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Building Up America

Breath By Breath

By Flower InBloomPublished about 11 hours ago 6 min read
—^^^^—

We don’t rebuild a country

with slogans taped to podiums

or flags waved hard enough to drown out hunger.

We build it

with hands that know calluses,

with backs that bend and straighten again,

with mornings that start before the sun

because rent doesn’t care about rhetoric.

America is rebuilt

when teachers are trusted,

when nurses are rested,

when farmers can feel proud without going broke,

when builders can build without fear of falling through the cracks

they didn’t make.

It happens quietly—

in libraries that stay open late,

in kitchens where neighbors share soup and stories,

in towns that decide not to disappear

just because someone forgot to fund them.

We build it when we stop asking

who deserves help

and start asking

what does it take to thrive?

When work is honored,

not exploited.

When rest is allowed,

not shamed.

When dignity isn’t something you earn

after surviving cruelty.

America rises

when we choose repair over punishment,

listening over winning,

care over control.

When bridges are fixed—

the steel ones and the human ones.

When we remember

that a nation is not a brand

or a battlefield

but a living body,

and no body heals by being divided against itself.

Building up America

means choosing each other

again and again—

even when it’s slower,

even when it’s harder,

especially when it’s quieter.

Because the real work

has never been about tearing down,

but about staying,

repairing,

and refusing to abandon

what still has a heartbeat.

Grittier Version

America doesn’t rise

to the sound of applause.

It wakes up coughing.

Coffee gone cold.

Back already hurting

before the boots hit the floor.

It’s built by people

who don’t get speeches written about them,

just warnings taped to breakroom walls

and timecards that don’t tell the truth.

We don’t rebuild this place

with promises that expire after elections.

We rebuild it

with hands split open,

with lungs full of dust,

with knees that keep showing up

long after the math stops working.

America is rebuilt

in towns everybody drove past

and called “dead”

without stopping to ask who was still breathing.

In trailers, walk-ups, basements,

in break rooms where the microwave hums

like it’s praying.

By people who learned early

that pride doesn’t pay medical bills

but shame doesn’t either.

We build it

when we stop blaming the poor

for being exhausted.

When we stop calling survival

a personal failure.

When the work is real

and the paycheck isn’t an insult.

When “essential” means protected,

not disposable.

America cracks

because it was taught to grind itself down

and call that strength.

America heals

when we say: enough.

Enough with profit dressed up as virtue.

Enough with leaders who never bled

telling others to endure more.

Building up America

isn’t pretty.

It’s rehab, not a parade.

It’s choosing repair

over pretending nothing’s broken.

It’s staying

when leaving would be easier.

Fixing what still can be fixed.

Standing shoulder to shoulder

not because we agree,

but because collapse doesn’t care

who was right.

This country doesn’t need saving.

It needs honesty.

It needs hands back on the tools.

It needs people who refuse

to confuse suffering

with worth.

That’s how America gets built again—

not higher,

but truer.

No Apologies Version

America doesn’t break politely.

It rots while smiling.

Painted flags over hollowed houses,

“Now Hiring” signs stapled to lies.

This country eats its workers

and calls it character.

Calls it freedom.

Calls it the cost of doing business

while executives sleep through the damage.

We wake up already behind.

Already owing.

Already blamed

for a system that needs us tired

so we don’t notice the theft.

They tell us:

Work harder.

As if exhaustion is a moral failure.

As if collapse is a choice.

America is built on backs

that were never meant to carry this much—

medical debt, rent hikes, broken promises,

and the quiet terror of one bad week

ending everything.

They pit us against each other

like it’s sport—

race, class, politics, pain—

while the same hands reach deeper

into every pocket.

And if you dare name it,

they call you angry.

Ungrateful.

Divisive.

Good.

Anger is what happens

when truth finally gets air.

Building up America

means admitting it was never “fine.”

It means saying out loud

that suffering was engineered,

that scarcity was staged,

that the ladder was pulled up

and sold back to us rung by rung.

This place doesn’t need more hope speeches.

It needs accountability.

It needs consequences.

It needs to stop mistaking cruelty

for toughness

and obedience

for patriotism.

