Not really that hard. Can show you how I file my lawful money tax return and perhaps you can learn by example.

We've discovered the US Income Tax is really an indirect tax on the incoming transfer of Federal Reserve notes. An excise tax on FRNs. And you can avoid the excise by avoiding the currency. How? By redeeming lawful money. That's the remedy we speak of. And as David points out "We are beyond the validation this is the correct interpretation of remedy. It is."

If this is a new concept you might best start learning here at this thread http://savingtosuitorsclub.net/showt...RS-agent-think

1) DO I NEED TO FILE?
Start by looking at all the 'information returns' you've received for the year (2017). These would be Forms W-2s and 1099s. When someone submits information returns to the Internal Revenue Service asserting the payment of “income”, such as W-2s or 1099s, the law requires that person to also send copies to you the "payee". The reason for that requirement is to afford the payee notice-- so that he/she can affirm, dispute, and/or correct, such assertions. If the payee does not do one of these things, the IRS will act according to the unchallenged assertions (since they are the only evidence on the record), treat them as correct, and create a tax liability.

The IRS will assume the total of these information returns is your gross income. Is your gross income above the 2017 threshold for your age and filing status? If so you should file a federal income tax return. For example see here:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kellyph...return-in-2017
someone Single under age 65 with reported income above $10,350 would be required to file; to give a report, an accounting of use of the estate/trust.