You’re tired of trading advice that contradicts itself.
One guru says buy the dip. Another says short the rally. A third tells you to wait for confirmation (but) never says what that even looks like.
I’ve been there. Wasted months chasing signals that vanished before I clicked “buy.”
That’s why I built this Trading Guide Etrstrading from scratch (not) theory, not hype, but real screen time and live trades.
No noise. No vague “mindset” talk. Just what works.
And what doesn’t.
I tested every tool. Skipped the fluff. Kept only what gave clean, repeatable entries.
This isn’t another overview. It’s a walkthrough. Step by step.
From setup to first signal to your first real trade.
You’ll know exactly what Etrstrading is. What its tools actually do. And how to use them.
Today.
No guessing. No second-guessing.
What Etrstrading Really Is
this post isn’t a toolkit. It’s a trading philosophy (one) that treats price as the only real signal.
I stopped using indicators two years ago. Not because they’re “wrong,” but because they lag. They smooth.
They lie to you when volatility spikes. Etrstrading cuts that noise out.
Its core rests on three things: Price Action Focus, Risk-Defined Setups, and Psychological Discipline.
Price Action Focus means reading candlesticks, structure, and volume as they happen. Not waiting for an RSI cross or a MACD hook. Just what the market is doing right now.
Risk-Defined Setups mean every trade starts with a stop-loss. Placed first, before entry. No exceptions.
You know your loss before you know your profit.
Psychological Discipline? That’s the hard part. It’s showing up even when you’re tired.
Skipping setups that don’t meet criteria. Taking the loss without revenge trading.
This isn’t for everyone.
If you need 12 confirmations before pulling the trigger, Etrstrading will feel naked. If you rely on alerts, auto-trades, or backtested “edge” scores, this won’t fit.
Think of it like flying a small plane. Most traders stare at 100 blinking lights. Airspeed, altimeter, heading, GPS, fuel flow, engine temps.
Etrstrading teaches you to fly by attitude, power, and horizon. Fewer dials. More awareness.
I’ve watched people blow accounts using perfect-looking indicator setups. And I’ve watched others grind steady gains with just support/resistance + volume + discipline.
The Trading Guide Etrstrading doesn’t promise shortcuts. It promises clarity. If you’re willing to sit with it.
You’ll miss trades. You’ll get faked out. But over time?
You’ll stop blaming the market.
It works (but) only if you do the work.
No magic. No hype. Just price.
Risk. And you.
Inside the Toolkit: Your Etrstrading Resources, Opened
I opened this toolbox the first time and thought: This is how trading should feel.
Not like guessing. Not like chasing headlines. Like having a co-pilot who’s seen the same chart patterns 100 times before.
The Momentum Scanner finds stocks already moving. Not ones you hope will move. It filters noise.
You get names with volume, price action, and real-time catalysts. No more staring at scanners for 20 minutes wondering if that green bar means anything.
Does it work? Yes. But only if you use it before the news drops.
I missed AAPL’s breakout last month because I waited for confirmation. Rookie move.
The Setup Library is just that: real trades. Not hypotheticals. Not backtested fantasy.
Actual screenshots, entry/exit notes, and what went wrong when it failed. You learn faster from someone else’s mistake than your own.
It’s not a course. It’s a reference book you flip to mid-trade.
Community Discord? Not another hype channel. It’s where people post their watchlist before market open.
Then tag entries live. You see real hesitation. Real stops getting hit.
Real wins. No guru talk. Just traders typing fast.
I wrote more about this in Trading tips etrstrading.
You want context? That’s where it lives.
These tools don’t sit in isolation. The Momentum Scanner spits out tickers → you check the Setup Library for similar past setups → then you ask in Discord whether anyone’s scaling in or watching resistance.
That’s a system. Not magic. Just flow.
I stopped treating each tool like a separate app. Now it’s one rhythm.
The Trading Guide Etrstrading taught me that early. And stuck.
One pro tip: Turn off notifications on everything except the Momentum Scanner and Discord. Too many pings kill focus. You don’t need alerts for every minor pullback.
You need signals that mean something.
