WellBeing

A beacon of hope

“Looking back, I don’t feel like a victim at all.”

As an opening line for the story of awardwinning restaurateur, filmmaker, boat person, writer and abuse survivor Pauline Nguyen, there couldn’t be any better. Once you start to understand the challenges she has overcome, and the enormous success she has managed to create, you’ll understand why. Nguyen doesn’t do victim. Instead, she takes some of the most confronting parts of the human experience, turns them into opportunities and then takes it on the road to help others do the same.

As the co-owner of the most awarded Vietnamese restaurant in the world (which she runs with her brother Luke and husband, chef Mark Jensen), Nguyen has proved that grit and determination can turn any start in life around. As one part of Sydney restaurant Red Lantern, she has won numerous business awards.

It was the release, however, of her very personal family memoir Secrets of the Red more than 10 years ago — documenting not only some of the family recipes that had made Red Lantern the roaring success it is, but also the abuse and tragedy of her family’s escape and early years in North Sydney — that marked her as a speaker and inspirational leader. She is a woman determined to share her message.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from WellBeing

WellBeing8 min readCrime & Violence
Breaking Out Of Prison The Search For Humane Pathways
Many informed observers consider jail a blunt instrument that doesn’t work particularly well for most prisoners, while also a necessary evil for managing crime. In their view, spending more money on keeping more people locked up is not a solution. On
WellBeing1 min read
The Maths Of Octopuses
Don’t get caught up on it, both octopuses and octopi are acceptable plurals of octopus, we are just using octopuses here because it is more grammatically manageable. Think of octopuses and the first thing you think of will be their eight legs, as the
WellBeing3 min read
Holistic Approaches To Your Health Through Natural Medicine
A common way to approaching health and wellbeing is focusing on a health concern after the symptoms have appeared, rather than looking at your being holistically. This is the key principle to natural medicine — looking at the person as a whole, not a

Related Books & Audiobooks