I just want to do a quick recap in case there's any kind of confusion with that one. Like whenever we're looking at a range like this, like we have 28, 9, 13. So we see the hourly level. If that hourly level had stopped that move, we would always be looking for a 15. So like one of the first things we do in this, in any time any asset is moving up or down, whether it's Bitcoin, Forex, doesn't matter.
And one of the first things we do is we identify always RA standards, right? Like what's the bottom move? What's the knife catch? What's the greediest level?
And we kind of define that range. So if we are working inside of this, and I want you to see that Ahibet has 9.13 on his screen, which is blue, which is our hourly. The next level down that it would have to go to would be 8.37, which is the 15. It's the next time frame.
And then there's a very important reason why I always talked about these are the time frames we use, the exact ones that Ahibet has on his screen, which is daily 4.1, 15.5.3.1. And there's a reason, and we're not going to get into the reason why. It's a whole mathematical thing.
But these time frames will... always be your guiding light so whenever anybody adds any time frames outside of this i'm always very adamant to say like do not use that because it'll just break the whole entire flow and so like if you have only these time frames on your chart that's the first thing we have to mention because i don't want to see somebody having say you know level x on their screen and then you know it's like a half an hour level and they would go from the one hour to the half an hour level and then they would just miss a trade because it's just that doesn't line up it doesn't make sense it's confusing you know what i mean like it just it's not there right so that's that's the first thing so whenever we see and we're making these decisions we have to be extremely mindful that he has on his chart 913 which is an hourly had that and he's also defined 837 which is the 15 so he's defined his combo range he's picked all the levels that it could go to in the event that it only targeted 913 that's perfect we know to go for the 15 minute hole level when it establishes it and if it establishes a 15 minute hole level that is also untested Now, it can get into a reverse trail, but then you're looking also into more like, OK, it reversed a 15, has a combo five. So now are we creating a five minute range trend?
Because now we're getting into another theory we haven't talked about. But imagine that you have a 15 minute level. It's a reverse level.
You have a five minute trail. Then you're going to have a five minute interior trend in the interior trend breaks to go back to that reverse level. So now we're opening up even a newer can of worms here with that kind of saying, which we're not going to focus on today.
But just be mindful that if you had like a 15 minute level. all of a sudden it made a five minute level. There was a 15 minute reverse. You started trailing and laddering five minute levels.
You're going to create a five minute interior trend. That interior trend represents the holding of that time frame until a bigger time frame is developed. Or if you lose that interior trend, you're going to go target that reverse level because that reverse level propagated the five minute levels.
The five minute levels laddered. And this is where interior trends are used or not used in theorem. So people might be able to just like adapt this instantly and move right through it.
But if you have a reverse level and then you propagate to the next time frame, so let's say the 15 minute is a reverse here, you have five minute levels holding you up. You need to make an interior trend off that five minute trail. And when that breaks, realize you are going to that 15 reverse to hold the entirety of the move. So there's kind of a whole queue you get into there. But despite that, again, that sentence should allow people to understand that.
We'll go into it in a greater depth in a future lesson. But that should really resonate pretty clearly anyways for those who get it. And then so he has his 15 minute level on his chart. We have the hourly deep dives to the 15. It's still attacking that range in order for that range to hold.
It now has to hold a five minute level, which is why I have it has a five minute on the screen. So that's just where I wanted to make sure we had clarity with the five minute levels. It's creating a five minute trail.
You now should also be making your five minute trail also should have. an interior to it as well so if you are now saying you went for the 15 the five has to hold i want you guys and girls getting into the habit of now making interior ranges so draw your interior range on the five where it tests back that's back here uh yeah yeah i mean it's going to be the same base and reach point whether you have it yeah you had you had a perfect yep base there reach there that that's important so when you have the 15 You always one time frame plus one minus one for interior trends to show you whether that range is going to hold a break. Now, I'm not saying that the five minute range interior range trend here is going to be the definitive spot that breaks the hourly. But this gives you where the starting of where do I draw perfect range trends?
