Build Your Edge Before the Market Opens: Why I Use Flashcards to Train

Most traders think their edge is in their strategy.

But the deeper I’ve gone into this game, the more I’ve realized:

My real edge is repetition. Pattern recognition. Conditioning. Preparation.

What are my repeated weak behaviours in trading and how I can improve on them to become better.

Let me explain how I got there — and how flashcards changed the way I trade.

I take time to open a flashcard and then review yesterday’s price action from the perspective of that card.

Sometimes I will set a timer – 1 minute per card or longer. Or just go through each card and find all the patterns and move on.


📈 Step 1: See the Math Behind Your Trades

Early on, I started tracking my trades more visually.

  • Entry and exit marked.
  • Initial risk (the stop loss I started with).
  • Actual risk (what I really risked once I adjusted).

That simple exercise revealed something most traders miss:
Not all wins are good. Not all losses are bad.
When you understand the risk-reward maths behind every trade, you start making informed decisions.


🔁 Step 2: Continuation vs. Reversal – Know Your Game

The next thing I looked at was the type of trades I was taking.
Not all trades are equal — especially when it comes to hit rate.

Here’s what I found:

  • If I focused on continuation trades, my win rate was solid. That gave me room to take less or more than 1R and often add.
  • But when I took reversal trades, my hit rate was near 20%. That would’ve been fine if I was getting 5R reward. But I wasn’t. I was barely getting 2R.

The lesson?
If the maths doesn’t work, neither will your strategy.
Tracking this helped me strip out low-quality trades and refine my approach. Most of trading is of a breakout continuation style.


🧠 Step 3: Flashcards for Trader Conditioning

This brings us to the game-changer:
Daily flashcards.

I’ve been doing this for years now.
The first time I built my deck, it had over 60 flashcards. It took me 5 hours to get through. I was so slow at finding patterns.

And I got so tired after only 5 minutes

But over time with practice it becomes faster and easier. Now hardly much stress at all.

Now my daily drill listing has well over 100. Most of which I put into the deck below.

I can review my full list in under an hour and not too bad.


Why it works:

It’s not about memorization.
It’s about conditioning your brain to see recurring setups across different timeframes:

  • Weekly
  • Daily
  • 60-min
  • 15-min
  • 5-min
  • Open of the Day
  • Day Structure (Trend Day vs Trading Range Day)

Every flashcard is built from a real trade — good or bad.
Some made me money. Others cost me.
But all of them taught me something I didn’t want to forget.


🛠 Try It For Yourself (Free Resource)

If you want to try it yourself, I’ve uploaded my flashcard deck here:
👉 ZTT Flashcard Deck on Knowt


Open a flashcard and then review yesterday’s price action from the perspective of that card.

Also – I’ll be uploading more over the coming weeks:

👉 Join the Class

I’ve tried Anki, Quizlet — all of them. Knowt is the easiest and best for this use.

Once you’re in:

  • Start reviewing the deck
  • Let me know which cards are unclear — I’ll add extra notes or audio
  • Use it daily to sharpen your edge before the market opens

🧩 Bonus: Make Your Own Deck

This is where the real power comes in:

  • Screenshot your own trades (good or bad)
  • Turn each trade into a flashcard — just one per card
  • Add a quick note: What worked? What didn’t? What should I remember next time?

When I started reviewing my own mistakes before the session, performance changed.
I became more present. More prepared. Less likely to repeat the same errors.


🎯 Final Thoughts

Flashcards aren’t magic.
They’re just a tool — but a powerful one.

When used right, they become your pre-market conditioning.
Your mental warm-up.
A way to lock in the lessons you’d otherwise forget.

If you’re serious about leveling up your trading — not just intellectually, but habitually — start using flashcards.

And if you do?
Let me know how it goes. I’d love your feedback.


2 responses to “Build Your Edge Before the Market Opens: Why I Use Flashcards to Train”

  1. Keithsjourney Avatar

    Hi Tim
    This flash card idea is amazing.
    I struggle to remember all the patterns and other tips shared by you and Rose etc and I was thinking
    recently, what can I do to refresh my memory every day. Where do I keep a brief list of things, but also with “some” details added.

    I sometimes look at the encyclopedia, but get overwhelmed, tired and lose focus quite quickly, so it’s really
    interesting to hear that you had that problem at first. Maybe I can improve that part of me with time.
    Tom H has a pile of his best and worst trades that he looks through every morning, the book of horrors
    i think he calls it haha, I like that idea also.
    I’ll try the flash cards and let you know how I get on.
    thank you very much for sharing

    Oh, on one of your cards, what are CSC bars?

    Keith

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    1. Tim Fairweather Avatar

      Hi mate! Thanks for your msg – yes the book of horrors – that is one of his best tips – I have my own as well – outrageously-bad days – CSC means consecutive bars – I went and updated the deck for that so thanks for sharing. Flashcards are great to keep the ideas fresh – I still use them each day, I find its a really good discipline – how did you go with them so far? T

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I’m Tim

Welcome to Zen Trading Tech.

I’m a Aussie day trader and I post trading tips, practice drills, and indicators that helped my trading get to a professional level.

Everything here is to help train the eyes and hands to trade better. If it helped me I’ll post it for others. Hope you enjoy!