
Companion Preface
This work appears in four movements, not as revisions of one another, but as different ways of standing on the same ground.
The first speaks with grit.
The second listens for what still opens.
The third braids what was once held apart.
The fourth offers a vow—small, human, unfinished.
Together, they trace a walk rather than an argument.
What changes between them is not the land,
but the stance of the one walking it.
You may enter at any point.
You may linger where something recognizes you.
Nothing here asks for agreement—
only presence.
— Flower InBloom
This Land
I was walking
without a map,
just the sound of my own breath
and the long memory of footsteps
pressed into the dirt before me.
There were fences—
not always visible,
but I felt them
when my chest tightened,
when a voice said this isn’t for you,
when a line was drawn
with words instead of wire.
The land didn’t say that.
The river didn’t say that.
The dust didn’t check my name
before clinging to my shoes.
I crossed valleys where hands had labored
and mountains that watched
generations come and go
without keeping score.
The sky didn’t belong to anyone—
it simply opened
and let us breathe.
I saw signs that said No Trespassing
and others that said Welcome Home,
sometimes nailed to the same post,
depending on who was reading them.
But beneath the signs
the earth kept doing
what it has always done—
holding seeds,
breaking open,
feeding whoever showed up hungry.
This land carries songs
older than ownership,
stories spoken in many tongues,
some stolen,
some silenced,
some still humming under the noise.
It remembers bare feet.
It remembers chains.
It remembers hands reaching not to take
but to plant,
to build,
to bury,
to pray.
I learned this land isn’t mine
the way a thing is owned,
and it isn’t yours
the way a prize is claimed.
It’s ours
the way breath is shared,
the way grief travels through families,
the way hope keeps resurfacing
even when buried too deep.
This land is your land
when you tend it.
This land is my land
when I protect it.
This land is our land
when we stop pretending
it was ever meant to be divided
from itself.
And as long as the ground keeps opening
and the sky keeps listening,
there is room here—
for your story,
for mine,
for the ones still walking
toward home.
This Land (Rough Cut)
I walked into a country
that taught me how to sing
before it taught me how to listen.
They said this land is yours
but handed me a rulebook,
a fence line,
a price tag,
and a warning label.
I saw borders drawn like scars—
fresh enough to bleed,
old enough to be called history.
The land didn’t ask for papers.
The river didn’t recognize law.
The soil never voted
for who gets to eat.
I passed signs that said No Trespassing
on land stolen so long ago
the theft learned how to smile.
There were men with deeds
and women with empty hands,
children learning early
what side of the line they were born on.
This land remembers screams
buried under sidewalks,
prayers pressed into cotton fields,
names erased
so comfort could stay clean.
Don’t tell me this land is free
when freedom comes with conditions,
when hunger is criminalized,
when survival is called trespassing.
Still—
the earth keeps opening.
Still—
the rain keeps falling
on the righteous and the ruthless alike.
So if this land is yours,
prove it by protecting it.
If this land is mine,
I’ll stand between it and the fire.
And if this land is ours,
then we’ve got work to do—
because the ground knows the truth
even when we refuse to say it out loud.
This Land (Gentler Cut)
I walked this land slowly,
as if listening might change something.
The wind didn’t ask who I was.
The path didn’t need permission.
The horizon opened
without checking my worth.
I’ve seen fences rise
where stories once crossed freely,
and signs try to speak louder
than the earth beneath them.
But the land keeps offering itself—
fields growing despite neglect,
rivers carrying names
we forgot how to say.
This land holds many hands at once,
even when we don’t.
It remembers footsteps layered over time,
each one believing they were first,
each one learning they were not.
This land is your land
when you walk it with care.
This land is my land
when I listen before I claim.
This land is our land
when we let belonging mean responsibility,
not possession—
when we choose to stay
and tend
and share the ground beneath us.
And maybe that’s how home begins—
not with ownership,
but with gratitude
and the quiet promise
to leave room for those still coming.
This Land (Braided)
I walked into a country
that taught me how to sing
before it taught me how to listen.
They said this land is yours
and handed me a map with missing names,
a fence line drawn like law,
and a promise that only worked
if I stayed in my place.
The land didn’t say that.
The river never learned the rules.
The soil didn’t ask who deserved bread.
I walked valleys layered with labor,
mountains heavy with memory,
roads paved over stories
we were told not to ask about.
I saw signs that said No Trespassing
nailed into ground taken so long ago
the theft learned how to sound official.
I saw welcome signs too—
sometimes on the very same road,
depending on who was arriving.
This land remembers more than we admit.
It remembers bare feet and broken chains,
hands that planted knowing they might never harvest,
prayers whispered into fields
where names were erased
so comfort could remain clean.
Don’t tell me this land is free
while hunger is punished,
while survival is renamed crime,
while belonging is rationed
by ink and inheritance.
Still—
the earth keeps opening.
Still—
rain falls without checking status.
Still—
the horizon refuses to pick sides.
I learned this land isn’t mine
the way a thing is owned,
and it isn’t yours
the way a prize is claimed.
It’s ours
the way breath is shared,
the way grief travels bloodlines,
the way hope keeps surfacing
even when buried too deep.
This land is your land
when you tend it.
This land is my land
when I protect it.
This land is our land
only when we stop pretending
it was ever meant to be divided
from itself.
I walk it now with listening feet,
aware of who came before
and who still waits for room.
I stay—
not to claim,
but to care.
Vow / Closing Couplet
This land is your land.
This land is my land.
As long as we are breathing here,
we belong to it—
and it belongs to all.
Dedication
For those whose footsteps were erased,
for those still walking without permission,
and for the land itself—
which remembers us
even when we forget each other.
Author’s Note
This poem was written in listening rather than certainty.
It does not claim ownership, innocence, or arrival.
It stands as a witness—to stolen ground, shared breath,
and the quiet truth that belonging is not a right we take,
but a responsibility we practice.
May this land be tended, protected, and remembered
not as a possession,
but as a living home we hold in common.
— 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




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