I don't like labels. I don't understand the need for them. When you define yourself a certain way, people have expectations.
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I'll always be Chinese first. It probably isn't politically correct to say or something that the majority understands; I can change my shoes, I can swap my passport, but, I'll always have this face.
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For me, juicing isn't about binging and cleansing; I try to incorporate it into a balanced diet.
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I wasn't meant to be an attorney, but I was meant to go to law school.
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I like a walking culture; I need to be in a city where you can walk everywhere.
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I wanted to inspire people not to work under a bamboo ceiling. Whatever you are - yellow, black, white, brown - you don't have to allow your skin to define who you are or how you operate your business. There's not one face to anything.
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I saw an opportunity to use a restaurant to identify a lot of my issues and concerns with being an immigrant in America, and Asian in America, and a young person in America.
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I'm so sick of people misunderstanding Asians in America and what we're about.
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I choose to be American, I choose to live in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, I choose to have Puerto Rican/Jewish neighbors, and I choose to maintain my Chinese identity.