This all sounds very wonderful and intelligent but how are you applying this to make money from the markets?
The problem is by defining a trend you are defining something that has already occurred. Unless you are entering at the beginning of the trend the greater the likelihood that you are entering into a weakening trend. The later you get in the higher the risk of failure and the less probability of the trade working in your favour. Surely, it is no use understanding what a trend is and how to measure it. It is more useful to understand how a trend begins and how it ends.
You briefly mentioned supply and demand but no mention of multiple time frames. All trends begin and end at levels of supply and demand. By understanding where smaller time frame price action is within bigger picture supply and demand (horizontal), the trader is able to trade within the context of actual market forces and know where he is trading in the larger supply/demand curve the beginning and possible end to the trend.
The problem is by defining a trend you are defining something that has already occurred. Unless you are entering at the beginning of the trend the greater the likelihood that you are entering into a weakening trend. The later you get in the higher the risk of failure and the less probability of the trade working in your favour. Surely, it is no use understanding what a trend is and how to measure it. It is more useful to understand how a trend begins and how it ends.
You briefly mentioned supply and demand but no mention of multiple time frames. All trends begin and end at levels of supply and demand. By understanding where smaller time frame price action is within bigger picture supply and demand (horizontal), the trader is able to trade within the context of actual market forces and know where he is trading in the larger supply/demand curve the beginning and possible end to the trend.