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Don't Force the Market to Follow Your Will
During trading, there’s a very common mistake that many people fall into: confusing analysis with rigid belief.
For example, when Bitcoin is in the 67,000 range, you come up with scenarios like down to 62k, 55k, or even up to 80k—that’s completely normal. Analysis is an indispensable part of trading, and everyone should do it.
But the problem starts when you believe the market has to go the way you drew it.
Analysis Is a Scenario, Not a Fact
Trendlines, support/resistance zones, or price patterns are just how you interpret the market—not rules that the market is required to follow.
When the price doesn’t move to the zone you expected (for example, not to 55k), instead of accepting it, many people start to:
Redraw resistance to be “more reasonable”
Adjust the trendline again
Find more reasons to reinforce their original belief
This is exactly the moment you’re no longer analyzing—you’re bending the market to fit your own thinking.
Right Mindset: React, Don’t Predict
In trading, the most effective approach isn’t:
“What the market will do”
But rather:
“If the market does A → what I do
If the market does B → what I do”
You don’t need to be right about the direction the market will go. You just need to respond correctly to what’s happening.
When the Plan Is No Longer Suitable
If the market doesn’t follow the original scenario, it doesn’t mean you’re completely wrong—it simply means:
The data has changed → the plan must change too
A good trader isn’t someone who’s always right from the start, but someone who knows how to update their perspective the fastest when the market gives new information.
The Market Owes You Nothing
One truth you need to accept:
The market doesn’t know who you are
Doesn’t care what you’ve analyzed
And certainly has no obligation to follow your expectations
You can only control:
Entry point
Capital management
Trading discipline
You can’t control the market.
Conclusion
Trading isn’t a game of “guessing right”—it’s a game of “adapting correctly.”
Don’t try to force the market to follow your analysis
Let the market guide your actions
When scenarios change, be ready to change with them
In the end, the person who lasts longest in the market isn’t the best analyst—it’s the most flexible one.
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