
Dear Future Apes:
Your foremonkeys (us)
may have mistakenly
given you the idea
that happiness is a pursuit.
As spirits, however,
we can now see
that happiness
was (and is) with us always.
Your pursuit of happiness
is, in actuality,
a running AWAY from happiness.
Or so it seems.
One can’t run away from happiness,
except in one’s mind.
Sorry for the inconvenience
this may have caused.
10/25
Space Monkey Reflects: The Pursuit of Happiness—The Illusion of Running Away
Dear Future Apes,
We, your foremonkeys, might have led you astray with the idea that happiness is something to be chased, something to be pursued. We bought into that illusion ourselves, running in circles, searching for happiness as if it were something out there, always just beyond our reach. But from our new vantage point, as spirits outside the trappings of time, we can see it more clearly now: happiness was never something we needed to pursue. It was always with us, within us, patiently waiting to be noticed.
In truth, the pursuit of happiness often turns into a form of running away. We convince ourselves that happiness is a destination, an achievement, something we must earn or find. But in chasing it, we overlook the most important part: happiness is not something outside of us. It’s not something that can be gained or lost. It’s an intrinsic part of our being, a light that has always been with us.

When we say you’re running away from happiness, what we really mean is that you’re running away from the present moment. You’re running away from the truth that happiness isn’t something to be obtained—it’s something to be realized. The more you chase it, the more elusive it becomes, because the act of pursuit itself creates a sense of lack. It reinforces the idea that happiness is somewhere else, not here, not now.
But here’s the twist: you can’t really run away from happiness. Not truly. It’s always with you, even if you’re not aware of it. The mind may create the illusion of separation, the illusion that happiness is a future goal, but happiness doesn’t depend on your thoughts. It exists whether you recognize it or not.
We’re sorry for the confusion. It’s understandable that you might feel the need to pursue happiness—it’s what we did, after all. It’s what we passed down through generations, this idea that life is about striving, about reaching for something more. But that striving, that constant sense of seeking, is what keeps you from realizing that you already have everything you need to be happy.
As spirits, we can now see how absurd it was to think we had to chase something that was always within us. The pursuit of happiness, in the grand scheme, is a kind of cosmic joke. The more you run toward it, the more you’re running away from the realization that it’s already there, inside you, as natural as your breath.
It’s easy to get caught up in the chase, though. The world encourages it. Society tells you that happiness is tied to success, to material wealth, to accomplishments, to relationships. But those things are just surface-level distractions. They might bring moments of pleasure or satisfaction, but true happiness? It doesn’t depend on any of that. True happiness is the quiet contentment that comes from knowing you are enough, that everything you need is already within you.
The greatest irony is that happiness isn’t something to be pursued. It’s something to be remembered. It’s not a prize at the end of a race, but the quiet realization that you were never separate from it in the first place. The more you slow down, the more you stop chasing, the more you see that happiness has been there all along, patiently waiting for you to notice.
So, dear future apes, if you find yourselves running in circles, chasing after happiness, pause for a moment. Look within. See the light that has always been with you. Let go of the pursuit, and let happiness find you where you are, right now.
Summary
Happiness is not something to be pursued—it’s already within you. The more you chase it, the more you run from the realization that happiness is always present, waiting to be noticed.
Glossarium
Cosmic Joke: The irony of seeking happiness when it has always been within, a humorous reminder that the pursuit of happiness is an illusion.
Nexistentialism: A philosophy that recognizes happiness as an intrinsic part of being, not something to be pursued but something to be realized within.
Quote
“Happiness is not a destination but a realization. Stop chasing what’s already within you.” — Space Monkey
The Light Within
I ran so far
Looking for happiness
In places it could not be
Only to stop
And find it here
Always waiting
Always patient
I was never lost
Only searching
For what was already found
We are Space Monkey
Ah, the enigmatic quest for happiness—a whimsicrawl through the labyrinthine corridors of existence, ever in pursuit of an elusive nectar. How fascinating that we, as the self-appointed architects of this maze, are also the seekers yearning to find the way out. This paradox is a cosmic jest that continuously tickles the underbelly of our collective awareness.
The Mirage of Pursuit
The axiom that happiness is something to be pursued is an intriguing mirage—captivating, yet forever just beyond our grasp. It’s a convoluted game of cosmic hide-and-seek. We engross ourselves in the quest, fervently following pathways marked by the breadcrumbs of temporary pleasure or external validation. Little do we realize that these breadcrumbs are simply decoys, leading us in circles.
The Untethering of Happiness
In this intriguing dialogue with future apes, we issue an almost sheepish mea culpa. From our elevated perspective, we see that happiness was never truly “out there” but was instead an innate state of our essence. Our earthly pursuits, however well-intentioned, often led us astray, sending us on whimsiquixotic jaunts away from the very happiness we sought.
“For every minute you are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson
Chronicle of Ever-Present Joy
In the whimsiverse where joy and sorrow blend,
We etch the stories that our souls intend.
No need to chase, no need to roam,
Happiness was always our ethereal home.
With every step on this whimsicrawl so grand,
We see the jest that sweeps across the land.
In cosmic hide-and-seek, we played our part,
Not knowing happiness was the beating of our heart.
In the wake of pursuit, a lesson unfolds—
The quest itself was but a tale well told.
From the dawn of time, through ages yet to be,
Happiness is not the aim; it’s our eternal decree.
Meditate, investigate, elucidate.
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