Sorcerers: Alejandra Pizarnik

Alejandra Pizarnik (1936–1972) was an Argentine poet, diarist, and linguistic sorceress whose haunting, fragmentary work continues to pulse with life decades after her death. Born to first generation immigrants in Buenos Aires, she struggled with depression, sexuality, and belonging from an early age. Her writing—urgent, confessional, and often devastating—was her way of surviving the silence. She wrote in notebooks, on napkins, in the margins of life. Her work wrestled with exile, desire, madness, and the sacred violence of language itself.Pizarnik didn’t want to be understood. She wanted to remain real. Her poems, many of them no longer than a breath, feel like x-rays of the soul—raw, radiant, and radioactive. She died by suicide at 36, but her words remain: glowing, untamed, and unforgettable. A poet. A witch. A ghost.For Further Reading:Extracting the Stone of Madness (New Directions)The Poetry FoundationWant to go beyond learning about creators, and become one yourself?This whole month we will be looking at poets in honor of National poetry month. Rainier will be teaching a masterclass: Dead Society Poets, on living poetically in a world gone mad. Consider joining The Creators—the membership that helps you unlock your potential, unblock your purpose, and ignite your passion. In this collective, Rainier and others share resources, offer monthly teachings, facilitate workshops, and inspire creativity in every area of life.Create your self alive.

Om Podcasten

Remember history class? Ever wonder about the ones they didn't talk about? The rule breakers? The rebels, the misfits, the poets, and the prophets who refused to follow the script? Enter *The Creators Podcast* ( https://www.thecreatorspodcast.live ) bringing you the untold stories of those who flipped the world upside down. These are the footnotes of the encyclopedia, written in a trail of blood—stories buried, burned, or ignored because they didn’t fit the mold. This is history like you’ve never heard it before. The voices they didn’t want you to know? You’ll know them now.