The conviction to take the trades suggested yesterday comes not from waiting to be told what to do or for someone to make a "call". Nor does it arise from unquestioning faith in AMT. Rather it is the result of study and practice and more study and more practice, in replay and in real time, each session accompanied by and followed by the recording of meticulous notes, every day, day after day, even if one is not trading that day. Those who were not aware of the context for yesterday's trades since Tuesday evening should ask themselves why, particularly if they have been at this for more than a few months and still struggling.
6. Record-keeping. It is essential to collect and maintain records of your end-of-session reviews (you are of course doing end-of-session chart/trade reviews). If you do not keep track of what you did right and what you did not-right and the results of each, you won't be looking at early retirement any time soon. Avoid, however, the I'm A Useless Sack drama. Focus instead on what you saw correctly, what you missed that you should not have missed, what you missed that the greatest trader on the planet would have missed, which trades were made according to plan and which weren't (along with why, so that you can avoid the same behavior in future). Review Appendices E and F. (p. 135)
Those who aren't maintaining these records, including meticulous real-time notes, are spinning their wheels, and unless they want to spend years learning "how to trade" like so many do, I suggest they spend some quality time with Appendix E.
Db