At the beginning, everything felt random. Results fluctuated without pattern.
This created space. And better decisions created consistency.
Instead of reacting to movement, the trader defined structure. Clear setups, clear invalidations, clear triggers.
Wins became consistent—not because of website luck, but because of clarity. Better entries, better exits, better timing.
This reduced errors. And better results reinforced the system.
This is the Clarity Compounding Effect. Structure builds on itself.
The lesson is simple. You don’t improve by guessing—you improve by structuring.