If You’re Bearish…

If you’re bearish, there’s a potential head and shoulders pattern forming in the NYA.  And if you look really hard, a head and shoulders pattern could have already formed on the QQQQ…although its a bit of a stretch. 

Nya_head_and_shoulder_041005

Qqq_head_and_shoulders_041005

3 thoughts on “If You’re Bearish…”

  1. Good article and interesting history, the university can keep on hand is always useful to see how people feel. Have you read the works of more than you expect. Also, I need to show the place, I asked him to come back as late as possible. However, expanding their horizons and understanding it.Let happy to enjoy every moment of understanding, please read more on the basis of the fact that participation is not appropriate.
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  2. indirectly; that is, when someone lives with chinroc pain they must keep trying treatments, medications, etc. until they find a combination that works for them. I have been a chinroc pain patient for almost 11 years and know the feeling of wanting to crawl out of my own skin. I am the survivor of a MVA; I was t-boned by someone driving 80 mph. I spent two years almost bed ridden a successful day back then was getting dressed, combing my hair and brushing my teeth and it took ALL DAY to do it. Now, I often have 3 or 4 decent hours a day. I never feel good. I never have a good day. The best I can expect is an OK day when my pain is managed enough that I can do something besides laying in bed on an ice pack’. Most days are a constant negotiation with myself. It goes something like this:What do you feel like doing? NOTHING.Well, do you think you could manage putting the silverware away. YES. Now, do you think you can take some chicken out of the freezer ? YES.Do you think you could return these phone calls? NO.What about returning one call? YES. The answers for me, at this point of time, are a combination of medications, acupuncture, physiotherapy, massage, osteopathic care and tai chi. I also have to leave my home in the NW and visit my parents in the mid-west for most of the winter. That has been a blessing on many fronts; I have developed a deeper relationship with my family and they have been a part of my recovery. I read Linda’s article differently, what I understood was that to move forward people have to make a decision to move forward. Mentally, for me, this would be .OK this is my life now. I can’t make the pain go away so the decision is whether to sit around complaining about how much pain I’m in (I call it wallowing in why me’) or to have as good a life as I can manage despite the pain.

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