Member Pathway
Step 1:
Set Your Freedom Number
“Most people don’t fail at trading because they lack knowledge. They fail because they don’t have a reason strong enough to stay consistent when life gets difficult.”
Executive Summary: The Income Operator Paradigm
This section exists to install the Income Operator Paradigm Shift before you see any strategies, trades, or tools.
Most traders start with a subtle but fatal flaw: they treat the market like a casino or an emergency fund. They look for quick wins to fix immediate problems. That mindset is not sustainable. It creates urgency, and urgency breaks systems.
We are doing something different here. We are not trying to double your money this month. We are building an income engine that you can operate for the next 20 years.
The Old Paradigm
“Trading for fast outcomes, excitement, or emergency money.”
The Income Operator Shift
“Operating a boring, repeatable income system designed to replace a paycheck over time.”
Time Horizon Reset
We operate on a 3–5 year timeline for full income replacement. Contrast this with the “double your money in weeks” mentality that destroys accounts. Urgency breaks systems; patience builds freedom.
Income vs Speculation
We focus on weekly and monthly consistency. We de-emphasize single trades, big wins, and market predictions. If the system is working, no single trade matters.
Emotional Detachment
Market volatility feels irrelevant once the system is running. Ups and downs are noise, not threats. You are an operator of a system, not a gambler watching a wheel.
Lifestyle Integration
Trading is a background financial system. It is not a daily activity, an identity, or a source of stress. It fits into your life; it does not consume it.
Real-World Reframes
“I need money now”
This is not for you. If you need immediate cash, trading is the most dangerous place to find it.
“What about market ups and downs?”
We do not fear them; we plan for them. Volatility is an input, not an enemy.
“Why not faster strategies?”
Because fast strategies blow up accounts. Boring income is reliable income.
Setting Expectations
- 1%–ish monthly consistency is the target.
- 3–5 years is the timeline for freedom.
- Boring is good. Excitement is a warning sign.
“We’re not trying to double money fast. We’re building an income system.”
“Freedom comes from consistency, not urgency.”
“You are not here to trade. You are here to operate.”
From this point forward, we focus on strategy and execution. But remember this shift. When you feel the urge to speed up, or the fear of missing out, return to this summary. You are an Income Operator now.
Purpose & Meaning of “Done”
Purpose of Step 1
Step 1 is designed to do one thing: Anchor you emotionally and structurally so you can follow the system through the entire 7-step pathway — even when motivation fades.
This step removes: Vague goals, Unclear expectations, Emotional decision-making, and “I’ll figure it out later” thinking.
Crucial Definition
What “Done” Actually Means
Step 1 is complete only when all seven Mile Markers below are finished. Not understood. Not agreed with. Finished.
Status: Action Required
Mile Marker 1: Freedom Number
This is the most important Mile Marker in the entire system. If this is weak, everything else will eventually collapse.
Part 1: The Target
You must choose a specific weekly income target. Not “extra money”. A number.
Example
“I want to replace $500 per week.”
Part 2: The Vision (Required)
Imagine your life once this income is fully replaced.
- What stress is gone?
- What choices become available?
- Who benefits besides you?
If you cannot state your number clearly, this Mile Marker is not complete.
Mile Marker 2: Define Your Capital Plan
Your income goal must be supported by math, not magic. This Mile Marker requires you to define exactly how your plan will be funded based on where you are starting today.
Consider these two common scenarios to see where you fit:
The Builder
Profile: 30 years old. Starting with $1,000. Goal: Replace $1,000/week income.
For this trader, relying on trading returns alone is mathematically slow. Adding capital (deposits) acts as an accelerant, drastically reducing the time to financial freedom.
Time to Reach Target ($100k Account) @ 1% Weekly
Verdict: Weekly or monthly deposits are essential here. They buy you time.
The Preserver
Profile: Starting with $100,000. Already generating $1,000+ per month.
This trader does not need to add capital. Their challenge is not growth—it is retention. A single large mistake hurts them more than a missed opportunity.
Recommended Adjustment
Focus entirely on risk management and capital preservation. Deposits are unnecessary. Instead, consider upgrading to the Operator Level to ensure professional oversight on risk management.
Your Action: Define your starting capital and monthly deposit commitment now.
Mile Marker 3: Broker Setup & Approval
What Broker Approval Is — and Why It Matters
Before you can trade options, your broker must approve your account for the strategies you intend to use. This approval process usually involves a short questionnaire about your experience, financial situation, and risk understanding. It is not a test of intelligence or a judgment of your ability — it is a risk-screening process designed to ensure your account permissions match how you plan to trade.
