Lauren Junge: Where Passion Meets Perseverance By Leah J. Zelaya
Some paths are chosen. Others are carved from the challenges life places in our way. And every so often, those challenges become the very reason someone rises higher — not in spite of them, but because of them. Lauren Junge, a nineteen-year-old from Houston, Texas, is a neuroscience student at the University of Rhode Island and the founder of the NORD Students for Rare club on her campus. She lives with Type 1 Diabetes and Lambert Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome (LEMS), a rare neuromuscular disease. Her academic focus is as precise as it is personal: she is majoring in medicinal neuroscience and minoring in cellular and molecular biology, determined to one day become a doctor working with children who have neuromuscular conditions. “I was interested in pharmacology as well as neuroscience, so I ended up finding medicinal neuroscience — a combination of both studies,” she explains. “My ultimate goal is to go to medical school and work with children with neuromuscular diseases. Medication is ...