Learn two beginner-friendly strategies, follow weekly alerts, and join a community that helps you see $100–$300/month potential without overwhelm.
You’re not lazy. You’re not irresponsible.
You’ve just been so focused on helping others that your own financial future got pushed to the side. Maybe…
You’ve contributed to a retirement account here and there, but it’s nowhere near enough.
You’ve looked at the stock market before and thought, “I don’t have time to figure this out.”
You’ve wondered if you’ll have to keep working long after you want to stop, just to make ends meet.
You’ve even considered a second job or side hustle... but the thought of it wears you out.
You're not alone.
Thousands of pastors are in the same boat and they're quietly anxious about what the future holds.
You don’t need a finance degree. You don’t need thousands of dollars.
All you need is a desire to take control of your future, and a guide who understands your world.
Clarity on exactly when to enter and exit trades
Two proven strategies that fit into your schedule
Monthly watchlist of high-probability stock setups
Weekly trade alerts so you can follow along with confidence
Supportive community to keep you motivated and learning
Direct answers when you have questions
Built by a pastor who understands the financial challenges ministry leaders face
Strategies tested and refined with years of real-world results
A step-by-step learning path that meets you where you are
A community that values wisdom, stewardship, and intentional growth
While nothing is guaranteed in trading and there is always a risk of losing, many members report seeing $100–$300/month potential within their first few months of joining. The real win is gaining the skills and confidence to make disciplined, repeatable trades.
$97/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for SLM and MIS strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Up to 3 questions per month, responses within 48 hours
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective Course
Double Canopy Strategy Course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
$197/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
$1,970/yr
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session
No contracts - cancel anytime
Learn two simple strategies, follow weekly trade alerts, and join a supportive community that helps you grow with confidence.
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Most traders love the idea of backtesting. It feels safe. You get to test your strategy on past charts, plug numbers into spreadsheets, and see a clean curve of “what would have happened.” On paper, it looks controlled, logical, and even exciting.
But here is my honest take: I am not a big fan of backtesting. It is too easy to manipulate the numbers, even without realizing it. It is too easy to add unintentional bias into the results. And most of all, it is a completely different ballgame when real money is on the line.
Backtesting is useful, but it is not the finish line. At best, it is a filter to see if an idea even has a chance of working. If you stop at backtesting, you will almost always be disappointed. The real edge comes when you take that idea through a full testing process, from charts, to practice, to forward testing, and finally scaling up when you have proof.
Backtesting does one important thing: it shows you if your strategy has any basic viability. If you run a test and the numbers are consistently negative, you know right away to scrap that idea. You save yourself time, energy, and money.
That is where the real value ends. Backtesting is not about perfection, and it should never convince you to dump your entire account into a shiny new strategy. Perfect-looking results on past charts can be dangerously misleading. The market is too dynamic, and conditions change too often for a backtest to guarantee future performance.
The reality is that you can backtest almost anything and make it look good if you tweak the rules enough. That kind of curve-fitting may build confidence on paper, but it almost always falls apart in real time.
The biggest weakness of backtesting is bias. Even if you try to be honest, bias sneaks in.
Hindsight bias: You already know what happened in the past, so your brain naturally cheats when deciding where to “enter” or “exit.”
Rule drift: You start bending your own rules mid-test because you want to see a better outcome.
Overfitting: You tweak and tweak until your system only works on the exact past data you tested.
The outcome is a backtest that looks bulletproof. On the charts, it seems like you have found the secret formula. But the first time you put real money on it, it fails, and usually in a way that shakes your confidence. That gap between theory and execution is wide and unforgiving. It is the graveyard of most new traders, the place where hope meets reality. Many people never climb out of that hole because they trusted results that were only valid in hindsight, not in real life. When you realize this, you see that the danger is not just the failed trade, but the false sense of security that a perfect-looking backtest created.
Here is the truth: trading with fake or past data does not prepare you for what it feels like when your own money is truly on the line.
The psychology is completely different and it cannot be overstated. A backtest does not capture what happens when you see three losses in a row and start doubting your system, when your pulse quickens as you hover over the sell button, or when you hesitate because you fear missing out. It does not measure the way greed pushes you to hold too long, or the panic that causes you to exit far too early, leaving money on the table.
The gut punch of a real losing streak cannot be simulated by data alone, no matter how clean the spreadsheet looks. And the confidence of seeing your system actually work in real time cannot be replaced by any amount of backtesting. That is why backtesting is just the warmup, not the game, and why every trader must accept that the lessons that matter most only come when real money is involved and real discipline is tested day after day.
So what is the better approach? Here is the path I recommend.
Backtest LightlyRun your idea through past charts just enough to see if it makes sense. If it fails completely, drop it. If it looks promising, move forward.
Practice Test (Paper Trading)Trade the system live, but without money. This builds muscle memory, lets you refine your rules, and shows you if you can follow your plan without pressure.
Forward Test (Small Real Trades)Place tiny trades with actual money. The goal is not profit. The goal is to experience real emotions and see if you can stick to your rules.
Sample TestCommit to 20–30 trades in a row, recorded in detail. Do not judge after one or two. At the end of the sample, review win rate, average gain vs. loss, and how you felt.
Scale SlowlyOnly increase position size after you have proven consistency in small size. Growth should follow evidence, not emotion.
This path takes longer, but it keeps you from blowing up an account just because a backtest looked good.
Backtesting is the start, not the proof. Think of it like drawing up a playbook in sports. The play might look brilliant on paper, but it only matters once it works on the field.
Your goal is not to chase flawless charts or dream about the perfect system. Your goal is to build confidence that you can execute a strategy through good seasons and bad. That confidence only comes from practice and real experience.
When you adopt this mindset, testing stops being about “finding a holy grail” and becomes about proving to yourself that you can do the right thing at the right time, even when it is hard. That is the foundation of consistent trading.
So here is my challenge to you. Take one idea and put it through the process. Do a simple backtest to check for basic viability. Then forward test it for 20 trades with the smallest size possible. Keep records, track your emotions, and judge your performance by your discipline, not just the dollars.
At the end of those 20 trades, review your results. Do you have something worth scaling? Or do you need to refine the plan? Either way, you will have real data and real experience, not just pretty charts.
If you want a printable backtesting and forward testing tracker, or if you want to join a community where strategies are already run through this process, reach out and I will send you the tools.
Do not fall for the trap of perfect backtests. Build a system that works in real life, with real money, and you will finally trade with confidence.