Because to draw a perfect range trend is a whole nother thing that we haven't gotten into yet. But we couldn't until this moment because you have to understand the 15 minute goes down from the hourly. The combo hits the 15. Goes to the five, the five bounces.
That time frame that needs to hold is also your range trend, which is why on the right side of the screen, you're seeing it hit perfectly. So just to talk about that for a few minutes. Those interior range trends are created from having the right accuracy, the 15 minute to the five minute hold, et cetera. That's where those are created.
So, okay, go ahead, Ahivet, keep going. But I just wanted to get that in there before we moved on. So not only that everybody understands why the 15 to the five, but also to add the context that this is how we draw accurate and perfect range trends.
Yeah. No, that's a nice little piece there. Thank you.
It's a killer tip that'll give you like, and you can see it on the right side where it hits that. And you'll see what happens here as you hit play too. Can I actually ask a question real quick about that? Sure. So like that five minute trail is associated with that 15 that's inside the hourly until you would probably create like a new 15 that would represent the succession of that hourly, right?
Like it's like to hold the hourly, you want to create a 15 and hold that the same way that to hold the 15, you're creating that five minute trail. Right. Okay.
So repeat that question again for me. I understand it. I just need to know a little bit more context on it. Well, like, because one of the things I was wondering is like, if you're attacking this hourly level, that's the first thing we tested.
Yeah. So you're looking to make a 15, but then, you know, it breaks, goes down deeper into the hourly to test the 15. So my kind of thoughts were like, are we, are we looking for that five? Cause we're testing the 15. Are we still looking for a 15 because we're inside the hourly? Like it's the bigger.
container but it kind of makes sense that it happens like inside the container it's like it makes sense so so what's gonna happen here so i did i did mention something that um i quickly skimmed over i was hoping that we could just skim over it but you kind of asked the right question but anyways we'll get into it right now real quick so this range trend when it tests to hold so like where ihevet has it testing to hold you now have to go back and say like what time frame did it create so now what you need to do with that is you need to go and find the highest timeframe. Because when that trend holds, you have to adapt it. Now, this is something else, a theory that we haven't talked about, but it's kind of falls under range adaptation. So what you need to do now, Ihevet, so once you have your five minute range trend, it is tested, confirmed, and held in the moment right now.
So now you need to go back up to your four hour and you need to see if this has created what timeframes. Okay, so it's not a four hour. So let's just move on.
Let's go to the hourly. There's no blue candles. Okay, there's...
No blue candles here either. The base point is the only thing I'm looking at to start. We go to the 15. Okay, so you have the 15 reach.
You have the hourly reach. You need to adjust this now to that timeframe here on the 15 because it's kind of going back to where you have. Yep, you need to test this to the 15 and this is going to become a 15 minute range trend now that will adapt. So you have to kind of go plus one, minus one in this scenario where you've seen that, okay, look, we've got this five minute range trend.
the 15 minute is what it tested that's kind of your plus one minus one that's where you need to start setting your your next trend from here and you'll see that this is going to be a 15 minute trend as time goes on so you could just go on the 15 minute here hit play and you'll see where you need to um adapt this trend yeah it's already adapted there you go adapt it to there and then you have your 15 minute range trend so now you could just even just hit play the whole way through and i bet you this thing respects like perfectly There's the 15. There it is again. There it is again. There it is again. Jesus.
So this is how you do range trends properly because this was propagated from the 15. There it is again. There it is again. Here's the, and see how it gets lost and then it just sinks down and through it.
And then it's backtesting it. You see how perfect the range trend is now. So really one of the, one of the purposes, and then obviously something else holds it up and it goes to a, to a bigger part of the move, right? So.
one of the purposes to having these interior range trends is it's kind of like plus one minus one theory but you also have trends and interior trends so your five minute gives you your interior trend that you need to first have right so you have your five minute range trend and when it tests you need to start going to the other time frames to see what exactly is happening in this one you're going to want to see if there's a 15 minute you could start with a four there was no four there was an hourly and there was a 15 So now you can go to the 15 to see if that holds. You could also step up and go to the hourly to see if it's there as well. But the first thing you need to do is see the 15. So the only thing you could possibly do with this is you could adjust it to an hourly, but that might be the same as the 15. Yeah, it's not even the same as the 15. You'd have to actually go for the hourly, test the 15, and then you'd have to do the same process on the hourly. You end up with the same exact trend almost.
