Every good structure needs a framework—a skeleton that carries the shape, guides the purpose, and lays out the path for what comes next.
Part 2 of my story is that framework.
This is the chapter where I learned how to work with people, how to work under pressure, how businesses operate, and eventually… how to build my own.
But more importantly, this is the chapter where I discovered something that changed my entire life:
I love accounting, and I love supporting the trades.
Not because it was handed to me.
Not because it was easy.
But because every step, every role, every unexpected turn slowly revealed what I was meant to do.
The Early Years: Where Capability Took Root
By the time I graduated high school in 2000, I had already worked in retail, restaurants, and even a movie theater–restaurant hybrid where I got paid to do my homework between ticket sales and serving.
All of it taught me something important:
- Work ethic wasn’t optional.
- Showing up mattered.
- People notice when you care.
But none of it felt like the thing yet.
I was still searching.
So I enrolled at the Florida College of Natural Health and earned a degree in Massage Therapy, with an end goal of becoming a physical therapist.
It didn’t take long to realize:
I don’t like touching people.
A small but important detail for a massage therapist.
Which became my first big pivot.
I needed a job—and quickly.
24/7 Protection Co. — The First Spark
At 24/7 Protection, a home security installation and monitoring company, I started as a receptionist.
Nothing glamorous.
Nothing fancy.
But then QuickBooks landed in my lap.
And everything changed.
As soon as I opened that program and started making sense of numbers, patterns, ledgers, and processes, something clicked in my brain that had never clicked before.
I was a closeted organizational nerd.
I tracked every dollar I had as a teenager—down to tip money in jars.
I color-coded my life before color coding was a thing.
I found comfort in structure, patterns, and clarity.
QuickBooks felt like home.
Every day, I dove deeper.
Every task made me want to learn more.
Every financial detail made me want to understand the whole story.
This is where the seed was planted:
I want to do this.
I can do this.
I’m good at this.
And I began taking accounting classes at a nearby community college to build the foundation I knew I would need.
But this was only the beginning of the framework.
Tijuana Flats → Fifth Third Bank: Learning People, Pressure, and Professionalism
Over the next several years, I found myself in roles that—at the time—felt disconnected.
But looking back now, they were building beams I would desperately need one day.
Tijuana Flats (Server + Trainer)
This job wasn’t about accounting.
It was about people.
It taught me:
- how to stay calm under pressure
- how to problem-solve in real time
- how to deliver consistent service
- how to communicate with all personality types
Skills I now use every single day with contractors, APs, bookkeepers, and team members.
Fifth Third Bank
This is where I learned the inner workings of commercial banking and client services.
My role included:
- supporting 150 commercial clients
- setting up treasury products
- assisting with loan closings
- coordinating documentation
- managing relationships with executives
- performing detailed administrative and financial tasks
It was high stakes.
Fast paced.
Demanding.
And I excelled.
But there were politics.
Hurtful rumors.
Moments of being underestimated and misunderstood.
A promotion granted and then taken away based on lies.
What I learned there?
I will never lead in a way that causes someone else to feel small.
I will never run a business that rewards toxicity.
And I will never participate in environments where competition replaces humanity.
Those lessons shaped the kind of mentor I am today.
Healthcare Support Staffing — Excellence, Integrity, and a Hard Ending
This was one of the roles that could have become a long-term home.
I loved the people.
I admired the owner.
The work mattered.
I handled:
- accounting for multiple companies
- daily cashbooks
- reconciliations
- payables and journal entries
- HR onboarding
- benefits
- unemployment claims
- payroll support
Then one day, I discovered something that didn’t add up.
Literally.
The controller had shown me how to run financial reports while she was away on vacation.
What I saw told a different story.
One that didn’t align with what she had been presenting to the owner.
I talked to my husband.
I did the right thing.
I gathered supporting evidence.
And I told the truth.
It cost me my job.
I was walked out.
Some years later, she was caught during an internal audit, and arrested for grand theft.
That moment taught me something I still hold as a personal and professional standard:
Integrity comes with a cost—but losing integrity costs far more.
CFE Federal Credit Union — Growth Interrupted
At CFE FCU, I thrived.
I took on work that challenged me creatively and technically.
I supported business loan applications, maintained files, trained branches, and even took courses for various internal roles.
I loved that job.
But then came the knee surgeries—
and the complications—
and ultimately the severe femoral nerve neuropathy.
This is where Part 3 will pick up emotionally.
From a career standpoint, here’s all you need to know:
I lost my job because I physically could not return.
Not because I lacked skill.
Not because I lacked dedication.
But because my body gave out.
This moment marked a turning point in my professional story.
But that chapter belongs fully in Part 3.
EvDevo — A Familiar Industry Calls Again
EvDevo was a commercial real estate investor, run by the owner of 24/7 Protection.
I stepped into a hybrid role:
- bookkeeping
- invoicing
- sales tracking
- month-end closings
- HR functions
- newsletters
- inventory tracking
- closing coordination
It was the first time I saw construction-adjacent accounting at scale.
The first time I understood the financial heartbeat of the trades.
The first time I realized:
I love this industry.
I understand how these people think.
I have the skill set to support them.
When the company closed after selling its final lots, it wasn’t a painful ending—
just a natural one.
And then something life-changing happened:
I found out I was pregnant.
Which created new priorities, new emotions, and a new chapter of life.
But the emotional depth of that journey belongs in Part 3.
LRA Insurance — A Kind Lifeline
During pregnancy, an old high school friend hired me for a temporary management role.
LRA became a bridge for me:
- flexible
- supportive
- meaningful
- necessary
It wasn’t glamorous.
But it gave me stability when everything else in my life felt unpredictable.
When motherhood arrived, I stepped away to stay home with my son.
A Year at Home — And a New Version of Me
This year wasn’t a professional chapter—
but it was essential to my professional identity.
I learned:
- patience
- prioritization
- resilience
- balance
- clarity
And when I was ready to return to the workforce, I returned differently.
More grounded.
More intentional.
More aware of what mattered.
This is where Grennan Fender enters the story.
Grennan Fender — The Role That Prepared Me to Lead
Grennan Fender became the place where everything I had learned finally aligned.
I started as a bookkeeper supporting a subcontractor.
Then trained their internal team so well that my bookkeeping role was no longer needed.
The partners didn’t let me go—
they promoted me to Office Manager.
Here I learned:
- leadership
- HR processes
- firm operations
- budgeting and forecasting
- staff management
- administrative oversight
- professional confidence
This was the role that told me:
You are capable of more.
You are ready.
You can build something of your own.
And in May 2015—
I walked out of Grennan Fender and launched my firm, EOB/B4C.
This is where Part 3 hands off into Part 4.
But before we go there, Part 3 needs space to tell the hardest part of your story.



