Divorce Financial Planning: She Found $42,400 Of Hidden Debt And Cleared $11,400 In Six Months

“All right then.” Marlene Schaefer said it out loud to her empty kitchen at 9:14 p.m. on a Sunday. The divorce attorney had handed her a 14-page financial inventory that morning. Page 9 listed seven credit cards she had never seen a statement for. Joint cards. Her name on every one. Combined balance: forty-two thousand four hundred dollars. She opened the divorce financial planning Bundle, ran the Financial Health Radar, and started listing every card her ex-husband Glen had hidden under the breakfast bar.
She did not need a pep talk. She needed to know which problem to fix first, and a number she could trust. Six months later: $11,400 of that debt was gone and she had $4,000 in the bank. Here is the order she worked in.
Marlene is 52. She has owned Schaefer Floral in downtown Boise since 2007. Her ex-husband Glen ran the books for the shop and the family for 26 years. While she arranged wedding bouquets, he used their joint credit to fund a friend’s startup that died in 2023. He never told her. She did not know any of it existed until the attorney’s page 9.
Before and after: what 6 months of divorce financial planning looks like
September.
Page 9.
Seven cards.
- ✗ $42,400 hidden CC debt (7 cards)
- ✗ $0 emergency fund
- ✗ Years of missed business deductions
- ✗ Mortgage on one income
- ✗ No retirement in her own name
March.
A real plan.
Her own numbers.
- ✓ $11,400 of CC debt cleared
- ✓ $4,000 emergency fund banked
- ✓ $3,200 in missed deductions found
- ✓ Cards ordered by rate, not panic
- ✓ Roth IRA opening month 7
The Bundle did not promise a transformation. It gave her five tools and a Radar that named the order. The Radar showed debt was the fire. The Debt Planner listed every card and ranked them by rate. The Budget Builder banked a buffer first and cut the cash-flow leaks. The Tax Finder caught the business deductions she had been missing for years.

The 5 AI tools – and the Radar that picks your order
Five tools in one buy. You do not run all five – the Radar names your weakest area, and you start there. Marlene leaned on three.
The Financial Health Radar rates all five areas and tells you which tool to run first.
The surprise tool was the Tax Finder. As a self-employed florist, Marlene had been missing business deductions for years – home studio space, vehicle mileage, supplies, a chunk of her phone bill. It flagged roughly $3,200 she had never claimed. That, plus the interest she stopped paying once the high-rate cards were gone, is what put real money back in the shop.
The 6-month progress – month by month
$11,400 cleared. $4,000 banked. $3,200 in tax money found. Six months.
The hardest part was not the spreadsheet. It was pulling the seven cards out from under the breakfast bar and reading the numbers aloud to nobody. After that, the math was just the math. The Debt Planner ordered the cards by rate. I followed the order. By month six the highest two were gone.
The shop sits on Capitol Boulevard, between a coffee roaster and a stationery store. Most customers do not know Marlene was the artist while Glen ran the books. The wreckage was always behind a door. The Bundle just made her open it, count what was there, and write the order down on a piece of cream paper.
Bundle vs the alternatives
The free YouTube path is not bad. It just assumes you already know which questions to ask. The Bundle asks them for you, in the order that surfaces hidden joint cards first.
How two other readers ran the same 5 tools
Naomi K.
ICU nurse · Cleveland OH · mom of two teens
“My ex left me with $28K of joint medical debt. The Debt Planner found two cards I had never seen. The Budget Builder saved me – banking $1,000 first stopped me from panic-paying instead of plan-paying. Nine months: $0 CC, $6,000 emergency fund. I worked the same 12-hour shifts the whole time.”
Tomás V.
laid-off contractor · Phoenix AZ · dad of one
“Layoff in February, $19K of CC debt by June. The Debt Planner ordered the cards by rate. My gut wanted the smallest one first. The math wanted the 28.49% card first. Math won – saved roughly $1,800 in interest vs my old plan. Month 7: $0 CC.”
Run the same five money tools – find hidden debt, clear it in the right order, and keep more at tax time.
