The Atlantic

The Good Luck of a Hard Life

How growing up with a pair of dice in one hand and a pistol in the other prepared Rich Paul for success
Source: Chris Szagola / AP

One of my all-time-favorite Jay-Z songs is a deep cut called “Lucky Me.” Jay is talking about how success brings envy, jealousy, and danger, how people think his life is perfect, but he’s dealing with more than they could ever know. It’s a powerful, mournful, and somewhat sarcastic song, with a hook that goes: “You only know what you see / You don’t understand what it takes to be me.”

That’s exactly how I feel about my life. Some people say I’m lucky, and in one sense they’re right. At 22, I had a random encounter with a teenager named LeBron James that led me to become one of the most powerful agents in American sports. Bad luck can seem good for a while, like money that comes too fast; good luck might be hard to understand. My luck often arrived in disguise, in the form, for example, of an absent mother who in the end needed my forgiveness and understanding.

[Read: Against all odds, LeBron James is still getting better]

People who call me lucky don’t realize what kind of assembly line I was built on. I spent the early years of my life in

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