Most people stall here not because they are unqualified, but because they don’t understand how their answers are evaluated. This module exists to make sure you clear this step cleanly and keep moving forward toward income replacement.
Why This Comes First
Before strategies. Before signals. Before income.
Your broker must approve your account to technically allow the trades used in the Freedom Income Options system. If this step isn’t handled correctly, progress stops, confidence drops, and momentum disappears quietly. That is why we address this now.
What You Actually Need
REQUIRED
Approval to trade defined-risk option spreads.
Usually Level 2 or Level 3 (depending on broker).
NOT NEEDED
Naked options approval, unlimited-risk strategies, or speculative leverage.
How Brokers Evaluate Applications
Broker approval is not a knowledge test. It is a risk assessment. They are asking one question: “Is this person likely to create risk for us?”
They evaluate applications using three internal buckets. Approval depends on how well these align:
Experience: The Goal is Alignment
Brokers cross-check your experience against your requested strategy. A newer trader requesting defined-risk spreads is reasonable. A newer trader requesting naked puts is a red flag.
Important Guidance:
- Do not exaggerate experience unrealistically.
- Do not downplay yourself into incompetence.
- Emphasize learning structured, defined-risk strategies.
Strategy Selection: The Approval Lever
This is where most approvals are won or lost. Even if you never plan to trade them, selecting the wrong strategies increases rejection odds.
Strategies That Help
- • Covered Calls
- • Cash-Secured Puts
- • Vertical Spreads (Credit or Debit)
Signals: Defined risk, capital awareness.
Strategies That Hurt
- • Naked Calls
- • Naked Puts
- • Unlimited-Risk Strategies
Signals: Excessive risk, potential liability.
Financials: Why It Matters
Brokers aren’t just looking for wealth; they are looking for alignment. “I am matching my strategy to my capital responsibly.”
Small Account + Defined Risk = Acceptable
If You Are Rejected
A rejection is not a failure. It usually means answers were misaligned.
Action: Reapply after the waiting period or apply with a different broker. Do not stop.
Completion Checklist
- Brokerage account is live
- Options trading approved (Level 2/Spreads)
- Capital is deposited and fully settled
- Order ticket opens without restriction
Next: We ensure you can read the tools without confusion.
Mile Marker 4: Trade-Ready Basics
Foundational Definitions & Orientation
This section ensures you are oriented—not advanced—so nothing in the next step feels foreign or intimidating. This is a warm-up, not a test.
“I know what I’m looking at, even if I don’t know what to do yet.” — The goal of this Mile Marker.
Core Options Definitions (Plain English)
Call Option
A bet that price goes up — or stays above a level. Gives the right to buy shares.
Put Option
A bet that price goes down — or stays below a level. Gives the right to sell shares.
Strike Price
The “line in the sand.” The agreed-upon price at which shares can be bought or sold.
Expiration Date
The date the option stops existing. Options are time-based instruments; they do not last forever.
Bid / Ask
Bid: What buyers pay. Ask: What sellers ask. The difference is the spread. Tighter spreads = better liquidity.
Volume & Open Interest
Volume: Contracts traded today (ease of entry).
Open Interest: Total existing contracts (liquidity & reliability).
Reading an Options Chain (Orientation)
It looks complicated until you know what you’re looking for. Here is the standard layout:
- Calls are typically on the left
- Puts are typically on the right
- Strike prices run down the middle
- Expirations are selected at the top
Placing an Order (Practice Level)
At this stage, you should be able to open your broker’s order ticket and identify:
Paper trading or practice mode is fine. This is about navigation, not execution.
Fast Track Preview: Step 2
This section was intentionally light. Step 2 — Beginner Options Course is where training actually begins. We will break down options step-by-step, explain spreads simply, and remove jargon.
Think of this section as a warm-up lap.
How to Know You’re Ready to Move On:
- Options terms no longer feel foreign
- You can look at an options chain without panic
- You know where things live (even if you don’t know what to do yet)
Mile Marker 5: Automation Check
Turning Decisions Into Reality
This Mile Marker exists to confirm execution — not to revisit decisions.
By this point, you have already defined your capital plan and decided whether weekly deposits apply to you.
Mile Marker 5 does not ask you to rethink that plan. It asks you to prove it is active.
Why This Mile Marker Exists
Most people don’t fail because they chose the wrong plan. They fail because they never removed friction from following it. Automation solves that.
- Progress does not depend on motivation
- Market noise loses influence
- Consistency becomes inevitable
This Mile Marker turns intention into infrastructure.
What You Must Confirm
This step is complete only when all applicable items below are true:
- Your weekly deposit is fully automated (if deposits apply to your plan)
- The source of funds is clearly defined
- The transfer day and timing are set
There is nothing to optimize here. There is nothing to tweak.
