True, traditions exist for a reason. To a large extent, they help us navigate the world effectively because they're built on foundational axioms that worked in the past. But it’s better to follow traditions with those original axioms in mind, so we can recognize when they no longer apply. Context changes, and change is inevitable.
This is where questioning systems becomes relevant and not rebelling just for the sake of it, but finding a balance. We should respect tradition while leaving room for adaptation when those old axioms fail to explain our current reality.
But that leaves the ultimate question: if a tradition has survived that long, who is any one person to say a recent shift justifies tearing it down? There has to be an effective way of navigating through this, maybe by testing new ideas gradually and letting them prove their worth, rather than burning the whole system down overnight.
Not the cleanest of setups for $GBPUSD. I'm currently tracking scenarios for sell and buy but I'm leaning more toward the sell considering bullish DXY. It's worth watching out for both cases.
I'll remain bearish while the immediate high @ 1.348 remains intact, if it breaks bullish, I'll look for a bullish continuation.