The Whale and the DoorDasher: Discovering Purpose in the Daily Grind

Purpose isn’t a fixed point. It evolves with us, changing as we grow and adapt to new seasons of life. I used to think teaching was my lifelong purpose—a vocation that defined me. But when I found myself standing in front of a classroom, wondering if the paycheck even covered my gas for the week, I began to question everything. What was once a calling had become a burden, an Ahab-like obsession dragging me deeper into burnout.

Purpose, I realized, should uplift, not destroy. It should offer hope, not sink us into frustration. Much like Ahab, I had confused a goal for a purpose. My goal was to stay in education, but my deeper purpose—bringing hope and clarity to others—was more fluid than I allowed it to be. And so, when the classroom door closed, a new opportunity opened. Real estate wasn’t Plan A, but it became a way to fulfill my purpose in a different context, where I could still educate, guide, and bring hope to people in another transformative moment of their lives.

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What’s Spookier: Hurricane Milton or Halloween Spending?

On top of Florida weather, we are also still struggling with inflation. Thank you transportation costs and insurance rates. I saw eggs at Walmart yesterday for over six dollars. Halloween candy prices are experiencing an increase, yet consumers are still splurging with many incorporating candy purchases into their grocery budgets this month. The latest figures reveal that prices for sugar and sweets have risen by 0.8% annually, with sugar and sugar substitutes seeing a notable 3.3% increase.

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Is Your Home a Risk?

This is a repost from the September 15th An Email By Steve Last year, a couple clients of mine said they wanted to purchase a fixer-upper, not something they necessarily needed a renovation loan for, but something they could move into and tinker with. And this past January, we closed…

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The Costly Mistake That Left Me Owing the IRS—and How I’m Fixing It

I thought making more money would solve everything. After transitioning from teaching to real estate, I watched my income jump from $17K to $50K, but the financial relief I expected never came. Instead, I was blindsided by a $3,000 tax bill that wiped out my savings and left me questioning how I got here. It wasn’t just the IRS that caught me off guard—it was the lifestyle inflation creeping in and the realization that more income didn’t mean more security. I thought I was building a better future, but I was on the verge of financial collapse. So, how did I fix it?

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