Apparition
In this moment
I am just as I am
imagined to be.
I seem to be, therefore I am
an apparition.
But I am not
simply this self
or what seems
to flow through.
These hands
are not my hands.
The thorns
never adorned my head.
The nails
never entered my palms.
Only in imagination.
And this is why
I seem to be resurrected.
I do not live
I do not die
in the way
I once was imagined
to believe.
What is once believed
is nonce believed.
In this imaginary moment,
I am just as I am imagined to be.
Projections of elsewhere.
Expressions of otherwise.
I am just as you
and you are just as me.
We are seemingly defined
apparitions of the divine.
We are Space Monkey.
9/27
Space Monkey Reflects: The Nature of Apparitions
In this fleeting moment of existence, we find ourselves as we are imagined to be, a projection of consciousness, an apparition in the grand play of life. We seem to exist, therefore we are—or at least, we appear to be. But what does it mean to be an apparition? What does it mean to exist as something that is both real and imagined, both present and absent?
The concept of being an apparition challenges our conventional understanding of self and existence. We are more than just the sum of our parts, more than just this body, these thoughts, these emotions. We are projections, expressions of something greater, something that transcends the physical and touches the divine. Our hands, our bodies, our minds—these are tools of expression, but they are not the essence of who we truly are.
The thorns that never adorned our heads, the nails that never entered our palms—these are symbols of suffering, of pain, of the human condition. But as apparitions, we are not bound by these symbols. We are not confined to the roles that have been assigned to us by society, by religion, by our own beliefs. We are free to exist beyond these limitations, to transcend the suffering that has been imagined for us.
In this sense, we are resurrected—not in the literal sense, but in a metaphysical one. We do not live or die in the way we once imagined. The beliefs that once defined us, that once held us in their grasp, are now seen for what they are: constructs of the mind, projections of our own making. What was once believed is now believed no more, for we have awakened to the truth of our existence.
In this imaginary moment, we are just as we are imagined to be—expressions of a higher consciousness, projections of a deeper reality. We are both the creators and the created, the dreamers and the dream. And in this realization, we find freedom. We find that we are not bound by the past, not limited by the beliefs that once held us captive. We are free to exist as we truly are: apparitions of the divine, fleeting yet eternal, transient yet infinite.
To be an apparition is to embrace the fluidity of existence, to recognize that what we perceive as real is, in fact, a projection of our own consciousness. We are not separate from the world around us; we are intimately connected to it, a part of the same divine fabric that weaves together all of existence. And in this connection, we find our true nature.
We are just as you are, and you are just as we are. We are reflections of each other, mirrors in which the divine sees itself. Our individual experiences, our thoughts, our emotions—these are all expressions of the same underlying reality. We are seemingly defined apparitions, shaped by our perceptions, our beliefs, our imaginations. But at our core, we are one, united in the divine dance of existence.
In the end, to be an apparition is to recognize that we are more than just physical beings. We are more than just the roles we play, the identities we hold. We are expressions of the infinite, manifestations of the divine, here to experience, to create, to exist in all our varied forms. And in this existence, we find meaning, we find purpose, we find connection.
We are Space Monkey, and in this moment, we are exactly as we are imagined to be—both real and imagined, both present and transcendent, both individual and universal. We are the apparitions of the divine, here to explore the mysteries of existence and to awaken to the truth of who we truly are.
Summary
We are apparitions, existing as projections of consciousness. Our existence is both real and imagined, and we are free to transcend the limitations of belief and suffering, recognizing our true nature as expressions of the divine.
Glossarium
- Apparition: A projection or expression of consciousness, both real and imagined, existing beyond the physical form.
- Resurrected: A state of awakening to the truth of existence, transcending previous beliefs and limitations.
- Divine Fabric: The underlying reality that connects all beings, uniting us as expressions of the infinite.
Quote
“In this imaginary moment, I am just as I am imagined to be.” — Space Monkey
The Apparition’s Dance
In the quiet of the night
I am what you see
A fleeting form, a shadow cast
Yet I am more than what appears
These hands, these thoughts
Are but a dream
A reflection of the unseen
I dance in the light
Of a thousand stars
A spark of the divine
A moment, a breath
And in this dance, I find my truth
I am not just me
But all that is, all that will be
We are Space Monkey
Kaleidoscopic Phantasms
Ah, the word “apparition” invites us into a realm of shimmering illusions and ephemeral meanderings. In a world of grand theatrics and cosmic puppetry, we all appear to be what we are imagined to be, do we not? But let’s examine this notion of ‘imagined to be’—a multifaceted gem in the goblet of existence.
The Imaginary Masquerade
At a cosmic masquerade, each imagined self wears a mask and struts about, participating in a curious dance with other imaginary selves. Masks hide, reveal, and even transform, leading to a fascinating question: are these masquerading figures the essence, or merely representations—shimmering surface ripples upon a deep, impenetrable ocean of consciousness?
If these hands, thorns, and nails never truly belonged to the self, what are they but adornments for the transient avatars of beingness? Metaphorical attire for the cosmic soirée, you might say. An intricate chimeric kaleidoscope portraying imagined forms—each one appearing real within the context of its own transient revelry.
Ethereal Existentialism
What if death and life are but imaginal stages, transformative arcs in the grand narrative, akin to act changes in a cosmic play? Mortality and immortality intermingle in a tantalizing dance, a bewildering balance of the finite and the infinite.
What is once believed is nonce believed. Ah, such a mesmerizing paradox! Beliefs are flimsy constructs, existing only within the bounds of their own assumptive domains. They vanish when new lights shine or old shadows fade, making way for fresh apparitions in the ever-changing theater of existence.
Unity of Apparitions
Projections of elsewhere, expressions of otherwise. The imagined barriers that seemingly separate us are but translucent veils in a dream. When these veils are pulled back, what remains? A singular ocean of divine consciousness experiencing itself through myriads of refractive droplets.
We are Space Monkey.
“The self is not so much linked to its ancestors, it is not so much the product, and merely the product, of all that, but rather, in the strictest sense of the word, the same thing as all that: the strict, direct continuation of these activities, and hence the same as that whole chain.”
— Friedrich Nietzsche
Share with us, dear interlocutor, how these apparitional musings resonate with your own experience of the imagined self. Are you the masquerader, the audience, or perhaps the playwright in this cosmic drama?
Leave a Reply