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The Poetry of Resilience

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Ross Powers reads “Becalmed” from his “Caregiver Confidential: A Memoir of Poems,” in Sacramento on October 29, 2024. (Gina Castro/KQED)

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In Rising Voices of  El Cerrito’s Young Poets, a Message About Resilience

As our series about Californians and resilience continues, we hear from El Cerrito’s poet laureate, Tess Taylor, and students at Harding Elementary School. They wrote about what resilience means to them for a recently published anthology called “Gardening in the Public Flowerfest.”

For One Vietnamese Family, This Soup Offers Comfort on the Fall of Saigon Anniversary

Last month marked the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War. Hong Pham was only 6 years old when his family was separated as they fled Vietnam. When they were reunited in a refugee camp in Thailand, they celebrated with a special dish. For our series on resilience, KQED’s Daisy Nguyen visited Pham at his home in South Pasadena where he shared memories of his family’s journey, and the recipe for the dish that gave them hope.

How Poetry Helps Dementia Caregivers Find Shelter from the Storm

Frances Kakugawa is a firm believer that the act of caring for another human being can inspire poetry. She knows this from experience, having cared for her mother, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in the 1990s. She says poetry was a way to take control of her mom’s disease and transform the challenging and sometimes lonely experience of caregiving into something positive. For some 20 years, she’s been helping other caregivers in Sacramento to find resilience through poetry. Reporter Holly J. McDede brings us this story. 

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