If I Were President
A Love Letter to Responsibility

If I were president
I would not speak in soundbites.
I would speak in pauses.
I would let silence finish its sentence
before I rushed to sound smart.
If I were president
the first thing I’d do
is sit at the same table
as the people who don’t trust me
and not try to earn it—
just listen long enough
for my defenses to get bored and leave.
If I were president
poverty would not be a “policy issue.”
It would be a failure we name out loud
without blame-shifting,
without pretending hunger is a moral flaw
or homelessness a lack of hustle.
If I were president
no child would need to be brave
before they are safe.
No elder would have to choose
between medicine and dignity.
No worker would be told
they are replaceable
by the same system that depends on them.
If I were president
truth wouldn’t belong to one side.
It wouldn’t wear party colors.
It would be heavy, inconvenient,
and shared—
because real truth always costs something
and asks everyone to participate.
If I were president
war would never be the first answer,
and rarely the second.
I would ask what we failed to hear
before we reached for force,
and who profits every time
we call violence “necessary.”
If I were president
I would stop confusing power with domination.
Leadership with control.
Strength with the inability to cry.
If I were president
I would tell the country:
we are not broken beyond repair—
but we are overdue for accountability,
for grief,
for admitting we’ve been surviving
instead of living.
If I were president
the measure of success
would not be the stock market
but how many people slept without fear.
How many voices stopped whispering.
How many hands unclenched.
If I were president
I would remind us daily:
a nation is not great
because it is loud,
or armed,
or wealthy—
but because it learns,
because it changes,
because it refuses to abandon
its most vulnerable
when it gets uncomfortable.
And if I were president—
I would never let you forget
that leadership does not live in one office,
one person,
one title.
It lives in how we treat each other
when no one is watching.
(Manifesto cut)
If I were president
I wouldn’t promise greatness—
I’d promise honesty.
I would tell the truth
even when it costs votes,
even when it makes us uncomfortable,
especially when it asks us to change.
If I were president
hunger would be urgent,
healthcare would be human,
and housing would be a right—
not a reward for obedience.
If I were president
no one would have to perform pain
to be believed.
If I were president
power would mean protection,
not permission to harm.
Leadership would mean responsibility,
not immunity.
If I were president
truth would not belong to one party.
Dignity would not be negotiable.
Silence would not be mistaken for peace.
If I were president
we would stop calling cruelty “policy”
and fear “security.”
If I were president
I would remind us:
a nation is not strong
because it dominates—
but because it cares,
because it repairs,
because it refuses to forget
who it was built for.
And if I were president
I would say this clearly:
This country does not need saving.
It needs remembering.
(Spoken-Word Cut)
If I were president—
I’d lower my voice.
Not because I’m unsure,
but because listening requires space.
(beat)
If I were president
I wouldn’t talk at the people.
I’d stand with them.
Long enough
for the masks to get tired
and fall.
(beat)
If I were president
hunger wouldn’t wait for a committee.
Healthcare wouldn’t come with fine print.
Housing wouldn’t be something you earn
by breaking your back
for a system that forgets your name.
(pause)
If I were president
no one would have to bleed in public
to prove they’re hurting.
(beat)
If I were president
power would not mean distance.
It would mean accountability.
It would mean saying
“I was wrong”
out loud
and meaning it.
(longer pause)
If I were president
we would stop calling fear “protection.”
Stop calling violence “order.”
Stop calling silence “peace.”
(beat)
If I were president
truth wouldn’t lean left or right—
it would stand upright
and ask us all
to come closer.
(pause, softer)
And if I were president
I would remind us—
every single day—
that leadership
is not an office,
not a title,
not a microphone.
It’s how we treat each other
when the cameras are gone.
(quiet)
That’s where the country lives.
(Quiet Cut)
If I were president
I think I’d start with admitting
I don’t know everything.
I would let the weight of that be visible—
not as weakness,
but as respect
for how complex people are
and how much we’ve carried.
If I were president
I would notice the tiredness first.
The kind that doesn’t show up in statistics.
The kind that lives in shoulders,
in unanswered emails,
in people doing their best
with less than enough.
If I were president
I would believe people
without asking them to prove
they’re worthy of care.
I would remember that most harm
comes from being unheard
for too long.
If I were president
I would move slower.
Not to stall—
but to make sure we don’t trample
what’s already fragile.
I would choose repair
over punishment,
care over control,
truth over comfort.
If I were president
I would stop pretending
we can heal without grieving,
or change without telling the truth
about what hurt us.
And if I were president
I would keep reminding myself—
quietly, often—
that the goal was never power.
It was trust.
It was safety.
It was making room
for people to breathe again.
If I were president
I would hope
that when I left,
things felt a little less heavy—
not because everything was fixed,
but because no one felt alone
inside it.
— 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)
I wish you were President. HUGS
I keep thinking about the line “I would let silence finish its sentence before I rushed to sound smart.” That really hit me because it’s so true—how often do we fill the quiet just to prove we’re in control, when maybe what people actually need is to be heard without interruption? And the part about “the tiredness… that lives in shoulders” made me think of all the invisible exhaustion around us that never makes it into a debate or a headline. It’s such a tender way of saying the country isn’t just a system, it’s a bunch of people carrying things they shouldn’t have to carry. Do you ever feel like the biggest change we need is just for someone in power to admit they don’t have all the answers and still choose to stay present?