America will not be rebuilt

by people who profit from its decay.

It will be rebuilt

by the ones who were bled dry

and still refused to turn on each other.

By people who say:

You don’t get rich off our bodies anymore.

You don’t call this normal anymore.

You don’t gaslight us into gratitude anymore.

Building up America

is a reckoning.

A refusal.

A line drawn in the dirt

by people who have lost enough

to stop being scared.

This isn’t rage for show.

This is rage with memory.

Rage that knows exactly

who benefited

and who paid.

And if that makes the ground shake—

good.

Rot only survives

when no one is willing

to tear the boards up

and expose what’s underneath.

A MANIFESTO FOR BUILDING UP AMERICA

We reject the lie

that this is as good as it gets.

We reject the story

that exhaustion is virtue,

that debt is discipline,

that silence is patriotism.

This country was not broken by the poor,

the tired,

the angry,

or the grieving.

It was broken by those who profited

from keeping us desperate

and calling it order.

We name what happened.

Work was devalued.

Care was commodified.

Communities were hollowed out

and told to feel lucky for the crumbs.

We were divided on purpose

so we wouldn’t notice who was feeding

on the fracture.

We refuse the framing

that survival is a personal failure.

We refuse a system

that calls people “essential”

only when it needs them expendable.

We believe a nation is measured

not by markets,

but by whether its people can breathe

without fear of one mistake

destroying their lives.

We believe dignity is not earned

through suffering.

It is inherent.

We demand work that sustains life,

not drains it.

Healthcare without terror.

Housing without humiliation.

Education without debt traps.

Rest without shame.

We demand accountability

from those who extracted wealth

while eroding trust

and called it leadership.

We are done confusing cruelty with strength

and obedience with unity.

Building up America

is not nostalgia.

It is repair.

It means telling the truth

even when it costs power.

Choosing people

over profit.

Care

over control.

We know this will be called radical.

So be it.

Repair always threatens

those who benefit from collapse.

We are not asking for permission.

We are organizing memory.

We are refusing amnesia.

We are standing in the wreckage

and saying: this was not inevitable.

And here is the dangerous hope—

Not the soft kind.

The earned kind.

If this system was built by human hands,

it can be unbuilt by human hands.

And rebuilt—

not higher,

not louder,

but fairer.

That hope scares them

because it doesn’t beg.

It doesn’t wait.

It remembers.

And once people remember

what they deserve,

a country doesn’t fall—

it changes.

A CALL & RESPONSE

LEADER:

They told us this was normal.

ALL:

It is not normal.

LEADER:

They told us to work harder.

ALL:

We were already working.

LEADER:

They told us to be grateful.

ALL:

For what was taken?

LEADER:

They told us exhaustion was strength.

ALL:

Exhaustion is a warning.

LEADER:

They called us divided.

ALL:

We were divided on purpose.

LEADER:

Who benefited?

ALL:

Not us.

LEADER:

Who paid?

ALL:

We did.

LEADER:

They said, be patient.

ALL:

We’ve waited long enough.

LEADER:

They said, this is the way it is.

ALL:

This is the way it was built.

LEADER:

And if it was built—

ALL:

It can be unbuilt.

LEADER:

Say it again.

ALL:

It can be unbuilt.

LEADER:

What do we refuse?

ALL:

To be disposable.

LEADER:

What do we demand?

ALL:

Dignity.

LEADER:

Not someday—

ALL:

Now.

LEADER:

Not for some—

ALL:

For all.

LEADER:

What are we building?

ALL:

A country that can breathe.

LEADER:

What are we tearing down?

ALL:

The lie.

LEADER:

What carries us forward?

ALL:

Each other.

LEADER (slower, quieter):

If this system was built by human hands—

ALL (steady, grounded):

It can be rebuilt by human hands.

LEADER (final, alone — pause after):

And this time—

ALL (together):

We remember.

— Flower InBloom

Free Verse

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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  • SAMURAI SAM AND WILD DRAGONSabout 7 hours ago

    HUGS

  • A MANIFESTO FOR BUILDING UP AMERICA LOVE THIS

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