Episode 88: From Debt to Dream Business: The Money Journey That Changed Everything

3/25/2026

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I’m getting brutally honest in this one. This episode is the part of my story most people never talk about — moving to the U.S. with zero debt, building it right back up, and the moment everything finally clicked. This is how Firestorm Finance was actually born, and why I believe the hard seasons are exactly what shape you into the person your future clients need.

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What I Yapped About

  • Why starting with zero debt doesn’t protect you if your habits haven’t changed — We came to the U.S. completely debt free. And then, slowly, quietly, we weren’t anymore. Running a creative business without separating finances or tracking spending meant the debt crept back in before I even realized what was happening. The starting point doesn’t matter if the system isn’t there to support it.
  • What it actually looks like when spending outpaces awareness — There wasn’t one dramatic moment. It was a slow accumulation of buying materials, mixing business money into personal accounts, and not really looking at the full picture until the numbers got uncomfortable enough to demand attention.
  • How budgeting became the single biggest turning point — Getting a clear, honest look at what was coming in and going out changed everything. Suddenly we knew where we stood, what we owed, and what we needed to do next. That clarity was the foundation everything else was built on.
  • The honest math behind product-based creative businesses — Selling stickers is not the same as running a profitable business unless you’re moving serious volume. A few sales a week doesn’t cover materials, time, packaging, and platform fees. Understanding that wasn’t a failure — it was information I needed to move forward.
  • The accounting job that sparked everything — Working inside a real accounting role taught me that I didn’t just understand this stuff — I loved it. When a company offered to pay for my accounting degree, I took it. When I started learning QuickBooks and realized I could do this independently, something clicked that I couldn’t ignore.
  • What it actually took to leave a stable job and bet on myself — We were so close to being out of debt. We didn’t have a lot saved. But we had a budget we trusted, a husband who believed in me, and a three-month runway I committed to. That combination was enough to take the leap.
  • When my business had to support us both — My husband’s company shut down with almost no warning. He wasn’t supposed to go back to work the next day. And instead of panic, I had stability — because I had spent years building the financial foundation that made that possible.

Your Next Step

Take 10 minutes this week and look at your business finances with fresh eyes. Not to judge what’s there — just to see it clearly. What’s coming in? What’s going out? Where are things mixed together that shouldn’t be? Awareness is always the first step. You can’t fix what you won’t look at.

Ready to stop guessing and start making decisions you actually feel confident about? Let’s talk about how fractional CFO support can help you get real clarity on your numbers. 👉 Book Your Discovery Call


🎧 Listen to the full episode now, or if you can’t listen check out the transcript below.

Read the Transcript

Welcome to the Creative Minds Smart Money Podcast, where we turn financial confusion into creative confidence. I’m Samantha Eck, bookkeeper and fractional CFO for Creative Entrepreneurs. Each week, I’m sharing my financial expertise and actionable strategies to help you build a thriving creative business.

Plus, you’ll hear from industry experts who bring fresh perspectives on growing your business beyond the numbers. Because building a successful creative business starts with strong financial foundations. Your next chapter starts now.

Hello, hello, hello. Okay, so today we’re diving right back into the personal stuff. We’re really kind of diving more into a little bit more of my background and the time that things changed and I started to gain a deeper relationship with money and where I started to really dig deep into things overall.

So this is where I get brutally honest with you guys and just really dive into everything. But let’s let’s kind of get into it. So just to recap from last episode, we recapped where, you know, I was I grew up in Canada, we moved to Texas in 2020, how I had my first business in Canada, where I was making kids clothes.

And then when we first moved here, there was a variety of things that I started doing. I was a accounting assistant when I first moved here because obviously I’d had that accounting experience, everything like that. So when I first moved here, one of the jobs that I had was an accounting assistant.

I had invested in an iPad where I started drawing and I started to draw every day. And I found prompts on Instagram and things like that or there’s these these challenges called draw this in your style. It’s where you take someone’s image and you draw their image.

And I’m so sorry if I’m itching my nose or if you hear me itching my nose. For some reason, whenever I film, my nose gets super itchy. Just straight up honesty right now.

But anyway, so I started drawing every day and I decided at some point after seeing a bunch of different artists and things like that, I was like, hey, like, you know, my drawing is getting slightly better. Maybe I should try making some stickers. Maybe I should try making some postcards, some post-it notes, things like that.

I should try making this stuff and selling it. And so the birth of I think it was called Eclectic Pin Studio. I don’t think it was even called Eclectic Pin Studio.

I think it was Eclectic Studio or something like that. It was something along those lines. I’m going to start off by saying right off the bat, I did not run the business properly again.

So this was a time, I think it was 2021, 2022. And my dad was doing our taxes still. So my dad would do two of our tax every year and he would, you know, ask for all our documents and get things done for us.

Actually, yeah, I know it was in 2022 because when we first came here, my husband wasn’t working because we were waiting for his visa slash green card to come in. So he actually had a little bit of downtime, which was nice for him to actually kind of relax for a while. The opposite of what we were used to with me kind of taking the backseat with him working full time and me doing trying to run my business.

