Lots of charts and jibber-jabber. Looks like you have a chunk of federal loans and are a recent graduate. Just go on a PAYE (or if you're not eligible, REPAYE) plan and pay off the minimum on your loans. Based on your situation, you would probably pay $0-$100 monthly for eligible loans and then capitalization of interest is limited to 10% of original loan amount. After 20 years of PAYE, you will have the loans discharged and, if things haven't changed by then, pay tax on the "forgiven amount" as income. Take a look here:
http://askheatherjarvis.com/ Don't be in a rush to pay off student loans. They are essentially free money now. You would be in a far better position having those $60k in loans plus $60k in cash versus $0 in loans and $0 in cash.
Student loans are discharged in event of death, so no reason to have life insurance based on that FYI, with the exception perhaps of some of the weirder loans that you have. I would not have shared your tax situation with your boss. Now they know that you *need* this job and may work you harder rather than hiring more people. I know I would, especially if you are salaried.
Going to be honest, at 26 with what, 3 years of "cashier experience" at Lowe's (you don't need an accounting degree for this BTW), you are not competitive for a Big 4 style position. Big 4 is for "accounting bros" who think it is "cool" to be living in the big city/suitted down while only making $10k-$20k more than the average accounting position (but at a terrible hourly rate since they are there 60-80+ hours weekly). Actually, just avoid "public" accounting entirely. It looks like you took this position to stay exposed to that area. They probably said something along the lines of "unlike a Big 4, you get exposure to all functional areas of accounting here." Screw that. With your background, get into a federal/state/local government "accounting" job, work less, make more on an hourly or even annual basis, and then have loan forgiveness (without tax penalty) after 10 years. The Big 4 ship has sailed for you, as that is for 21 year olds that they can "trick" into thinking Big 4 is all that.
Accounting is beyond flooded for everyone's information. There are so many schools with accounting associates, bachelors, masters, etc. and plenty of people just like OP who have the degree but are working in positions where they don't need it (think store manager, office worker, etc.). If you want to be a CPA, you need an accounting degree, otherwise it is just sort of "there." Yes, it's the better business degree you can get, but it's still not the "golden ticket" professors make it out to be.
TL; DR: OP enjoy life, go on PAYE/REPAYE, don't make all these charts and crap and tracking about this stuff