Author: ROQET
Lesson 60 — Double Tops
Meet Double Tops Ever seen price climb a mountain, reach the peak… then try again only to get tired at the same spot? Congratulations — you’ve just spotted a double top. A double top is a price pattern where the market forms two peaks at roughly the same level, showing hesitation or resistance around that…
Lesson 59 — Basic Retracements
Meet Retracements Markets don’t move like rockets — they breathe.Even when price is trending strongly, it pauses, backs up a little, then continues. That backward step? That’s a retracement — a temporary counter-move within a trend. Retracements matter because they show that even strong trends need breaks, like an astronaut catching oxygen mid-spacewalk. 👉 Comic…
Lesson 58 — Basic Breakouts
Meet Breakouts Imagine price trapped behind a locked gate — pacing, tapping, gathering energy… Then — BAM! One candle punches through the gate. That’s a breakout — price breaking beyond a defined level of support or resistance. A breakout matters because it signals momentum strong enough to push past a barrier, revealing shifts in trader…
Lesson 57 — Corrections
Meet Corrections If impulses are market sprints, corrections are the oxygen breaks — slower, choppier pauses where price catches its breath. A correction is: Corrections matter because they show the market isn’t a straight-line rocket — even strong trends take breaks before deciding what’s next. 👉 Comic Illustration Idea #1:An astronaut runner stops mid-space sprint…
Lesson 56 — Impulses
Meet Impulses Ever seen price on a chart sprint like it just heard the ice cream truck?That sudden whoosh is called an impulse — a fast, aggressive move in one direction. An impulse is a burst of momentum where: Why do traders care?Because impulses show intent. They reveal when the market is not just strolling…
Lesson 55 — Beginner Chart Examples
Meet Beginner Chart Examples Imagine walking into a gym for the first time and seeing someone juggling kettlebells while balancing on a stability ball.Now imagine someone else doing a simple push-up. Beginner charts should feel like the push-up version of charting — simple, clean, and effective — not circus-level chaos. Charts don’t need decorations, neon…
Lesson 54 — Avoiding Overdrawing
Meet Avoiding Overdrawing Have you ever seen a chart so overloaded with lines that it looks like a toddler discovered crayons and caffeine at the same time?Yep — that’s overdrawing. Overdrawing happens when you mark everything: every swing, every touch, every diagonal, every possible maybe-sorta-kinda trendline. It’s chart analysis meets spaghetti art. Clean charting, on…
Lesson 53 — Clean Charting
Meet Clean Charting Imagine opening a trader’s chart and seeing 19 indicators, 47 diagonal lines, 6 oscillators, and a motivational quote squeezed into the corner.At that point, you’re not trading — you’re solving a Where’s Waldo puzzle. Clean charting is the opposite of that chaos. It’s the idea that your chart should be: A clean…
Lesson 52 — News Awareness
What Is News Awareness? Picture this: you’re casually sipping your morning coffee, watching EURUSD drift lazily…BAM! A huge candle erupts out of nowhere like the market just got struck by lightning. What happened?News. In trading, news awareness simply means knowing when major economic events are scheduled, how impactful they might be, and how they typically…
Lesson 51 — Sessions
What Is Sessions? Imagine the forex market as a giant global party that never stops—people just take turns hosting it.When one city goes to sleep, another wakes up and says, “Pass me the charts!” These hosting periods are called trading sessions, and the three major ones are: Each session has its own “personality,” rhythm, and…