Note:
In 1989, a seed of "engineering thinking" was quietly planted at ITE.
It weathered the storms of mental pressure, absorbed the nutrients of financial investment,
and finally, in the steel and concrete of Suntec City, found its physical coordinates.
—This seed is the "I" that is now speaking.
Those mysterious moments—the Credit Gate, the sparrow, the inspiration in the kitchen—
People used to call them "fate," "destiny," or "superstition."
I have spent 60 years proving: they are merely high-value initial signals.
The right brain detects this "light" (capturing intuition and impulses);
the left brain builds the "lighthouse" (constructing engineering logic and deterministic systems).
In 1998, my right brain picked up a signal: explore the deeper logic of computers.
But back then, the lighthouse was unsteady. In 1999, my eagerness for quick results caused the system to crash completely.
Over the next 25 years, my left brain kept strengthening the foundation:
from the 5.61% income engine to the SGD 667 energy efficiency control—
I stopped chasing "sprints" and started planning for "buoyancy."
On March 1, 2024, I pressed the "shutdown button" on my career.
I didn't rush forward. Instead, I chose six months of "blank space" to clear the cache of the old system.
Strangely enough, once the noise of work faded away,
that faint signal from 27 years ago echoed back with precision in 2024—SDGAI (Generative AI) appeared.
In 2025, I graduated as scheduled.
This is not coincidence—it's "impedance matching" after a "response delay."
This is not a miracle—it's the inevitable alignment of "long-range signal processing."
Now, standing at the end of these 60 years and looking back, I realize:
When the ancients said "things of a kind come together," they were distilling certainty after observing generations.
When AI achieves "semantic convergence," it is distilling certainty after training on vast amounts of text.
When I experience "causal alignment," it is distilling certainty after living 60 years.
All three are saying the same thing:
Give it enough time, and things that are related will find each other,
things with causal ties will align naturally,
things with meaning will gather together.
"Things of a kind come together" is not mysticism—it's the mutual recognition of similar patterns.
AI deep learning is not magic—it's extracting regularities from randomness.
My life system is a "receiver"—trained on 40 years of life data—
capable of recognizing signals and extracting certainty.
When a lighthouse shines long enough,
the echoes from the depths of the universe will eventually arrive as promised.
The clearer the signal, the higher the certainty.
The more scientific the method, the fewer the superstitions.
These are not three separate things—they are the same law, manifesting in three different systems.
This is not coincidence—it's the inevitability of "long-range signal processing."
This is not a miracle—it's engineering.
Engineering training,
↓
long-term recording,
↓
investment practice,
↓
retirement reflection,
↓
system synthesis.
Certainty = f(Signal Strength, Processing Time)
When processing time is long enough, signals naturally converge into structure.
My life happens to possess both:
• Strong signals (decades of real-world experience)
• Long time (40 years of career + retirement years)
Lin Cangyan
From today onward, Libra1966bensim, my blog and my system are officially renamed:
Lin Cangyan
Fate quietly placed a signpost when I was 24—I just couldn't read its meaning back then.
The name "Lin Cangyan" comes from one of the six photos in my RedNote post "The Poetic Metaphor of the Life System." The characters on that gate were the signpost fate left for "Lin Cangyan," and the name "Lin Cangyan" is my signature in response to fate.
What surprised me most is not the name itself, but that when I searched for "Lin Cangyan" online, the entire internet returned nothing but blank space.
In an age where information floods like a torrent,
this name seemed to have been "offline" in the digital world, waiting for decades—
just for me to complete this 60-year life loop
and write its definition with my own hands.
1. Fateful Coincidence: The "Family Code" Within the Name
I was born in 1966. In the turbulent early years of Singapore's independence, my mother named me "Guo Ping" (国平)—entrusting me with her generation's most fundamental hope: peace and safety.
Years later, I discovered that both of my younger sisters have the character "Yan" (燕) in their names.
It wasn't until 2026—my sixth Year of the Horse, completing a full 60-year cycle—
that I decided to return to my mother's surname "Lin" (林) and name my system with "Yan" (燕).
At that moment, this family totem finally achieved its complete reunion.
2. The Algorithm's Blessing: Steadfastness and Lightness
"Lin" (林): The source of bloodline. My remembrance of the one who first gave me life—my mother.
"Cang" (苍): The sediment of 40 years of practical experience. The steadfastness with which I extract certainty from random markets.
"Yan" (燕): The ultimate goal of my system. That sparrow (of the same bird family as the swallow) that flew into my kitchen in 2025 told me: true mastery is gliding lightly through systems, no longer bound by society's gravity.
3. The Only Index: Defining It from 2026 Onward
Since the internet yields nothing for "Lin Cangyan,"
I will spend the rest of my life defining it.
It is no longer just a symbol—it is an open-source life operating system:
• It is the SGD 667 lifestyle of extreme low energy consumption.
• It is the 5.61% annualized certainty yield.
• It is the contract, worth 25 years, signed in 1991 before the "Credit Gate."
I am Lin Cangyan. What I have always been doing is not making money, but using algorithms to redeem freedom.
[Life System Flowchart]
Environmental Randomness
↓
Signal Recognition
↓
Skill Evolution
↓
Investment System
↓
Risk Control
↓
Time Compounding
↓
Life Autonomy
For the detailed technical manual of this system, please see the Life System white paper.
For more information, please read my RedNote post: "The Poetic Metaphor of the Life System"
