Blog
My Debt Free Journey and How I Became a Financial Coach
A deep dive into my origin story

I’m Grayson Stalvey, and I want to tell you about how I
became first debt free, and then a financial coach.
I wasn’t always great with money. When I graduated from the Coast Guard Academy, I was stationed in Kodiak, Alaska, an island where we were always told bears outnumbered people 4 to 1. I was making real, adult money for the first time in my life, and I basked in it. I still joke with my wife that I think I bought every DVD that came out between 2005 and 2007. I spent money without a thought for the future. I was putting something like 2% of my paycheck into retirement savings at the time, but I was much more interested in how I could use money to entertain myself on the island than setting myself up for success long term. I would go out on the weekend and buy drinks for the bar. One time I paid more than $300 to frame a $10 poster. It seemed like every other day or so I had a new package that I had ordered arriving. The money I actually needed to live on was less than half of my income, yet I was racking up credit card debt alarmingly fast. And that’s not even mentioning the fact that I split my time 50/50 between living on the island and living on a boat! Essentially, I didn’t know any better what I should be doing with my money. After spending 4 years in a military school where I didn’t really NEED money and now all of a sudden making this big paycheck every month, I definitely wasn’t setting myself up for success.
I met Tamar in San Diego in 2008. The Coast Guard moved me there and she was doing her Pharmacy residency at the Naval Hospital. We met two weeks before I deployed to Iraq. The connection was strong and immediate. I knew she was special and I knew I wanted to be with her. That bond strengthened as we communicated pretty much daily during my time in Iraq, and when I got back, I knew she was the one.
I knew I wanted to marry her one day. I wanted to provide for her and protect her. I had this overwhelming desire to make her happy. I knew that my debt, my money habits were holding me back from that. I knew I had to do something, to get rid of debt so that we could secure our futures together.
To be honest, I was ashamed of my debt. At this point I had about $30,000 in debt between credit cards, a car loan and personal loans. She actually had more debt than me, but hers were student loans and a car loan. I could look at her debt and see exactly what she exchanged it for. She was a pharmacist and had a reliable car. Me, on other hand, while I didn’t have quite as much debt as her, I had hardly anything at all to show for it. I couldn’t explain where all of my debt came from or how I benefited from spending that money that I didn’t have. It was embarrassing. I had met the woman that I wanted to spend the rest of my life with, and internally I was terrified that she’d learn the truth of my terrible money habits and never talk to me again.
I knew I had to get better, but I didn’t know where to start. I googled how to make a budget and how to pay off debt and was hit with information overload. I felt like giving up.
Then, one day, Tamar and I were talking about money and how overwhelmed I felt, and something amazing happened. We decided that we needed to hold each other accountable on this financial journey! That accountability piece was what had been missing.
Things got better after that, easier. But it still wasn’t smooth sailing. There were a lot of stops and starts, a lot of stumbles along the way. We’d have a bad month spending money and lose momentum, lose desire, but we eventually got to where we wanted to be. In June 2013 we made the last payment on Tamar’s student loans, making us officially debt free. I can’t describe that feeling. It was like a weight being lifted off of our shoulders. I honestly felt like a real adult for the first time, and by now I was 31 years old! It was so…freeing…knowing that we didn’t have to send our hard-earned money to a bank anymore. We got to take that money and pay ourselves, now.
We got debt-free cookies to celebrate. They were the best cookies I’ve ever tasted in my life. We actually didn’t get to eat all of them, they were pilfered by a houseguest, but that’s a funny story for another day.
So that’s our debt free journey. It wasn’t easy and there were a lot of hiccups along the way, but we got there.
Let’s fast forward a few more years. It’s early 2018, I’m out of the Coast Guard now and working in corporate America. I didn’t love it, but I didn’t hate it either. I honestly felt kinda lost after taking off the uniform, like I was missing a sense of purpose.
I remember finding an article that talked about what a financial coach was. I’d never heard the term financial coach before, and reading that article was eye-opening. Everything I read clicked. It just made sense to me. I got to the end of the article and ran to Tamar and told her, “I know what I want to be when I grow up!”
Tamar knows me pretty well. I do kinda have a tendency to get really excited about things and not quite see them through. So of course, she’s like uh huh, yeah, great dear. I knew this was different, though. The corporate job was fine, it provided for our family, but I KNEW that being a financial coach was what I was supposed to be doing.
I coached my first clients in January 2019. They were friends or friends of friends, and they were letting me coach them as a favor. It was clunky. My process was, frankly, terrible. But after each and every meeting, I felt energized. Excited. Ready to do more.
Tamar made the observation that I would come home from a full day of working in the office and be drained. Exhausted. Short of patience. Then that same day, I’d have a coaching session until 10pm, and afterwards I’d be bouncing off the walls. It was true, and it was yet another indicator that this is what I was supposed to be doing.
The joy I was feeling came from seeing the people I worked with transform their lives. Seeing them go from frustration and worry to confidence and swagger. Helping them see what was possible in their lives, and then helping them achieve it. It made me wish that I had known what financial coaching was a decade ago, because it would’ve eased so much of the money struggles and frustration we had early on.
Earlier this year I put in my notice and left my corporate job to be a coach full time. It was scary, it was exciting, and I’ve loved every minute of it since.
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