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Introducing Overdraft: Deeply Personal Stories About Financial Struggle

Collage of illustrated portraits of merchants for Overdraft series

In 2010 I was $40,000 in debt. Some of it was student loans, but honestly, it was largely the bad kind. It’s not that I’m especially terrible at money. I wasn’t a compulsive shopper. Putting life on credit was a way to move forward while interest payments conspired to hold me back. (Nine years later, I’m debt free. Well, the bad kind, anyway.)

This vicious cycle is not an uncommon story, and it’s one all too familiar tosmall business ownersin the early days of their growth. However they ended up at their own financial rock bottom—deep debt or moving back in with their parents or taking care the needs of the business before their own—they all did it because they believed in something.In this series, I speak with people who know whatdesperatefeels like, people who survived the lowest point of their business. While now blooming with success, they share with me their deeply personal struggles and lessons learned on their way back to black.

An advertisement to read Overdraft: a series of stories about deeply personal stories of financial struggle.

You’ll meet:

  • Dana Donofree, a breast cancer survivor who started her business while paying costly medical bills;
  • Tina Gong, a tarot designer who spent her life savings on her first print run;
  • Oscar Muñoz, a resourceful founder who turned trash into a plan to save his family;
  • Reid Hemsing, who was delivered a blow when his business partner wanted out, leaving him on the hook for loans;
  • Taryn Rodighiero, who quadrupled her business debt after bringing on a partner;
  • Andmore foundersevery week.

Have a storyabout financial struggle you want to share ?Tell us more.

Illustration by Germán González

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