(I'm going to separate the charts from the ptm's as much as possible, to reduce confusion. Thus, this extra post.)
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(o)" ? !"
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Okay, now for a trading performance - ptm reading study.
My first ptm-enhanced trade went fine, only it was beginner's luck.
The second ptm involved a contrary, higher-rank opinion, crashing my results.
The third ptm shows how the second took over the first, and then adds direct connection from gut theorizing to stringing together different brain parts to think with immediately.
The fourth ptm answers that facilitation with a delimiting of information available to process and a difficult-to-discern skewing of how that information is delivered to further degrade that facilitation.
This last one almost ends most useful trading; only a minor point (the large arrow pointing to it) delays this by circumvents the delimiting and skewing in a small way by being the one to initiate action, in the fifth ptm.
The sixth ptm is a clean break from self-control and thus any challenge to it: It fully embraces full-body reaction and measures it in how the user is controlled. The upper center of such a spike can be inspiration, at the same time confusion and loss sets in after another entity does actions the user reacts to (with the middle spike(s)). Thus, for me at least, reactive sacrifice for a new charting idea began.
After the sixth one, the fourth one began to look good, as it seemed I was being someone else and their approach to dealing with trading whatever study is done at the time. This feeling passed before I took up on it, and I kept with the momentum the sixth one began.
The final one seems to get rid of the sixth one's imcompatibility with profit, only its barebones approach and thin, two-axis-chart utilitarianism more carries through into smaller, more manageable pieces the last one's different measures of spike, allowing more space filled with different inspired ideas to crop forth and rewrite the overall method in some way as a meme.
This new method did recreate how I see the chart, and maybe this range of ptm examples can help guide the next bunch of ptm's to better trading.
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(o)"
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Okay, now for a trading performance - ptm reading study.
My first ptm-enhanced trade went fine, only it was beginner's luck.
The second ptm involved a contrary, higher-rank opinion, crashing my results.
The third ptm shows how the second took over the first, and then adds direct connection from gut theorizing to stringing together different brain parts to think with immediately.
The fourth ptm answers that facilitation with a delimiting of information available to process and a difficult-to-discern skewing of how that information is delivered to further degrade that facilitation.
This last one almost ends most useful trading; only a minor point (the large arrow pointing to it) delays this by circumvents the delimiting and skewing in a small way by being the one to initiate action, in the fifth ptm.
The sixth ptm is a clean break from self-control and thus any challenge to it: It fully embraces full-body reaction and measures it in how the user is controlled. The upper center of such a spike can be inspiration, at the same time confusion and loss sets in after another entity does actions the user reacts to (with the middle spike(s)). Thus, for me at least, reactive sacrifice for a new charting idea began.
After the sixth one, the fourth one began to look good, as it seemed I was being someone else and their approach to dealing with trading whatever study is done at the time. This feeling passed before I took up on it, and I kept with the momentum the sixth one began.
The final one seems to get rid of the sixth one's imcompatibility with profit, only its barebones approach and thin, two-axis-chart utilitarianism more carries through into smaller, more manageable pieces the last one's different measures of spike, allowing more space filled with different inspired ideas to crop forth and rewrite the overall method in some way as a meme.
This new method did recreate how I see the chart, and maybe this range of ptm examples can help guide the next bunch of ptm's to better trading.