Evangeline Pascua is a Filipino-Canadian poet whose work explores the raw terrain of womanhood, generational trauma, love, abandonment, motherhood, and emotional resurrection. Her debut collection, All I Needed Was Flowers (2025), is a lyrical roadmap through the quiet suffering and loud awakenings of a woman who loved deeply and lost louder — a mosaic of heartbreak, spiritual unraveling, and self-worth reclaimed.
Her follow-up, Untapped Trauma, continues the journey but dives deeper into her psyche — weaving together poetic narratives of inner child wounds, mother-daughter estrangement, masculine betrayal, and ancestral cycles of silence. Unapologetically tender yet fierce, Evangeline’s writing blends prayer, poetry, and protest into a healing ritual for readers still learning to choose themselves.
Each line in her work is an act of survival — a quiet rebellion against being misunderstood, misused, or muted. Her poems don't beg to be heard — they echo in the mind long after the page is turned.
Currently, Evangeline is preparing her third body of work related to inner healing, divine femininity, spiritual awakening, and self-reflection. All while building a digital sanctuary through her website and Instagram/TikTok (@epoetries), where she shares spoken word, visual poetry, and reflections on healing.