So, but you can see where... that range trend on the five minutes, you can see where, okay, we had a range trend off that five minute level. It's all held up by the 15 minute below.
Once that trend confirms the test, now you have to make a 15 minute range trend because you hit a 15 minute level. Had that 15 minute level not hit, you want to do the same thing with the hourly. And had you bounce that hourly, you're looking at the 15 minute level, right? So imagine 9.13 is the only thing that's hit. Hits 9.13, moves up, holds a 15 minute level, right?
You have a 15 minute range trend. When that holds, you have to go back up to the hourly timeframe, the timeframe you tested to go and say, okay, where's this hourly range trend? And that's why that 15 minute is so perfectly accurate.
And we didn't do anything else other than use that 15 because we hit a 15 minute level below. So we need a 15 minute range trend. I'm not sure if that answers your question, Dak, but it's part of it's along the lines of what you're asking.
Yeah, it's like it has to build up. Like it's the whole point of its existence to build up into those. Yeah.
Imagine having. a one hour level on the bottom 913 and then using a four hour range trend like what wouldn't the four hour just break the one completely because then if you lose a four hour range trend then you have to go down to a one hour hold level so how could that be right because it can't because you've already tested the one hour level so it would just skip right over 913 and that's sometimes what happens when you get higher time frame range trends is you have something where oh it tested an hourly level like 913 and it held so long that it created a four hour range trend off of a daily level, plus one, minus one, just supersedes all of what it back-tested, has a four-hour level. And then if you lose a four-hour and you're going plus one, minus one, your next untested whole level is not going to be 9.13. It's just going to skip through the entire range.
But if you did that on an hourly, that's why you need that hourly timeframe. Because if too much time passes, you're just going to skip the whole range. Because you already have a four-hour level. You lose that plus one, minus one, you have to go back down.
Unless 9.13 happened to be an origin, but we know in this case it's not. So if it was an origin, fine, you could create a four hour range trend, go back, test the origin of 913 or even 937, 837 here, 15 minutes. But we know those aren't origins.
We know those are just hold levels from the previous range. So the only way that could be possible is you create a four hour range trend. 913 is hit. 913 would be an origin. You lose the range trend.
The origin holds again. Eventually, you're going to make a daily hold level. So it kind of just like completes the circle. Like it just fills in all the blanks of like why and what trends to use and when and where.
Because if you had a four hour level, it was a one hour hold. Eventually, you're going to make a daily hold level anyways, because in order to make that four hour range trend, you're getting daily hold levels because you're going to have to have two pullbacks and you're going to end up having a daily hold level. So then you're going to lose a trend to go back to the daily hold that you created to create that trend. But without that, you would just sink right through anyways. So you see what I mean about the plus one minus one really fills in the gaps.
It just goes full circle when you're using plus one minus one. That's all the context. Yeah, it just goes full circle. And that like range trends and where and why they exist are you test at a 15. Let's go make a five, make a five minute range trend.
Oh, perfect. That five minute range trend exists. It gets tested once. Great. Go, go make a 15 minute range trend.
Now, 15 minute level gets hit. You have a 15 minute range trend. At least you have clarity in that move.
You're now looking to go test a five minute level. But if that was a four hour range trend, how could you go down and test this 837 again? You couldn't. It's not even a one hour level. And 9.13, well, I guess technically 9.13 is reversed, but not really because it's not a reverse level because I actually tested first.
So if 9.13 never got hit, you created a four hour range trend. You could reverse 9.13 as a reverse level to create an even bigger trend from 8.37 daily. Like you could do something like that, but that's not the case here because we tested 9.13 perfectly. So you see how it kind of just all ties together and comes through full circle with. talking about plus one, minus one, and where these levels can exist.
Because this five-minute range trend can't even exist unless 837 is the level it gets hit. And it is. And so we have a five-minute level.
