Why poet Canisia Lubrin embraces chaos

In her debut poetry collection, Voodoo Hypothesis, Canisia Lubrin sets her focus on colonialism, racial oppression and subverting false perceptions of Black identity. The book is informed partly by her experience growing up in the Caribbean and living away from home.
In the CBC Books Magic 8 Q&A, Lubrin answers eight questions submitted by eight fellow writers.
1. Lawrence Hill asks, "What do you do to steady your mind (if your mind is capable of being steadied), so that you can shut out the world and write?"
The world coming in tends to catalyse my writing. I learned a long time ago to appreciate chaos for its potential to generously estrange, to open me up to further learning. And while this is something that sustains my writing, I suppose my mind is steadied by the very act of writing itself. Writing is always an opportunity to focus my attention toward the particular, toward what I hope is impending discovery.
2. André Alexis asks, "Are you conscious of the rhythm that paragraphs have, their length, when you're writing? Or is that something you work on as a form of sculpture afterwards?"
Both. I love the musicality of language. I find that the rhythm of the paragraph is tied to the emotive arc of the thing I'm trying to write. I'm oriented toward the musical quality of things because this tends to shape, quite positively, my sense of pace.
3. Jocelyn Parr asks, "Do you think that your politics inform your writing? If so, how? If not, what does it mean to you to think of your politics as separate from your writing life?"