"I worked briefly for two firms in Boston, was all but fired by the first and was sat down and fired by the second for not really belonging or having my head in the game," Levin says.
"He said, 'I've worked with you creative people before, and you cannot do your best work if you don't know how you're going to put food on the table or pay your rent,'" Levin recalls.
"The decision to teach would launch the next phase of Levin's writing career, where ghostwriting and entrepreneurship went hand in hand. That was more than 35 years and 1,000 books ago."
"I wrote down on a piece of paper what I was earning at the time from ghostwriting versus what I was earning from teaching and coaching."
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