The five-minute level holds it. It makes a five-minute trend. And then you have a 15-minute range after the five-minute confirms, which is exactly what you need to do.
You test an hourly, you need to make an hourly range trend. You test a four-hour, you need to make a four-hour range trend. And that's how you get there. So whatever level you test, you then go plus one, minus one, down.
So let's pretend we hit a four-hour level. You have to go. hold a one hour and when that one hour creates you have to then make a range trend on the hourly and when that range trend tests and and it creates a range trend and then it tests it then you make it a four hour if you can or the moment it does then you make it a four hour then you have your perfect level you tested the four you have your perfect range trend that's how you get to it you get to it with plus one minus one sorry to hijack you event but i thought that was pretty important to kind of go because that was gold dust so good does everybody like understand that like why plus one minus one is so like prolific and and how that creates like does everyone kind of follow this i do could i only speak for myself could i try and like phrase it in a really like short way like a in a way sure to see that i understand it is it like it's kind of like so like you're going to test a level and test a time frame and then from there you're building a range but you're de-cycling that the move as you're developing it so you're going down in time frames but then whilst you're going down in time frames and testing the lower time frames to de-cycle the range you're also building new higher time frames so you're checking whether those are sort of setting the range up in a different time frame kind of converting it to if it can hold on those higher time frames for it then to see if it can de-cycle those or not and break the range or if it can continue to build those higher time frames and then break up yeah that's that that would be a way of putting it for sure yeah um you're using the term de-cycling which would Like, yes, it makes sense in terms of English language, but not as we use the term de-cycling. But that's fine because I completely understand what you mean when you say that.
But it wouldn't technically be de-cycling on the charts. But yes, that is correct. It would be almost like an easier way to say it would be whatever time frame you tested, you have to go and create a trend by retesting the minus, the plus one, minus one to that.
So whatever your time frame, like if you, the simplest way to say it would be whatever time frame you test, you have to create a range trend. one time frame lower by holding that one time frame lower. See what I mean?
Like that would be like the easiest way to say it. And then also the next like that would be step one would be whatever time frame you test, go make sure you test one time frame below it and hold that. That creates your range trend when that range trend tests.
So that's step one. Step two would be once that range trend is tested, you can now go look for the original time frame and make a range trend off that. And kind of just by sense of logic, too, because imagine you had a one minute range trend and you tested it the first time and you tested it again.
Well, by the time it takes you to test it for the like you create it and then test it, I should say I shouldn't say test and test it again. I should say you create the range trend and then test it. So the third the third touch of that, the base point being the first, the reach point being the second, the first test of that trend, that range trend being the third.
So the first time you test that range trend. you go back to the time frame that you, like you just go back up a time frame. But then that should make sense because if you have a one minute range trend and it's taken time to get there, well then technically enough time would have passed that you would have a three minute range trend.
And if a three minute level held you up, then that's what it would need to do. If a five minute level held you up, you use the wrong range trend. You use a one minute when you should have used a three minute. So you use a three minute range trend.
When that range trend tests, then you make your five minute range trend. And then you've got your five minute level tested with the five minute level range trend. If you were to go above that, to the 15. So if you were to go to above a timeframe, now all of a sudden you can't use the five minute that you tested to hold the move. You're going to gap down to the next five minute untested. You see what I mean?
So like right now we test at 837. If we were to use a one hour range trend, how could you say, let's go test the next 15 minute level? It would be in the next range. You'd lose the whole entire range.
So actually the range trend that you have is controlling the whole move. You see what I mean? So that's what happens when you test a certain level.
Like if you were to test a daily and you make a weekly range trend, because so many times the daily tested, when you lose that weekly range trend, you're not going, you're going to look for the next daily, which is under the beginning of that whole entire thing. You see what I mean? Like it's not the level of test that it's the next range.
So that's when you sometimes lose a range too. But again, it should just make sense completely like full circle because plus one minus one, forget everything we talked about. If you have a daily level, you need to stop it with a four.
If you just broke a weekly trend, how can you use the four hour level that was there? No, you have to use a daily. And the daily is way past that for you already tested the daily. See what I mean?
