“It's like all of the pressures of everything happening build up inside you, and if you don't write it down or put it somewhere— I just couldn't even handle it. I had no other coping mechanisms left. I came to poetry when I was younger as a coping mechanism, and I think I still do sometimes.
Some poets like to pretend that it's a totally intellectual practice and that there's no therapeutic benefit for them. But for me, it did start out as a therapeutic practice, and I think I still turn to it in that way. In some ways, the pandemic helped me access that primal relationship I have with poetry where I went back to the original reason I go to poems.
It's because I needed a place where I could tell the truth. I needed a place where I could process the most impossible things.”~ Eugenia Leigh
In this episode, Kaitlin speaks with Eugenia Leigh. Eugenia is a Korean-American poet and the author of two poetry collections, Bianca from Four-Way Books released this year in March, and Blood, Sparrows, and Sparrows from Four-Way Books in 2014.
Eugenia’s poetry received Poetry Magazine's Bess Hokin Prize and has appeared in numerous publications including The Atlantic, The Nation, Poetry, Ploughshares, and the Best of the Net anthology.
Eugenia and Kaitlin talked about:
More about Eugenia Leigh:
Website: https://www.eugenialeigh.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eugenialeigh/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/eugenialeigh
Linktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/eugenialeigh
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