Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Lauren Jauregui.
Last updated on April 15, 2025.
Lauren Michelle Jauregui Morgado is an American singer and songwriter. She rose to prominence as a member of the girl group Fifth Harmony, which became one of the best-selling girl groups of all time. Jauregui began experimenting with different sounds and exploring solo songwriting, collaborating on songs with Marian Hill, Steve Aoki and Halsey. She began working on solo music in May 2018 and released her debut solo song "Expectations" in October 2018 under Columbia Records. In January 2019, she released the song "More Than That". Jauregui contributed "Invisible Chains" to the soundtrack of the film Birds of Prey (2020), and released the Tainy-produced Latin urban song "Lento" in March 2020. In April 2020, she released the song "50ft". Jauregui's debut solo EP, Prelude, was released on November 5, 2021.
That messed me up, growing up in the public eye when I was a teenager. That's when everyone is trying to find themselves.
It's truly disheartening to me to see so many beautiful women who have no idea what their potential is.
I'm proud of myself, and I'm going to continue to grow.
When you really break it down to the way the world works, we're all little humans floating on a gas ball in the middle of space. That's the reality of our situation. And we've created these concepts and constructs that move us away from that.
A bunch of my fans have come up to me and said, 'Because of you, and because you came out, I have finally begun to accept myself.' That is infinitely incredible for me. I didn't expect to get to the point where I would own up to it within myself.
Read your contracts. Up and down, left and right.
I feel like, especially being around other girls, it's really easy to start picking yourself apart and being like, 'Wow, she looks better than me.'
If you love women, and you want to sing about love, don't feel the need to say 'he.' Don't feel the need to adapt to the society or the culture.
I'm either dressing like a rocker chick, or I'm looking like I just stepped out of ancient Greece! It all depends on my mood. I love bohemian vibes, too.
I like to dress in edgy black leather and denim, but I like a wide range of things.
I love every time that I get to be on a stage with Halsey. She's so incredible.
I'm marching for women; I'm marching for the LGBT community. I'm marching for immigrants. I happen to fall into all three categories, so I'm marching for myself at the end of the day and for my family and my friends. And for whoever else deserves it.
Two powerful women making art together is always really cool.
I gave my life to this without knowing what I was doing. I was very little when I started in 5H: I was 16.
When we auditioned for 'The X Factor,' we were five individuals going into the show. That obviously means we are five solo artists in our beings, so we have our own creative ideas, of what sounds the best music-wise, because we are all artists.
Even the fact that I labelled myself makes me mad sometimes, because dude, I'm just a free spirit.
We know how hard we've worked, we know how our choreography makes us feel empowered. We have our voices, which are incredible and kind of surpass anything else.
I do feel like the blogs that I follow share an aesthetic and draw a lot from '90s influences.
I am proud to be a woman.
It's amazing the support we've been able to get from Latinos and just in general from everyone.
I want to give the girls who admire us everything I can. I don't want to just fill them with selfies and crap. That's not what I'm about. I'm about, 'Be aware of the world and that you're not the only one in it.'
I feel like our fans identify with us because they're like, 'I'm her,' or 'I don't look like any of them, but I'm different like them.'
Don't lose your love for yourself and how much you've grown and how far you've come.
I'm everywhere; I'm just a soul that's floating around here on earth.
I am a bisexual Cuban-American woman, and I am so proud of it.
For me, honesty is a huge thing, and loyalty, when it comes to relationships.
There's this notion that artists are supposed to be dumb and frivolous. I completely disagree with that.
My grandparents and my mom came from Cuba back in the '60s because they were fleeing from communism and Castro. I wouldn't be here otherwise.
Some of our songs are empowering, but I feel like more so than our music, it's who we are. We're four women who are completely different ethnicities, completely different body types, completely different walks of life and opinions.
I was raised to feel that I can do anything, and I will always believe that.
If you connect with an artist because of what they make as a body of work, you feel like they're your friend. You feel like you're on the journey of connection with them because they see the world the same way you do. That's so powerful, and if you use that, you can genuinely change minds.
If I could tell every Trump supporter two things, it would be to travel and read a history book. Look beyond yourselves; look at how petty the morals you uphold seem when you realize we are not the only ones.
For me, coming into my own and being comfortable with myself really changed me as a person and made me more confident and vibrant.
They sell you this present of rainbows and butterflies, and as a 16-year-old, that's what I bought. It's why I did 'X Factor' and why I ended up in a group. But then you're working so hard, so young.
We're learning the business, meeting people we need to know, getting knowledgeable about our craft.
Amandla Stenberg is so powerful in her energy and what she speaks about and what she projects. I think it's incredible.
We should care about each other.
We had so many of our fans tell us how worthless they felt before they found out about us and watched our interviews and listened to our music.
I just don't feel limited by genre.
I would say that regardless of how the brand has been created, we are four hard-working women who have succeeded in making our dream to become artists a more possible reality through this.
Doing something that is your passion, in my case related to music and art, being a performer playing shows around the world, that is a dream come true.
I think pop culture has always influenced society.
I feel like art has been at the center of change since the beginning of time.
We definitely work hard, and we want to keep our fans engaged... we want to give them new music.
It's hard to accept yourself when you live in a world where nobody is like you, or you feel like nobody is like you because there's no representation.
I am proud to be the granddaughter and daughter of immigrants who were brave enough to leave their homes and come to a whole new world with a different language and culture and immerse themselves fearlessly to start a better life for themselves and their families.
We have an energy about us that's so unique and so intense, and it's because of how much power we have in us as individuals, being confident, harnessing that power, and wanting to share that with other women.
It's good to be an anarchist and just love yourself.
Every time somebody asks me, 'Oh, when you mix your own music, what are you going to make?' And I don't know.
I am proud to be part of a community that only projects love and education and the support of one another.
I really, genuinely don't look at my schedule too often, because when I do, I get a little overwhelmed by how much is going on.
We want to just make music that impacts people - we don't really care about the rest.
I went to a high school that taught me to be more worldly. The whole curriculum was very globally based. We learned a lot about other cultures and reflected on them.
I've always had this sense of justice - I get that from my mom, for sure. When you see stuff that's wrong, it's just wrong, man. You gotta point that out.
As an artist, I don't care about where we are in the charts and all that. The important thing to me is to connect with a creative project.
You can't use the fact that I'm bisexual against me if that's something I'm proud of.
I needed our fans to know they're loved and accepted, and fear isn't the way to go.
I think that until we're 21, human beings don't get to know themselves very much.
We're not all thin model types, and we're not all perfectly colored. It mind-boggles me that somebody would take time out of their life to make someone feel inferior because of something like that. That, to me, is insane.
We all allow each other to explore our individual things that make us happy, and so we're just being supportive of each other and making sure we focus on Fifth Harmony, and what's important to the group is important to all five of us.