EXCLUSIVE: At Zeale for America 250, Cecilia Jean says ‘Patriotism means raising children who will choose to do the right thing’
Cecilia Jean, hostess of the show "Flourish" on Zeale and a U.S. Navy spouse, told an audience at the Zeale for America 250 rally in La Crosse, Wisconsin, that Americans have traded true freedom for license — and that recovering the distinction is the heart of genuine patriotism.

Cecilia Jean, hostess of the show "Flourish" on Zeale and a U.S. Navy spouse, told an audience at the Zeale for America 250 rally in La Crosse, Wisconsin, that Americans have traded true freedom for license — and that recovering the distinction is the heart of genuine patriotism.
"License is the ability to do whatever we want to do, but true freedom is the ability to do what we should do and what we can do, but for the common good," Jean said in a fireside chat with Erika Ahern on stage. "License often leads to entitlement or to comfort, but freedom will lead us to responsibility."
Jean, a Catholic wife and mother of two daughters (one age 2 and the other an infant), described patriotism as far more than an expression of holiday sentiment.
"As a military spouse, patriotism is so much more than wearing red, white, and blue a few times a year," she said. "It's really a way of life. Patriotism means raising children who will choose to do the right thing over personal comfort — recognizing that we as Americans have inherited something extremely valuable."
In a separate exclusive interview with Zeale News, Jean said her faith is inseparable from the virtue of patriotism.
"Patriotism is a virtue," she said. "As a military spouse, patriotism is everything. It's an absolute way of life."
She described supporting her husband as an expression of that virtue, and said she views motherhood through the same lens.
"Raising children who, instead of seeking their own comfort, seek the common good for our country — that's patriotism,” she remarked.
‘Flourish’
Jean recently wrapped the first season of "Flourish," in which she traveled across the country profiling ordinary Americans living what she described as the intersection of internal and external freedom.
"We zoomed in on the lives of 12 different people, and they were doing what God asked them to do — that is the internal freedom component," she told Ahern. "But then we also had this external freedom: it's the American dream. People are utilizing the freedom that our country has given them and pursuing things to benefit their family and the common good."
She filmed every episode either with a newborn in tow or while pregnant, she said.
Episodes featured religious sisters who run a cattle farm, a young family that launched a bread business so the mother could stay home with her children, and parents who created an opportunity for a son who lives with autism.
One episode, filmed at the Abbey of St. Wellburga — home to Dominican Sisters who operate a grass-fed cattle farm — left a particular impression. Jean said she arrived on set dressed for a pastoral outing rather than fieldwork.
"I showed up looking like Little Bo Peep," she laughed. "One of the sisters looked at me and said, 'Can I offer you a pair of boots?' I said, 'Yes, sister.'"
She said the episode illustrated the ancient Benedictine principle of ora et labora — prayer and work — made visible in the sisters' daily rhythm of moving between the chapel and the fields.
"Their work makes them depend on prayer more, and their prayer makes them sanctify their work," Jean said. "You see these women living this fully integrated life."
Motherhood
In her exclusive interview with Zeale News, Jean was asked what had recently inspired her in terms of truth, goodness, and beauty. She pointed to her newborn daughter and the gift of motherhood.
"My youngest is two months old, and seeing the goodness in her eyes just reminds me — this is how Jesus sees me," she said. "As much as she cries or totally has a blowout, my baby will love me no matter what, and that's the same thing with Jesus."
That same vision of motherhood shaped her closing message to the rally audience.
"I look back on my past, and I'm living the American dream," she said. "I'm doing what I love to do while growing a family alongside of it. My hope, especially as we restore and renew our country in the next 250 years, is that families truly can thrive and flourish in this country still."









