I spent that week thinking about what I wanted to do with my power and my money. I'd learned that revenge wasn't satisfying, that accumulating wealth for its own sake was empty, that real power came from helping others build their own success. That's when I decided to start the Morgan Foundation. It was going to focus on helping people like I had been helped: people with no family, no support, no way out of the cycle of poverty. I told my father about the idea, and instead of just giving me money to start it, he challenged me. "If you want to do this right, you need to understand the problem from the ground up," James said. "You need to spend time with homeless people, understand their struggles, learn what they actually need instead of what you think they need." He was right. I'd been