He wasn’t working. I was working. And then eventually when he got his green card and everything like that and I was let go from my current position, I had a tough time finding another job at the time.

I started just focusing on my stickers. And while I was at that job, I was doing my stickers. So it wasn’t anything that I wasn’t not doing.

I started doing my stickers consistently. And of course, this job that I did have, I’d work from home, I think, which is why they’d kind of let people go because they were getting back to that point where they wanted everybody in the office and they just didn’t have enough space. But that’s when things started to feel really off because when we started to come here, you know, we came here with no debt.

But my husband and I, I don’t even know like what it was like. A lot of the time I started to get into debt because I would buy material. And of course, I didn’t have my own bank account.

I’d started a Lily account, but I didn’t really think about putting the money in there. Like sometimes the FC money would go in there, but most of the time I was like, oh, it’s just easier if it hit my personal account. You know, I didn’t think about all those things.

And that’s when money started to feel tight and started to feel really heavy because, you know, we were living with my parents when we first moved here. Like when we came from Canada, we didn’t just immediately go and get our own apartment. We were actually living in my parents upstairs, kind of sweet.

So they have like a bedroom upstairs that had like a, it’s just a bedroom with a closet. It’s had a walk-in closet and then also a bathroom, which was really nice for us because it gave us the space that we needed and kind of like to grow into, to grow into Texas really. So things started to feel really uncertain and heavy.

And we didn’t really have a lot of rent to pay because my dad was very lenient with the amount of rent that we paid. And he was like, what’s fair to you guys? And we told him, but there was a point in time where, cause we had just gotten out of debt in Canada. So we had zero debt.

We came to the U.S. with zero debt. We started gaining debt again because I was doing my business and I was just buying things like crazy. And that’s when something clicked in my head when I was like, okay, we’re in a lot of debt again.

Like what’s going on? Like what am I doing wrong? And I started to look at money podcasts. I started to look at money books. I started to look at money YouTubes.

I started to look at all these videos and all these things that were going on and all these money, you know, things. And that’s when things started to click. Like, okay, I’m doing something wrong here.

That’s when I found YNAB. And I know I’ve talked about YNAB before where it’s, uh, it’s the budgeting app YNAB and how much I love it. And that’s where I found YNAB and why I really dove into YNAB is something that I love because that’s when we really started to get on track was when we started budgeting.

When I found that out and I found out how much debt we were in and how many things we were doing and things like that. And realistically, the reason that we had so much debt when we came to the U.S. was because of my business. And I’m, I’m not ashamed to say that.

And I’m not ashamed to say that I made some mistakes in the past because that makes me human, right? And, and I want you guys to see me as that, that human. I don’t want you to see me as this flawless person. I’m not flawless.

I, I’ve gone through these trials that have brought me to this point in my life where we’re going to get, you guys are getting to know me and really feel me. So of course, that’s where I started to look at money. And when we started to put our numbers into YNAB, we started to look at everything and say, okay, this is where we’re at.

This is what we need. This is what, you know, what we’ve got coming in, what we’ve got going out. That’s when I realized I needed to get a job.

And so like, I couldn’t continue to just do the stickers. Like it wasn’t profitable enough. And I was working my butt off trying to do TikToks and everything like that.

And I was like, oh, I’m going to do TikToks of all these orders and things like that. But then the problem with that is it’s so much work and not enough payback. And I’m not saying stickers aren’t a profitable business, but you need to be like selling like hundreds per day, you know, to be really profitable.

You can’t just be selling two or three per day or one to three per week. And I think a lot of product-based creatives will, will resonate with that and, and understand that. That’s when I got a job and that’s when I found my first ever, I think it was called, I can’t even remember what the actual position was called, but it was an accounting position for a company here in Austin.

And I was doing phenomenally well. Like I started off, I learned their system in like two days and they were so shocked because they’re like, people usually take two weeks to pick this up and get all this stuff going. And they started to give me like account, actual accounting things.

And that’s when I realized, okay, I actually like this. Like, what is this? I want to learn more about it. So I was already doing the YNAB part of things, the budgeting part of things.

I was already getting my money on track. We were on track to start, we were paying off things, we were getting things done. And how do I say it? That was when we really started to figure things out.

And while I was at that job, they actually offered to pay for school for my accounting degree. We’d started my accounting degree and I’d started to get into my business and everything else like that that happened. But then I can’t even remember what it was.

It was like 2023. It was early 20, very early 2023 when there was a lot of like slowdown in housing stuff. And I can’t, I don’t think it was a recession, but there was a slowdown in like building houses and stuff like that.

And they had actually overhired. So they had decided to keep just the people who were there before they hired me. And there was, I think four of us that got hired at around the same time and they’d let all four of us go.

So it was impactful for me to experience that, but I kept going to school and I kept doing what I was doing. And I had found another job for a small business where I was doing almost all accounting. And I was still doing my degree at that time.