So that that's when you get those skip overs or those big dumps or those big pumps. Because and now think of that. Also, take that one step further. I hear that. Go to like a weekly chart or go to a daily chart for me, for example, and just go to the very bottom of this move or even the top here.
That's top or bottom. It doesn't matter. That's perfect right there. Imagine you sit there in a range testing something at the very top of this move. right?
Like go back a little bit. Yeah, yeah, right there. Yeah. Imagine you keep testing this over and over and over and people say, oh, distribution.
Well, it's not that it's distribution. Yes. Like if you want to sum it up into an easy saying, this is distribution.
But imagine now you've created a weekly, right? You've created weekly hold levels on the bottom of this chart. So if you go to the weekly chart here, you've already created weekly levels. So like, how do you even like, what can you even back target here?
If you've created a weekly hold level, you can't start using four hours and one hours. You've stayed there so long. at the top that you've created weekly levels.
Now you need dailies to hold you, right? So like, and then it even goes one step further. And the daily is what held us down in this move. So like, look at all this time that has passed by on the daily.
It has created these weekly levels. And then look, see his line here at 368? Well, that's the level that held us because it's the daily.
Of course, it has to be. So it just completes like a full circle effect that shows you exactly how distribution happens, exactly how accumulation happens, exactly how to create range trends, what time frames need to be done, right? Because now you need to see that. Like, well...
Of course, it's the daily level that held it down. What else could have held it down? Well, and that the only reason it is a daily level is because it sat up top for so long that it created a weekly level. So when you sit in these spots for too long, that's what happens.
Now go back to your current chart, like a five minute where you are 15. That's fine. Yeah. And like, imagine it just sits here and creates accumulation.
You just bounced off a 15 minute level. Imagine it sits here for so long that you start creating daily levels, for example, and a four hour range trend. Well, like, of course.
Now you have to use if you create a daily, you have to use a four hour level to hold you up. Do you even have a four hour level on your chart in the current range? No. Right.
So you can see where that fills in that gap of why does distribute like how does distribution exist? Like what is the exact reason? What is the exact science behind distribution and accumulation? What is the exact purpose of failing? What is the exact moment you lose it?
Well, that's what it looks like. But again, it just completes like this full circle explanation of, look, here's how you draw range trends. Here's the timeframes they exist on. Here's how they can get created.
And here's what happens when you lose a certain timeframe. Because now I think if you were to go and try to find like a four hour, I don't even think you have a four hour. I think your range trend is still a 15 minute here, but your replay tool is still on.
So I don't know because I haven't really looked at this move, but it's a pretty important thing to go through. You might actually have a day. I think you have a daily trend now, actually.
do you have a daily trend off of this 15 minute dump so like you eventually you know right not in this moment here yeah eventually like if you were to take the replayer to a loft you'll see it so now it's like four hour levels are the it so like i'm pretty sure that if you were to go to your daily charts and then just switch it over to a four you probably see four hour hold levels working now all of a sudden yep now this is i'm looking at my chart right now and that's exactly it there's a four hour hold level it just got hit it's perfect yep yeah so but that's exactly what i was that's full circle of when you go and knife catch something that's that's your full circle there's not a piece missing in that equation because that explains to you every piece if you start from no levels on your chart except for 837 if you if you deleted every level on your screen you go to the moment this knife catch happens that shows you what i just explained the full circle part of this move for range trends and knife catches and how you use them without a missing piece So that's like a complete piece of the science right there. Yeah, it is. It's really sick.
I've been using this all week and it's just been like the improvement is unreal. How fast did it help me? But you could also probably agree that without getting this far into the science, learning plus one, minus one, all this stuff at such a deep level that this would just go over your head and you'd be like, oh, I didn't like it.
There's a plus one minus one. What do you mean? Like you have to kind of get people to a certain point.
You see what I mean? But this is now a complete circle that we've just created. The first one we've ever created a mentorship for the first topic. It just goes so deep into so many hard theories that take so long to learn that you have to break it down like this. But you can see why, because it would be almost impossible to learn all of this before this moment.