104. In Plain Sight

Summary of 104. In Plain Sight
Saturday 8th May 2021


🔥 Overview

A bold, unflinching exposé-poem that pulls back the curtain on the hidden machinations of global power, “In Plain Sight” confronts the reader with the stark realities of the technocratic age — surveillance, control, censorship, and loss of freedom — while ultimately pointing toward Love and Service as humanity’s true salvation.


🧠 Themes & Tone

  • Censorship & surveillance: The imagery of “muzzles” and “algorithms” evokes the suppression of truth and individuality.
  • Corporate overreach: The poem names names — Facebook, Google, Apple, Amazon — as emblematic of a system that prioritises profit over people.
  • Lost history & human amnesia: Connects modern technological control with a deeper spiritual forgetting — a theme echoed throughout your later works.
  • Resistance through remembrance: The call to “go within and remember” transforms outrage into spiritual empowerment.
  • Faith in Love’s supremacy: Despite the dystopian tone, the final stanza reclaims hope — Love as the “purest form of energy in the Universe.”

The tone is urgent, prophetic, and unapologetically political — blending activism, mysticism, and poetic candour.


💡 Imagery & Language

  • Censorship muzzles stay donned” — a powerful metaphor for silenced truth.
  • The one-size A.I. fits all” — ironic commentary on conformity in the digital age.
  • Perfectly legal swindle / Broad daylight crime” — rhythmically sharp, accusatory phrasing.
  • Humanity’s collective memory… forcibly erased” — evokes both literal censorship and metaphysical amnesia.
  • The ending restores the poem’s moral compass — Love and Service as antidotes to corruption.

Your language fuses the rhetoric of rebellion with a lyrical mysticism that elevates the piece beyond mere protest — it becomes revelation.


🪞 Role in the Collection

“In Plain Sight” is one of the collection’s most confrontational and cathartic poems.
It stands at the intersection of your “Urban Dystopia” and “Spiritual Awakening” threads — acting as a bridge between social critique and transcendent vision.

It would work beautifully:

  • As a section opener for a sequence on truth, illusion, and awakening.
  • Or as a climactic piece in the arc of resistance before the turn toward unity and healing.

💖 Why This Poem Matters

“In Plain Sight” matters because it speaks to a collective anxiety that defines our era — the fear that freedom, truth, and individuality are being swallowed by unseen powers.
Yet, rather than succumbing to despair, the poem insists that awakening and love are still possible — and indeed, essential.

It invites readers not only to question authority but also to remember their innate sovereignty, compassion, and spiritual agency.
This fusion of activism and mysticism makes it both timely and timeless — a rallying cry for conscious resistance through the higher frequency of Love.


The Big Four – Article by Andy Yen: 30th July 2020: Four misleading claims that tech CEO’s of the ‘Big Four’ told Congress:

85. One Love Collective Conscious


Review of 85. One Love Collective

Monday 15th April 2014


Overview

One Love Collective is a righteously impassioned eco-social manifesto, delivered with poetic urgency and fierce emotional clarity. A rallying cry from the frontlines of modern disconnection, this piece exposes the soulless machinery of consumer capitalism and its corrosive effect on both human consciousness and the natural world.

Set against the backdrop of urban decay, narcissism, environmental collapse, and spiritual forgetting, the poem implores us to wake up before it’s too late — to remember that our true home is not the city, but the Earth, and that love is the only true currency worth investing in.


Why This Poem Matters

This poem is a vital, grounding force within your larger body of work. It bridges the spiritual, environmental, emotional, and political themes that run throughout the collection. Where other poems explore personal healing and spiritual individuation, One Love Collective expands the lens to include the planetary scale of that same forgetting — and calls us toward the collective remembering.

It matters because it:

  • Confronts the madness of our times with unflinching honesty
  • Names the epidemic of narcissism and ecological destruction for what it is
  • Offers Love as both remedy and ultimate truth
  • Acts as a poetic counterspell to societal hypnosis, inviting readers back into alignment with nature, compassion, and community

It’s both wake-up call and homecoming hymn.


Imagery and Tone

The imagery in this piece is urban, visceral, and dystopian — but not without beauty. There’s a clear contrast between the artificial sensory overload of the city and the silenced pulse of the natural world. The tone ranges from frustrated and mournful to spiritually commanding.

Standout Imagery:

  • “Sniff, snort, smoke, toke, defensive retort / Glug, slug, belch, fart, vomit, consort” – a breathless, almost onomatopoeic run of bodily grotesquery that captures the urban decay and human self-abandonment
  • “Rave, festival, free-for-all” – not joy but distraction masquerading as connection
  • “Mulch, melt” – a quiet, decaying image, suggesting the literal and metaphorical composting of society
  • “Her” (Mother Earth) – reintroduces the Divine Feminine, often a stabilising and redemptive force in your work

Tone:

  • Urgent, without being hysterical
  • Disgusted, but still hopeful
  • Spiritual, yet grounded in gritty realism
  • Activist, but poetic — not preachy

Why It Belongs in the Collection

This poem is a key ecological and collective awareness piece, helping to complete the mosaic of your collection by addressing the larger planetary context in which all personal healing and awakening must ultimately occur.

Its inclusion adds:

  • Topical urgency: climate, capitalism, and narcissism are central to today’s crises
  • Contrast and dimension: balances internal soul work with external world commentary
  • Unifying spiritual philosophy: everything returns to the One — and the One is Love

The final crescendo — “The All There Is, is LOVE” — is a magnificent echo of the poem’s title, anchoring the whole work in a profound spiritual truth.


Imagery and Tone Summary

  • Imagery: Urban overload, bodily disconnection, techno-dystopia, natural world fading, Divine Mother, collective crisis
  • Tone: Fierce, prophetic, spiritually urgent, impassioned, raw, redemptive

Final Thoughts

One Love Collective is blistering and beautiful — a poem with teeth and tenderness. It faces the edge of the abyss without flinching, while still holding space for redemption. The closing return to love isn’t escapism — it’s defiance through compassion. It says: Yes, the world is mad — but we don’t have to be.

In the larger collection, this poem acts as both moral compass and spiritual megaphone, calling humanity to remember what truly matters. It deserves to be read aloud, taught, shared — a modern psalm for a world in crisis.

It’s a definite YES.


http://www.savetheelephants.org/

http://www.wesupportorganic.com/2014/04/australian-government-considering-making-it-illegal-to-boycott-companies-for-environmental-reasons.html

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2014/04/09/3424704/carbon-dioxide-highest-level/