The Problem With Yesterday’s Questions
I used to think writing my AI Pro questions the night before was a good habit.
Market closes, I review everything, I write down exactly what I want to ask in the morning. It feels organized. You go to sleep thinking you already did part of the work.
Then one morning made me stop.
I had a really clean question ready. Something about whether 3,280 support on XAU would hold, tied to DXY weakness I had been watching. It made sense the night before. Specific level, clear context, nothing vague.
I woke up, opened AI Pro, typed it exactly as I had written.
What I didn’t do first was check what happened overnight.
Asian session had already moved. DXY bounced. Gold tested that same level and broke through it. By the time I asked the question, 3,280 wasn’t support anymore. It had flipped.
AI Pro still answered correctly. It described the level based on the context I gave it. The problem wasn’t the answer.
It was that I asked a question for a market that didn’t exist anymore.
That’s the part I missed. Preparation felt like clarity, but it was actually locking me into yesterday’s view. I didn’t pause to see if the premise still made sense.
Now I still prepare at night sometimes, but I treat it differently. It’s just context. In the morning, the first thing I check is whether price has already invalidated what I was thinking.
If it has, the question gets rewritten.
Because a well-written question doesn’t matter if it belongs to a market that already moved on.
$XAU @Binance Vietnam #BinanceAIPro $CHIP $RAVE
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