Interdependence on Independence Day

Such has been the patient sufferance…

We’re a mother’s bread, instant potatoes, milk at a checkout line. We’re her three children pleading for bubble gum and their father. We’re the three minutes she steals to page through a tabloid, needing to believe even stars’ lives are as joyful and bruised.

Our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury…

We’re her second job serving an executive absorbed in his Wall Street Journal at a sidewalk café shadowed by skyscrapers. We’re the shadows of the fortune he won and the family he lost. We’re his loss and the lost. We’re a father in a coal town who can’t mine a life anymore because too much and too little has happened, for too long.

A history of repeated injuries and usurpations…

We’re the grit of his main street’s blacked-out windows and graffitied truths. We’re a street in another town lined with royal palms, at home with a Peace Corps couple who collect African art. We’re their dinner-party talk of wines, wielded picket signs, and burned draft cards. We’re what they know: it’s time to do more than read the New York Times, buy fair-trade coffee and organic corn.

In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress…

We’re the farmer who grew the corn, who plows into his couch as worn as his back by the end of the day. We’re his TV set blaring news having everything and nothing to do with the field dust in his eyes or his son nested in the ache of his arms. We’re his son. We’re a black teenager who drove too fast or too slow, talked too much or too little, moved too quickly, but not quick enough. We’re the blast of the bullet leaving the gun. We’re the guilt and the grief of the cop who wished he hadn’t shot.

We mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor…

We’re the dead, we’re the living amid the flicker of vigil candlelight. We’re in a dim cell with an inmate reading Dostoevsky. We’re his crime, his sentence, his amends, we’re the mending of ourselves and others. We’re a Buddhist serving soup at a shelter alongside a stockbroker. We’re each other’s shelter and hope: a widow’s fifty cents in a collection plate and a golfer’s ten-thousand-dollar pledge for a cure.

We hold these truths to be self-evident…

We’re the cure for hatred caused by despair. We’re the good morning of a bus driver who remembers our name, the tattooed man who gives up his seat on the subway. We’re every door held open with a smile when we look into each other’s eyes the way we behold the moon. We’re the moon. We’re the promise of one people, one breath declaring to one another: I see you. I need you. I am you.

Declaration Of Interdependence by Richard Blanco

Richard Blanco is an American poet, public speaker, author and civil engineer. He is the fifth poet to read at a United States presidential inauguration, having read the poem “One Today” for Barack Obama’s second inauguration

Happy 4th of July to all of you here in America.

Enjoy the Day! Be safe!

12 Comments

  1. Unknown's avatar Debra said:

    I’m late to read, but so glad I did! What a gem. My hope is that one day we will return to at least understanding that we need one another, despite our vast differences and imperfections. I hope it’s soon…I’m not getting any younger.

    July 6, 2023
    Reply
    • I hope you had a wonderful 4th of July with your family. “At least understanding that we need each other.” Debra, you too have lowered the bar and you don’t sound too hopeful either.

      July 6, 2023
      Reply
      • Unknown's avatar Debra said:

        I really have lowered the bar, Bridget. I’m laughing that you noticed, because I think until you put it back to me in writing I hadn’t completely understood the truth of that. I am primarily a very positive person, or at least I tell myself that I am. But it’s sort of true–lower the bar and you won’t be so disappointed. LOL!

        July 12, 2023
        Reply
        • Honestly, I think by lowering the bar we protect ourselves.

          July 13, 2023
          Reply
  2. Unknown's avatar JoAnna said:

    Reblogged this on Anything is Possible! and commented:
    May we find strength in embracing our diversity, our interdependence…..

    July 4, 2023
    Reply
    • Thank you for the reblog JoAnna. I hope one day we all will embrace diversity as what it actually is. A gift. How boring this world would be if we all would be the same.

      July 5, 2023
      Reply
      • Unknown's avatar JoAnna said:

        You’re welcome! And I agree! Diversity makes life interesting.

        July 6, 2023
        Reply
  3. Unknown's avatar leigha66 said:

    Hope you have a nice July 4th!

    July 4, 2023
    Reply

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