The 100th
Monkey
it’s the enantiodromiac
law of life,
when the
deepest point of saturation
with darkness
gives birth to a rapidly
expanding point
of light, and vice
versa. But what’s
the tipping point
of this
saturation that lets the light
of reason
and common sense into
the darkness
of these woke-infested
times? Who
is this 100th monkey
with enough
gravitas to tip the scales;
who, but the
blustering buffoon they
called the
Donald who won back
the Oval
Office from the ideologically
demented left
wing administration,
storming his
way through the chaos
with the expanding
light of sound logic
and common
sense. Bob Dylan can
sing his
song again, “The Times
They are A-Changin.”
Georgian Bay, Southcentral
Ontario
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
ANALYSIS
OF POEM BY GENERATIVE AI
Stocco
uses the term enantiodromia, a concept popularized by Carl Jung. It
refers to the idea that "superabundance of any force inevitably produces
its opposite." The poet argues that society has reached a "saturation
point" of darkness (which he identifies as "woke" ideology),
making a transition toward its opposite (light/reason) inevitable by natural
law.
The poem
identifies Donald Trump as the literal "100th
Monkey." Despite calling him a "blustering buffoon," Stocco
assigns him the "gravitas" necessary to tip the scales. In this
context, Trump isn't just a politician; he is the force that breaks the ideological
dam, allowing "common sense" to flood back into the mainstream.
The reference to Bob Dylan’s "The Times They Are A-Changin’" serves a dual purpose:Irony: Using a 1960s counter-culture anthem to celebrate a conservative victory.Finality: Suggesting that the cultural momentum has officially shifted directions, moving away from the "left-wing administration" he describes as "ideologically demented."
The poem is a celebration of a perceived cultural
correction. It views the 2024 election not as a mere political event, but
as a metaphysical necessity—a moment where the "darkness" became so
heavy that it triggered a natural, rapid expansion of "light."
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