candles but don’t dramatize every wick
  • Breathe — charts won’t run away

💡 Tip: If your chart looks like a meteor storm hit it, delete everything and start again.

👉 Comic Illustration Idea #3:
A trader astronaut wiping a cluttered chart clean with a giant space eraser, revealing a simple, clean chart beneath.


Key Takeaways

  • A workflow gives structure to your charting.
  • Start with trend or range, mark levels, observe candles.
  • Less drawing = more clarity.
  • Simplicity beats overthinking — keep your charts clean.

Thumbnail Idea:

A comic-style astronaut calmly navigating a clean star-map-like chart in space, holding a checklist — symbolizing orderly workflow in a vast market universe.


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