The Forest and the Desert


If you deeply observe the laws of nature and compare them to the stock market, you will realise something profound: they are exactly the same. The market does not operate on man-made rules of fairness; it operates strictly on the unforgiving laws of nature.

Look at the people around you. Almost nobody is completely happy. Everyone has complaints. People look at others who are wealthier or more successful and feel a deep sense of injustice. They ask, "Why is everyone not equal? Why is life so unfair?"

If you look at the stock market, retail traders have the exact same complaints. They buy a stock and watch it sit completely flat for months. Meanwhile, they look at another stock—sometimes even in the exact same sector—and watch it skyrocket madly. They get frustrated and curse the market: "Why is my stock not moving? Why is the market so unfair to my portfolio?"

To understand why this happens, you have to look at how nature distributes its resources.

The Forest and the Desert

Think about how rain falls on the earth.

A dense, lush green forest already has plenty of groundwater. It has massive trees that could easily survive a drought for years. Yet, when the monsoon comes, the heaviest rains fall directly on the forest.

On the other hand, look at a barren desert. There is no water to drink. The land is cracking. It desperately needs the rain just to survive. Yet, the clouds pass right over it, and it receives nothing.

People look at this and say, "This is completely unfair!" . Why does this inequality exist?

The Crux: Requirement vs. Deserving

Here is the ultimate, harsh truth about both life and the stock market: The universe does not care about your requirements. The rain does not fall on the desert just because the desert needs it. The rain falls on the forest because the forest has built an ecosystem that attracts the rain.

You will never get what you want or what you need. You will only get what you deserve.

In life, rewards are given to those who build the skills, the mindset, and the ecosystem to attract success. Nature and markets do not run on charity; they run on value and momentum.

How to Apply "The Rule" in the Market

When amateur traders buy a weak, crashing, "cheap" stock, they are buying a desert. They look at the chart and think, "It has fallen so much, it needs to go up now." They buy it based on requirement. And just like the desert, they sit there waiting for a rain of capital that never comes.

Professional traders, however, buy the green forests. They look for stocks that are already strong, stocks that are breaking out, and stocks that have massive volume. These stocks don't "need" to go up—they have already proven that they deserve to go up because the Smart Money is already flowing into them.

Capital in the stock market is like rain. It will always flow toward strength, momentum, and class.

Stop buying weak stocks and hoping the market will show you mercy. The market does not reward sympathy. If you want to make money, stop looking at what you want to happen, and start betting on the stocks that have proven on the chart that they deserve to go higher.

-the trading job

The Luck


Whenever a retail trader sees a professional making consistent profits in the stock market, they usually default to the easiest excuse available. They point at the professional and say, "He is just lucky."

Let’s be completely honest: temporary luck does exist in the market. A beginner can blindly buy a random stock, stumble into a piece of good news, and make a quick profit. That is personal luck.

But here is the universal rule of the financial world: Personal luck is never consistent. Your personal luck will eventually run out, and when it does, the market will aggressively take back every single rupee it gave you, plus your capital. If someone is consistently profitable year after year, surviving bull runs and bear crashes, it is absolutely not because of their personal luck.

It is because they have learned to believe in the Market’s Luck.

The Supreme Entity

To understand this, you must realise that the stock market is a massive, collective entity. It represents trillions of dollars, global institutions, and the smartest financial minds on earth.

When you sit in front of your screen and analyse a stock, you are relying on your own limited brainpower and your own tiny pool of "luck." But the market does not guess. When the market places a massive bet on a specific sector or stock—driving the price up with massive volume—it is creating its own reality.

In every case, in every situation, and in every global event, the market’s luck is always right. If the market is aggressively betting that a specific stock will go up, it doesn't matter if the current news looks bad. It doesn't matter if the fundamentals look weak to you right now. The market is forward-looking. If the market is betting on it today, it is going to be proven right in the future. The market has the money and the power to ensure its bets win.

