 One of the biggest mistakes I see people making, especially newer traders, and surprisingly, a lot of times people that have been trading five to 10 years, they're always interested in the stock that already moved. I'll do a webinar and people will say, hey, Brian, what do you think about what's been moving recently? Draft Kings. What do you think about Draft Kings? That was just up on earnings the other day, and it had a huge run. I'll look and I'll say, well, just around 20% in three days. Do you think you're early on this trade? What's realistic? Do you think up to 20% in three days, and you think by the end of the week it's going to be up 50%? Sometimes that happens, but that's not what's typical. So we want to go with what's typical. So we ask, where has it come from? Did it expend a lot of energy getting there? And how do you think those people that bought it last week are feeling? We're thinking maybe it's time to lighten our exposure a little bit, sell some off. So we want to ask ourselves, where has it come from? And where can I set my stock based on that? It doesn't mean you can't buy that stock the next morning after a gap's lower, get back above the VWAP and put your stock 36 cents away. That still might be a great trade, but you've got to realize the opportunity for it to go up four, five, eight days in a row become less likely. The momentum is still there, so exploit it, but you've got to really drill down the shorter term time frames. The other question is, where did it have the potential to go before it's likely to encounter sources of supply that might become resistance? So a lot of people say, hey, there's resistance at that point. Here's the thing about resistance and support. We only know after the fact where support and resistance is. I look at them and say, that's a level of interest. The stock's at 18, there was prior support at 20. So I look at that, I don't say there was resistance at 20. To me, the people that say that, you've got to change your thinking, because there's nothing to say it will become resistance. Support broken tends to act as resistance. It's not going through every time. So as it gets towards 20, what do I want to do? I'm not just going to sell my stock because it's at a level I've had a problem with before. Instead, maybe I'll take a little bit off and I'll tighten my stop on the rest and really be careful. Otherwise, maybe it goes to 23, 24, 26 before it violates those higher lows. So it's always about find the ideal entry, don't chase things, and how can you manage risk and control risk along the way and listen to the message of the market. Don't listen to the analysts. Don't listen to the people on TV. Listen to the message. The message is there. It's clear. It's price action. Only price pays. All the rest of it is just noise, realistically.