04/26/2026
Most people don’t really see what goes on behind the scenes.
Running a businesses while raising a baby at home is hard. It’s a constant balancing act. My wife is a special education teacher at the middle school in Savannah — she has her own goals and aspirations outside of her job that she wants to achieve too.
Our days don’t end when the job is done.
An 8-hour workday (most days are 10 hours) turns into another 5–6 hours of family responsibilities, then back to business once the baby is asleep.
We average 4.5 - 5 hours of sleep a day because we want to do things right, and we want to spend time with each other and the baby. I want to build online presence and relationships with my clients. She wants to build a business plan for her own aspiration. It’s tough.
No sick days. No time off. No fallback plan.
Everything we’ve built has come from our own hands. The shop? I did all of the electrical, plumbing, wood work, painting, and everything else that you may see inside it.
We’re not a corporation.
We don’t live some over-the-top lifestyle.
When you choose to work with us, you’re supporting:
• A small family that is many hours away from our relatives.
• A household built on discipline and sacrifice
• Two people committed to doing things the right way, every time.
• A business who pays their employees well. I want them to be able to afford to live in this world too and to be able to have some to spend on their own hobbies.
So when we hear “you’re too expensive” or “why not earlier hours” or “why the delay in response” just understand, we’re operating at full capacity every single day to maintain the level of quality we’re known for.
From the outside, it may look like we’re everywhere and we are. Because that’s what it takes.
It’s not easy. But we don’t quit.
If you’ve supported us, we genuinely appreciate it.
If you’re considering working with us, just know exactly who you’re backing when you do.
You’re not funding a corporation.
You’re supporting a family who supports the community around them.
You’re supporting a small town local business. The American Dream.
“Thank you for your attention to this matter”