Your First Trade: A Step-by-Step Walkthrough Using Etrstrading

I opened the scanner this morning. Searched for stocks with volume above average and price breaking resistance. That’s step one.
No magic, just filters.
You’re not hunting for perfection. You’re looking for clear momentum.
Step 1: Use the scanner to find setups where price is moving with volume (not) against it. If volume drops as price rises? Walk away.
I’ve done that dance too many times.
Step 2: Pull up the chart. Draw support. Draw resistance.
Mark the last swing high. Then ask: does price respect those levels? If not, skip it.
No exceptions.
Entry goes at the breakout candle’s close. Stop-loss goes just below the recent swing low. Profit target?
Twice the distance from entry to stop. Simple math. No guessing.
You’ll second-guess this. Everyone does. That’s why you write it down before clicking buy.
Step 3: Size the trade so a loss hurts your account less than your ego. One percent max. Yes, even if it feels tiny.
(I blew through three accounts before I accepted that.)
Mindset isn’t fluffy advice. It’s refusing to move your stop because you “know” it’ll come back. It’s closing early when the setup breaks.
Not waiting for hope to pay off.
This isn’t a magic bullet. It’s a repeatable process. Do it wrong once?
Fine. Do it wrong ten times while ignoring the rules? That’s on you.
The Trading Tips Etrstrading page has real screenshots of these exact steps in action. Not theory. Actual trades I took.
You don’t need more tools. You need discipline.
Start small. Track every trade. Review weekly.
If your first five trades follow this exactly. Even if they lose (you’re) ahead of 90% of people reading this.
That’s the only edge that lasts.
Three Mistakes That Kill Your Edge
I’ve watched traders blow accounts on the same day they got access to the Trading Guide Etrstrading.
Mistake one: skipping the risk management rules. You think you’ll “just watch” that one trade go sideways. It doesn’t work like that.
One loss can erase three weeks of gains. (Ask me how I know.)
Mistake two: jumping from tool to tool every Tuesday. You switch indicators, platforms, timeframes. Chasing the perfect setup.
But mastery isn’t about new toys. It’s about knowing your setup so well you see the edge before the candle closes.
Mistake three: treating alerts like gospel. They’re not signals. They’re prompts.
You still have to read price action, volume, context. If you don’t, you’re just guessing with someone else’s timestamp.
The whole point of How Trading Works Etrstrading is to build your judgment. Not replace it.
Stop outsourcing your thinking. Start owning your calls. Then see what happens.
Trading Stops Feeling Like Guesswork
I’ve been there. Staring at charts. Refreshing news feeds.
Clicking through ten tabs. Still not sure what to do next.
That’s the problem. Not lack of data. Lack of clarity.
The Trading Guide Etrstrading fixes that. It gives you a real method (not) hype, not theory (and) tools that actually work with it.
You don’t need more indicators. You need pattern recognition. You need repetition.
You need structure.
So here’s what you do now.
Open the Setup Library.
Pick one setup.
Study five examples (no) skipping, no rushing.
Your brain learns by seeing variation. Not by memorizing rules.
This is how confusion turns into confidence.
Your move.
Start today.
There is a specific skill involved in explaining something clearly — one that is completely separate from actually knowing the subject. Marisol Gagnierenic has both. They has spent years working with debt management strategies in a hands-on capacity, and an equal amount of time figuring out how to translate that experience into writing that people with different backgrounds can actually absorb and use.
Marisol tends to approach complex subjects — Debt Management Strategies, Finance News and Trends, Investment Strategies being good examples — by starting with what the reader already knows, then building outward from there rather than dropping them in the deep end. It sounds like a small thing. In practice it makes a significant difference in whether someone finishes the article or abandons it halfway through. They is also good at knowing when to stop — a surprisingly underrated skill. Some writers bury useful information under so many caveats and qualifications that the point disappears. Marisol knows where the point is and gets there without too many detours.
The practical effect of all this is that people who read Marisol's work tend to come away actually capable of doing something with it. Not just vaguely informed — actually capable. For a writer working in debt management strategies, that is probably the best possible outcome, and it's the standard Marisol holds they's own work to.

