The market is an ocean of probabilities, not a mathematical constant.
Even the most perfect entry according to all indicators can be crossed out by one large order from a "whale" or simply by a random crowd impulse.
Why this approach is actually a victory, not a defeat:
Shifting responsibility away from yourself: When you acknowledge that the market lives its own life, you stop blaming yourself for an "incorrect" forecast. You are not Vanga, you are a strategist who works with probabilities.
The importance of a stop: Since this is a "guess the number" game, the only thing we really control is how much we are willing to lose if we guessed wrong. Your stop is your control over the chaos.
Psychological peace: As soon as you accept that the next candle can go anywhere, "fuh-moments" stop hurting so much.
Trading is not about being right in every trade. It's about staying in the game long enough to wait for your "lucky" wave. Today the market is capricious, but tomorrow or in an hour everything can change.