mangolassi, IMHO you are making a rookie mistake by switching time frames and instruments. At the end of the day you have to be who you are.
I didn't switch instruments (staying with Forex). I understand your point about the time frame switch, however. But honestly, after thinking this over for more than a couple of weeks, I have come to the following conclusions:
1) Intraday forex trading is NOT for me. The same patterns that have a probability of success when traded on other efficient instruments such as ES or high volume ETFs do NOT have the same success on Forex. This is what I have determined by doing a backtest on the EURUSD 5 minute chart. Moreover, the price action setups discussed by Al Brooks in his course and books do NOT present often at all on the 5 minute EURUSD chart. Yes, they are found throughout the day on the ES or SPY, for example, but the EURUSD is lacking in opportunity. And when they do present themselves, they are highly improbable.
I have a theory about this (though I don't know if it's valid...). Basically, I have hypothesized that the banks and hedgefunds that are trading currencies are doing so for various reasons such as hedging, importing/exporting, purchasing foreign assets, etc. This must result in a lot of intraday noise, with the clearer picture being presented on longer time frames. No doubt there are institutions trading forex intraday, but I think so much of the noise exists because of the fact that many aren't simply trading speculatively and watching chart patterns on the 5 minute charts. I think this may be a key difference between forex and other instruments like the ES and SPY, but this is simply my theory.
2) The daily chart for the EURUSD has NUMEROUS trading opportunities throughout the year, with excellent price action setups.
3) If I one day feel like I can attack the 5 minute chart, I wouldn't be doing it with forex. I'd rather do it with the ES and SPY. However, I cannot afford to trade these instruments at the present time.