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Byline: Lauren Aung

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Bowl Theory

A writer teaches the Nass how to let go, to hold on, and to be held.

by Lauren Aung on September 25, 2022September 25, 2022

Ruminations on a Homeland

On leaving home (and finding it).

by Lauren Aung on July 28, 2020July 28, 2020

Lessons on Greatness: Reflections On “A Conversation With Patti Smith”

“For Smith, poet and painter William Blake exemplified this approach to life. She remarked: ‘Despite the fact he had no proof from the world he was worth anything—he would have gotten 4 likes [on Instagram]—he did his work.’”

by Lauren Aung on October 12, 2023October 14, 2023

The Opposite of Hunger is Still Hunger

“But you put me here in America— in rich, white, suburban America, where the people are bland and the food even more so. You put me here in this diner, and I hate you for it.”

by Lauren Aung on April 4, 2021April 4, 2021

Love Lessons

Wherein a Nass writer contemplates the influence of Disney on her burgeoning worldview.

by Lauren Aung on March 7, 2021March 7, 2021

Life Lessons from Mahler and Fungi

Two Nass writers reflect on the nature of beauty through myriad lenses.

by Lauren Aung, Sam Bisno on April 4, 2021April 4, 2021

Beauty-Sick

“Looking back, I feel the peculiar embarrassment of having been a teenage girl with teenage girl concerns, but the lives and concerns of teenage girls are often dismissed as trivial things, and if I could tell myself at 13 what I know now, I would.”

by Lauren Aung on November 1, 2020November 1, 2020

Freshman Year From My Childhood Bedroom

“Applying to colleges, I held one core condition: there was no way I was staying in this town.”

by Lauren Aung on November 8, 2020November 8, 2020

A Sprained Ankle and Two Princeton Plagues

A rumination on campus culture and personal pain.

by Lauren Aung on October 10, 2021October 9, 2021

White Doll, Asian Woman

“But was my femininity forced on me, the only feasible result of a life grown around dolls and children’s books?”

by Lauren Aung on November 20, 2021


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