Tag: day trading

  • Riding the Waves and Finding Stillness in the Dips

    Riding the Waves and Finding Stillness in the Dips

    The market must breathe before it can run. Don’t let a micro-movement steal your macro-conviction.

    I was looking at two charts yesterday that I’d traded the day before. I’d walked away with a modest profit from day trading, but seeing them rise again—mimicking the previous day’s gains—hit me with a flicker of regret. I’d missed the second wave. It’s clear these assets are in a “wavy” cycle right now.

    Then, I turned my attention to gold. My mentor’s thesis is clear: gold is headed up, and when it moves, it will pull the mining companies with it. But in the moment, gold dipped. Even though I believe in the long-term play and the global tensions supporting it, that small downward swing sparked a moment of unease. I found myself questioning: Is it going lower? Did I miss something?

    Gold eventually recovered and moved back up, but the experience was a reminder of how easily micro-movements can affect your psychology. This is where awareness becomes the ultimate tool. Even when you have skin in the game and a firm belief in the asset, those small swings can still reach you. The challenge isn’t just predicting the market; it’s defending your peace of mind against the noise.

    The Zen Bull’s Lesson: How to Defend Your Peace

    If you find yourself feeling that “uneasiness” during a minor dip, here is how to stay grounded:

    • Zoom Out: Micro-movements are just the market breathing. If your long-term thesis (the global tension) hasn’t changed, the price wiggle shouldn’t change your mood.
    • Identify the Characters: Is the FOMO Monkey telling you that you’re losing out? Is the Paper-Handed Rabbit trying to make you jump too early? Recognizing these internal voices takes away their power.
    • The Cost of Admission: Volatility is the price we pay for the eventual “shoot up.” You cannot have the peak without sitting through the valley.
    • Label the Feeling: Instead of saying “I am worried,” say “I am observing a feeling of worry.” This small shift in awareness keeps you from acting impulsively.
  • Breathing Through the Red: My $1,000 “Real Capital” Baptism

    Breathing Through the Red: My $1,000 “Real Capital” Baptism

    February 24, 2026 | The $AG Journey

    Current Sentiment: Zen Bull 🐂 (with a Monkey 🐒 whispering in the ear)

    The end of the process.
    The end of the process.

    • Asset: $AG (First Majestic Silver)

    • Action: Holding the Line.

    • Price Level: Watching the $6.00 – $6.50 range.

    • The Environment: The Hedge Fund Whale is churning the water. Silver is volatile, but the math says the support is holding. The Permabear Owl is hooting about a crash, but I’m looking at the data, not the noise.

    • The Struggle: The FOMO Monkey wanted to sell everything when it dipped, then buy more when it spiked 2%. He’s frantic, looking for a “win” to feel safe.

    • The Zen Bull Move: I recognized the Monkey’s voice. I didn’t fight him; I just sat him down and did four rounds of 4-4-4-4 box breathing.

    • Journal Entry: Today I learned that silence is a trading strategy. Doing nothing is often the hardest trade to execute.

    • Result: Position is active. Capital is preserved. Mind is calm.

    • The “Zen Bull” Take: > “The FOMO Monkey trades the price; the Zen Bull trades the plan.”

    Box Breathing Technique

    “I am a practitioner of awareness, not a victim of the ticker.”