It's complicated to make trading so complex again. To be honest, most people don't lose to the market; they lose to themselves.
Are you like this too: as soon as the market opens, you want to make a trade, fearing to miss out when it goes up, and not daring to cut losses when it goes down. The more indicators you look at, the more confused your mind becomes. It seems like you are working hard, but in reality, you are being led by your emotions.
Most of the time, there are no opportunities in the market, but many people can't help it and always want to 'do something.' The result is frequent entries and exits, earning a little and giving it back, losing a little and digging deeper.
I later simplified everything and only looked at two points: Is there a structure? Is there space?
If the trend hasn't developed, I just wait; I act only after confirmation. No guessing, no gambling.
After entering the market, it's also very simple: if I'm wrong, I leave; if I'm right, I hold, but when I reach a certain position, I reduce my holdings, not being greedy.
Many people don't lack ability; they lack execution.
One more crucial point—there's no need to trade every day. If there are no signals, stay out; don't treat trading as a task.
Finally, a realistic statement: if you earn but don't take it out, it's equivalent to not earning. First, withdraw the principal, and let the rest roll; only then can you go far.
Trading is actually very simple; the hard part is whether you can control yourself.