The Ego Trap: Your Luck vs. The Market's Luck

The reason amateur traders lose money is that they try to test their own luck against the market.

They look at a stock that is crashing heavily. The market is clearly betting against the stock. But the amateur trader’s ego steps in. They think, "I am smart. I am lucky. I will buy this falling knife, catch the absolute bottom, and prove everyone wrong."

They are betting their tiny, fragile personal luck against the unstoppable, trillion-dollar luck of the market. The result is always the same: they get crushed.

How to Ride the Market's Luck

Consistent profitability is actually very simple once you drop your ego. You just need to follow one rule: Never rely on your own luck. Only rely on the market's luck.

Whenever it is time to take a trade, do not ask yourself what you think will happen. Look at the chart and ask: What is the market betting on right now? If the chart shows that the market is heavily buying (an uptrend), you buy. If the chart shows the market is heavily selling (a downtrend), you sell, or you stay out. You simply attach yourself to the market's direction. Whatever the market is doing is right.

Stop trying to be a lucky hero. Find out where the market is placing its massive bets, quietly place your small bet in the exact same direction, and let the market's luck carry you to profit.

- the trading job

The Noise and The Price

 

There is a silent killer in the stock market. It doesn't look dangerous; in fact, it disguises itself as "help." It is everywhere, in every profession, but in the financial markets, it is deafening.

It is the Noise.

The moment you open your trading terminal, you are bombarded. There are endless breaking news alerts, geopolitical updates, social media panic, political debates, and thousands of reports from so-called financial "experts." For a trader sitting in front of their screen, this overdose of information is paralysing. It will make you go mad. You sit there freezing, wondering: Who should I listen to? Who is right? What if the news is bad but the stock is going up?

To survive this chaos, you must learn a lesson from the people who navigate the skies.

The Pilot’s System

Imagine a commercial pilot flying a jet at 35,000 feet in the middle of a massive thunderstorm. It is pitch black outside.

How does the pilot know where to go? He doesn't roll down the window to check the weather. He doesn't look in a rear view mirror to see if another plane is behind him. He doesn't look at the ground to figure out how to land. If he relied on what he could see outside the window, the plane would crash.

The pilot has only one way to survive: He must blindly believe the system in front of him. His dashboard tells him his speed, his altitude, his direction, and the exact angle of his landing. He trusts the instruments because the instruments do not lie, they do not panic, and they do not watch the news.

In the stock market, your trading setup is your dashboard. And Price is your ultimate instrument panel. Everything happening outside of the Price—the TV debates, the Twitter rumours, the economic forecasts—is just the storm outside the window. It is pure noise.

The Brain Command

To detach from the noise and fly by your instruments, you have to give your brain one simple, unbreakable command:

"I will do my analysis, and I will follow my tested trading plan, no matter what."

When you first start doing this, it will feel incredibly uncomfortable. Human nature wants to react to the scary news on the TV. You will feel anxious ignoring a "great tip" from an expert. But once you pass a certain amount of time, and you survive the ups and downs of the market using only your system, your brain will adapt. You will realise that the only thing that is objectively true in the market is Price.

The "Mental Manager" Filter

Now, let’s be realistic. You cannot completely isolate yourself. Unless you live in a cave, you will hear the news. You will see the headlines.

Since you cannot completely avoid the noise, you must learn to filter it. To do this, you need to hire a "Mental Manager" inside your brain.

The manager’s only job is to stand at the door of your mind and compare every piece of outside noise to your instrument panel (the Price).

  • Scenario A: A piece of news comes into one ear. The news says, "This company is amazing!" Your Mental Manager checks the chart. If the noise matches the Price. You can keep it.

  • Scenario B: A piece of news comes into one ear. The news says, "This company is amazing!" Your Mental Manager checks the chart. If the chart is not good. The noise does not match the Price. The manager immediately throws the news out the other ear.

Ultimately, every single decision must be signed off by the Price. Ignore the storm outside, trust the instruments on your screen, and execute your plan.

- the trading job