Your Creativity Comes from Your Limitation
I grew up in a middle income household. My parents worked hard and saved whatever money they have for my education. We seldom eat out. Despite the limited disposable income, my mother knows how to stretch the food budget. Her cooking is simply amazing.
Our creativity comes from our limitation. Unless you came from a very rich family, most of us have limited resources to do what we want to do. The limited resource is not a restriction but an enabler for you to get creative. It forces us to think outside of the box.
The Wright Brothers who achieved first flight are bicycle mechanics, with no formal engineering training, no university degrees, and no significant personal wealth. Their achievement had beaten another person called Samuel Langley who also tried to achieved first flight. He was the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. He received a $50,000 grant (equivalent to over $1.5 million today) from the US War Department and another $20,000 from the Smithsonian. He had a team of engineers and craftsmen to work on the project. Logically speaking, Mr Langley should have achieved first flight, while the Wright Brother should have never taken off.
If you are struggling because lack of funds or resources, see this as advantage that allows you to be creative. The pain of limitation of real. Instead of crying over it, let it be your strength.