![]() |
Get Your FILL, Financial Independence and Long LifeAuthor: Christine Mccarron
One day I woke up and I was 50 years old. I don't know how it happened but it was pretty depressing. Especially since I had virtually no money saved for retirement and no clue what I wanted to be when I grew up. Now, I'm on a mission to create financial independence, financial FREEdom and - since I'm too old to retire early - a long, happy, healthy life! With the help of fascinating guests who are expert investors, holistic health practitioners, coaches and speakers, we tackle the tough questions like: Why? and How? Join me on this ride for your life! Language: en-us Genres: Business, Entrepreneurship Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
Listen Now...
Reclaiming Life from Corporate Stress with Kirk Welsh
Episode 32
Wednesday, 6 May, 2026
In this episode of Get Your Fill: Financial Independenceand Long Life, host Christine McCarron sits down with Kirk Welsh, a former licensed architect who turned a mid-career crisis into a thriving entrepreneurial journey. Kirk is now the CEO of Housewarming, a specialized flooring company, but his path from a $40 million corporate project to business ownership is a masterclass in internal alignment and habitstacking.🏗️ The Breaking Point: From Architecture to OwnershipKirk spent over a decade in the high-stakes world ofarchitecture. Despite the prestige, he found himself "misaligned." The wake-up call came during a grueling four-hour meeting on his son’s first birthday—a meeting about details that could have been handled in a 15-minute email."I’ve dedicated a decade and a half to this profession,working on projects I would never own myself. I had nothing to leave my son."This realization sparked his career pivot. He didn’tjust quit; he began a mental and physical "exit strategy" byreclaiming his time, starting with a 5:00 AM gym routine to prove he could commit to himself before committing to a corporation.🏚️ The "Horror Story" That Made the ManEvery entrepreneur faces a "test from the universe." For Kirk, it was a real estate investment project in Detroit that nearly broke him. He gave $104,000 to a contractor who subsequently disappeared.Instead of retreating to the security of a 9-to-5, Kirk used this failure to learn about:Progress payments: Never paying too much upfront.Proper contracts: Ensuring legal protection is in place.Systems and oversight: Moving from "trust" to "verification."🪵 Why Flooring? (The Strategy of Vertical Integration)Kirk’s choice of the flooring industry wasn't just aboutaesthetics; it was a savvy business move. As a real estate investor, he noticed that the "punch list" (the final stage of renovation) was always the most stressful. By owning a flooring company, he could:Design as an architect.Own equity as an investor.Control the finish as the contractor.This vertical integration ensures high-quality results and professional standards in an industry often plagued by a lack of integrity.🔑 Key Takeaways for Career ChangersInternal Alignment: Your intuition often knows you're in the wrong place long before your bank account does.Establish Boundaries: Both Kirk and Christine emphasize that "you teach people how to treat you." Whether in corporate life or real estate, setting boundaries is essential for survival.Systems Over Luck: Success in entrepreneurship isn't about working harder; it's about having the right systems and processes to hold people accountable.🏷️ Frequently Searched Terms in this Episode:Financial Independence, Real Estate Investing,Career Pivot, Architect to Entrepreneur, Detroit Real Estate,Contractor Horror Stories, Vertical Integration, BusinessSystems, Work-Life Boundaries, and Flooring Trends.Kirk’s journey serves as a reminder that while the leapinto the unknown is terrifying, the risk of staying in a misaligned life is much higher.Connect with Kirk: https://meethousewarming.com