So there was a CPA there that started to teach me some other things, like how to do things in QuickBooks, how to do this. And when I was in that position, that was when I really felt it. That was when I really understood.

And I was like, I was looking at QuickBooks and I was like, I could do this. I feel like I could do this on my own. And that’s when I got advertised the bookkeeping course that I took.

And it was like, Hey, like, would you like to learn about bookkeeping? Would you like to do this? And I was like, yeah, I would. I would. And I don’t know if I mentioned this, but I accelerated my degree because I wanted to just get through it as fast as possible.

So while also learning about accounting and doing all this stuff, I started taking this bookkeeping course. And at that point in time, that’s when we started to move out of my parents place because we were so close to being out of debt again that I was like, OK, let’s let’s move into our own place again. I did get let go from the company.

Well, actually, that’s not even true. I left the company. I left the company.

I didn’t get let go. I’m mixing up my my companies that I got let go because I got there’s a couple that got closed out. But for this one, I did leave the company because I wanted to start my own business.

And this was the scariest point in my life because we were so close to being out of debt and we didn’t have a lot of money saved up, but we were doing so well with our budget and like making sure that we were keeping track of things. And I looked at my husband and I said, hey, I said, do you trust me? Like, do you trust me to do this? Like, is this something you think we can actually afford to do? And he was like, yeah, he’s like, I think you’ve got this. He’s like, I trust you.

Go for it. And I was like, OK, well, if I don’t make money in like three months, let’s give me three months. If I don’t make money in three months, then I won’t keep doing this.

And I can’t remember. I mean, you guys know I’m a Christian, but I I felt so passionately about this that I was like, hey, we’re going to start this. And that’s when, you know, that’s when Five Star Finance was born.

And that’s when everything really changed for me. That’s a season of permanence for me. We did we did wind up going back into debt a little bit because money got tight when I first started my business.

And it did take a month for things to start flowing. But after that first month, like I had money flowing in and it was coming in on a monthly basis and I was able to afford things. And it was really cool just to kind of like get even a little bit more into this kind of aspect.

There was a point in time when my husband got let go. And this was the scariest time of my life because he was working for a startup and he was doing so well. He was doing phenomenally well and he was he was making enough money that he could support both of us.

And it was such a good feeling. And it was crazy because I was at this point in my business where I was doing so well that my husband got let go and his business shut down, like they shut down. Literally, they were operating and then they let everybody know that they were shutting down and and it just got shut down like he wasn’t even supposed to go back to work the next day.

And I remember feeling the pressure in my chest and being like, oh, my gosh, like my husband just lost his job. What are we going to do? I’m working my own business. My business had been doing so well at that point, like for bookkeeping, but we didn’t have to stress about anything.

Like I was able to support the both of us on my business alone because I had taken all this time to dig into my background, to get my degree, to build up all this experience, to understand really what it was to have that fear of not making enough money and everything like that. That was the transformational period in my life was 2022 to 2023 where Firestorms Finance started was really the point where everything kind of like changed. And that’s where things grew.

So, I mean, to catch you up to speed, that’s my background. You know, I started off in logistics. I moved to accounting.

I started two businesses that both failed. And then I started a third business. And it’s just been a phenomenal journey.

And all of the business owners that I’ve met, regardless of if they’re with me or not anymore, have just been phenomenal people to work with. And I love every minute of Firestorm Finance. I love when I’m doing a Firestorm Finance.

I love doing this podcast and I love working with creatives. That’s really what we’re going to get into in the next episode. Why I love working with creatives and what’s special about them.

You know, I’m getting a little bit emotional when I think about it because it’s just been a crazy journey these past almost three years. As we wrap up this episode, you know, I just want to say thank you. If you have been here for the almost two years of the podcast, thank you for sticking around.

Like, thank you for hanging out with me and listening to my voice. And just, you know, you didn’t even really know me. So I hope this is enjoyable for you to get to know me a little bit.

But thank you for hanging out and getting to know me and hang out with me. If you want to get to know me more, please hit me up on Instagram because I’m always sharing stuff on there. But I really do appreciate you guys hang out with me and listen to my voice every week.

And if you like this episode, please share it, subscribe, let people know about it. As always, you guys, I wish you the best week ever. And we’ll see you next week.

Farewell. Hello, travelers.

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The Legal Stuff

© –2026 Firestorm Finance. All Rights Reserved.

The content in this podcast and blog is for educational and informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional financial, accounting, or legal advice. Always consult with a qualified professional regarding your specific financial situation. Samantha Eck and Firestorm Finance are not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided in this content.

For specific legal or tax questions, please consult with a licensed attorney or CPA in your jurisdiction.

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meet your host

Hi, I'm Samantha—

The thing about financial advice is that it hits different when it comes from someone who's actually been in your shoes. As the host of Creative Minds, Smart Money, I don't just talk about finances – I share real strategies I've learned from running my own creative businesses and helping clients like you transform their financial chaos into clarity.

Want to know more about how I went from creative business owner to financial strategist for creative entrepreneurs?

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