Welcome to BNut Keyon,
you are the second person today that I have messaged from Tifton, GA, there is another Tifton resident on BNut,
@JesusFreak
He is pretty new too to the hobby, but you two might be able to help each other out sourcing supplies, potting media and such.
Fukien tea - also known as
Carmona retusa and
Ehretia microphylla - I have been doing bonsai for 40+years, and I have never kept one going more than 2 years. They are touchy, they dislike getting bone dry, and they dislike staying too wet for too long. Don't worry about winter dormancy, all you need to do is leave it outside until nights drop into the low 40's F or upper 30's F. The few weeks in autumn that it is cool will be enough of a rest. When you bring it inside, if it goes on a windowsill, the cool air from the glass will keep it colder than the room interior. You won't have to worry about it. If you find the "right spots" to grow it winter and summer, it becomes easy to keep happy.
Oh, and don't be bothered by people who disparage the "dreaded 'S' curve trunk". They talk that way because this style is very common for mass production trees, particularly elms, Fukien Tea, and Ficus. So those who are around a while tend to "dog" that style. But to you, the 'S' shaped trunk is new, you've never had one. So enjoy it and blow off anyone who dogs the style or tells you that you "need to change". You don't need to change it.
Right now, for the next couple months, let it grow out and get bushy. Then trim it back. For clip and grow, you usually cut back to just a couple leaves per branch. Key to vigor is letting grow out, then cutting back. If you trim continuously, it tends to slowly loose vigor. Best is an all over pruning, every 8 to 16 weeks, letting it grow un-molested in between.
Hope this helps.
Leo