Either the system runs without you — or it doesn’t.
Important Clarification
If you are starting with larger capital and deposits are not part of your plan:
- This Mile Marker still applies
- Your confirmation is simply that no deposits are required
The purpose is clarity — not uniformity.
Why This Matters Long-Term
This system is designed to survive busy weeks, low motivation, market drawdowns, and life interruptions. Automation protects the process when willpower disappears.
Automation Means:
Consistency becomes inevitable.
No Automation Means:
Missed weeks, emotional hesitation, inconsistent growth.
That’s not a character flaw. It’s a system flaw — and this Mile Marker fixes it.
Completion Check:
“My capital plan no longer depends on how I feel.”
If that statement isn’t true, this Mile Marker is not complete.
Mile Marker 6: Systemize Your Time
From Trading Activity to Operating a System
This Mile Marker shifts your mindset from “finding time to trade” to operating a repeatable system that fits into real life.
Freedom Income Options is not built around watching markets. It is built around structured execution on a schedule. This distinction is everything.
The Activity Trap
Most think success comes from:
- More screen time
- More charts
- More activity
Result: Overtrading & Burnout.
The Operator Mindset
Systemized trading means:
- You know what you do
- You know when you do it
- You do it the same way every week
Result: Consistency removes emotion.
The Freedom Income Engine Weekly Rhythm (Example)
A Cash-Secured Put trade
Usually around 12:00 PM • Takes about 15 minutes
A Debit Spread trade
Placed about one hour before market close • Takes about 15 minutes
Together, this creates a calm, repeatable rhythm. The exact timing is flexible — the structure is not.
What This Mile Marker Requires
You must choose a specific day and time for your weekly trading activity. A repeatable window you can realistically honor.
Even if you are new or not trading yet. This step is about identity, not execution. You are becoming someone who runs a system — not someone who reacts to markets.
Completion Check:
“I know when I operate my trading system each week, and it fits into my life without friction.”
If trading still feels like something you have to squeeze in, this Mile Marker is not complete.
Mile Marker 7: Commitment
Life will interrupt this process. This commitment exists because quitting during turbulence is the #1 reason traders fail.
The Agreement
“I will not quit during difficult periods.
I will follow the system until I achieve financial freedom.
I commit even when progress feels slow.”
Step 1 Summary
Pause Before You Move Forward
Before you move on, stop for a moment. Not to celebrate. Not to rush ahead. But to recognize what you just did.
Main Idea
This step wasn’t about trading — it was about deciding to take control.
You didn’t place a trade. You didn’t chase a result. You didn’t rely on motivation. You defined why this matters, put structure around money, removed friction from consistency, and chose a system over guesswork.
That may not feel dramatic yet — but it’s the difference between people who try trading and people who actually replace income.
Reflection (Required)
Growth doesn’t come from speed. It comes from awareness. Take a moment and reflect honestly on this step.
What part of Step 1 surprised you the most?
Where did you feel clarity click into place?
Where did you feel resistance or discomfort?
What felt powerful?
There are no right answers. Reflection here isn’t about judgment — it’s about grounding yourself.
Reflection Point
This is not a comment box. This is a checkpoint.
Step 1 is where most people think they’re done — and where most people later realize they rushed. Use this space to capture what actually shifted for you.
- Not what sounded good.
- Not what you think you should say.
- But what changed, clicked, or created friction as you went through this step.
Strong systems are built by people who notice their own reactions — clarity, resistance, relief, doubt — and take them seriously.
As you write, consider:
- What belief about trading or money was challenged or dismantled?
- Where did you feel relief — and why?
- Where did you feel resistance, hesitation, or discomfort?
- Did anything here force you to slow down in a way you weren’t expecting?
- What feels different about how you’re approaching income now compared to before this step?
This reflection isn’t for perfection. It’s for honesty. The more specific you are here, the stronger your foundation becomes — and the better this system gets for everyone who comes after you.
Take your time. Write like this matters — because it does.
You Are Now at a Fork in the Road
Move Into Phase 2: Beginner Course
If options still feel unfamiliar or intimidating, this is the natural next step. Clear explanations, no jargon.
Unlock CourseStep Directly Into The Income Engine
Ready to operate? This is where strategy, execution, and accountability come together. The full operating system.
Join The EngineReturn to Dashboard
Use the tools and scanners deliberately. Remember: Tools support progress, they don’t replace a system.
Go to HubFinal Thought Before You Continue
“Step 1 is not something you rush through once. It’s something you come back to when motivation fades or progress feels slow. You now have a foundation that doesn’t depend on emotion. That’s rare.”
Where you go next is your choice — but you are no longer starting from zero.