
The flag isn’t one thing.
It never was.
It hangs from porches with chipped paint
and from poles too tall to question.
It flaps soft at dusk in quiet towns
and snaps hard above buildings
that forgot the people beneath them.
Some flags whisper.
Some shout.
Some are folded with hands that tremble.
Some are waved by hands that never had to.
It has been stitched by women whose names were never recorded,
saluted by men sent home in boxes,
clutched by mothers who learned grief
before they learned answers.
The same cloth
has covered coffins
and covered lies.
It has been burned—not because it was hated,
but because it was promised something
it did not keep.
It has been raised in victory
and raised in warning.
Lowered in mourning.
Lifted in defiance.
Worn on jackets by people who mean love
and by people who mean threat.
The flag does not choose its hands.
We do.
It does not speak.
We speak through it.
For some, it means home.
For others, survival.
For others still, a door that never opened
no matter how politely they knocked.
You can love a country
and still demand better from it.
You can honor the dead
without obeying the living.
You can stand for the flag
and refuse to kneel to injustice—or
kneel because you stand for something deeper.
A flag is not truth.
It is a mirror.
And what it reflects
depends entirely
on who is brave enough
to look
without flinching.
I Am the Flag
I did not ask to be sacred.
I was cloth before I was symbol—
thread before I was doctrine,
color before I was command.
I remember the first hands.
Calloused. Rushed.
Sewing by lamplight, not prophecy.
No one told me I would be asked
to carry so much.
I have felt rain soak me into silence
and wind tear my edges honest.
I have been folded with reverence
and ripped with rage—
and I understood both.
Do not confuse me with permission.
Do not make me your shield
while you strike another.
I was never meant to cover cruelty
or excuse forgetting.
I have rested on chests
that no longer rise.
I have been pressed to mouths
that could not say goodbye.
I have absorbed tears
saltier than any ocean I’ve flown over.
When you raise me,
know this: I rise with your intention.
When you lower me,
I feel the weight of names you won’t say aloud.
I have watched children pledge to ideas
they had not yet survived.
I have watched elders bow their heads
because remembering hurt less than hoping.
I do not belong to volume.
I belong to conscience.
I do not need defending.
I need reckoning.
If you kneel, I do not feel disrespected.
If you stand, I do not feel honored.
Those are human postures.
I am only fabric, listening.
Ask yourself why you reach for me
when words fail.
Ask yourself what you want me to mean
when no one is watching.
Hold me if you must.
Burn me if you must.
Fold me carefully
or let me fray.
But do not lie
and say I spoke.
I have never spoken.
I have only reflected
who you were
when you lifted your hands
toward me.
Call & Response: With the Flag
ME:
I was taught to stand.
To still my questions.
To call it respect.
FLAG:
Stand if you must.
But don’t still your conscience for me.
ME:
They told me you meant freedom.
FLAG:
I meant possibility.
You decided who qualified.
ME:
I’ve seen you raised in pride
and lowered in grief.
FLAG:
Both are true.
Neither absolves you.
ME:
People argue over you like ownership.
FLAG:
I am not land.
I am not permission.
I am not a weapon.
ME:
Some kneel.
Some shout.
Some turn away.
FLAG:
Posture is noise.
Listening is the work.
ME:
What about the dead?
FLAG:
Say their names.
Care for the living.
Do not confuse ceremony with devotion.
ME:
What about those you never protected?
FLAG:
Do not look at me.
Look at them.
Then stay.
ME:
If I love you, what do you ask of me?
FLAG:
Nothing.
Love is not owed to cloth.
Justice is owed to people.
ME:
If I carry you, what should I remember?
FLAG:
That I rise with your intention
and fall with your courage.
ME:
Then what are you, really?
FLAG:
A mirror.
Held at arm’s length.
Waiting for honesty.
Closing Vow
I vow to honor no symbol
at the expense of a human life,
to let conscience outrank ceremony,
and to stay present where justice asks me to remain.
— Flower InBloom 🌿
About the Creator
Flower InBloom
I write from lived truth, where healing meets awareness and spirituality stays grounded in real life. These words are an offering, not instruction — a mirror for those returning to themselves.
— Flower InBloom


Comments (2)
COOL
WELL DONE. HUGS