I’ll be very direct here, without any bad intentions:Lenovo wrote: Fri Jan 30, 2026 4:30 am the broker closed me again,, today I say goodbye and thank you all for everything, a hug to all of you bye
Step 1. Limit yourself to one or two liquid instruments that actually fit your daily routine.
Years of jumping between markets usually lead to experience in none of them.
Step 2. Build one trading approach with a real foundation (for example market structure, trend follow or Supply & Demand).
This means price-based logic, not a stack of indicators.
At some point, it is necessary to leave the indicator swamp completely — especially systems built around repainting indicators.
They create the illusion of accuracy, but in reality they train the wrong habits and destroy confidence.
If a strategy only works in hindsight, it is not a strategy.
Your entire rule set should be mechanical, fixed, and simple enough to fit on one A4 page.
If rules need constant interpretation, they will fail under real pressure.
Step 3. Test this single approach on a demo account and commit to it.
Take 100 trades, no switching, no tweaking mid-test, no adding “just one more indicator”.
Step 4. Then let the statistics speak:
Win rate
Risk–reward
Expectancy
If the numbers are not acceptable, the solution is not the next strategy or indicator.
The solution is either refining the logic or choosing a different market.
Constant strategy hopping — especially between repainting systems — is one of the fastest ways to burn accounts.
This is not about finding something new.
It’s about finally executing one simple, non-repainting idea consistently.
P.S. I am currently at step 3 myself.
It is incredibly boring at times and requires a lot of patience and discipline — much more than constantly looking for new strategies or indicators.
But from my experience, every single step matters.
If you remove even one step, or try to skip ahead, you usually end up going in circles again.
There are no shortcuts here — the process is simple, but not easy.
Best Regards