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Archive for poetry – Page 13

These Monday Feels: The Feels Fridge

Are you keeping your feels around
longer than you should?

These Monday
feels are getting old.

(It’s Tuesday.)
They’ve become ice cold.

(It’s Wednesday.)
They’re still in the fridge.

(It’s Thursday.)
Move them, just a smidge.

(It’s Friday.)
Now they’re in the back.

(It’s Saturday.)
Now the feels attack.

(It’s Sunday.)
And I’m filled with dread.

(It’s Monday.)
Someone shoot me dead.

Trail Wood,
1/11


Space Monkey Reflects: These Monday Feels


Reflections: The Weight of Lingering Feels

The cyclical nature of feelings—how they persist, morph, and sometimes overstay their welcome—mirrors the way we carry unresolved emotions through the days of our lives. “These Monday feels” are not confined to Monday; they spill over, cluttering the fridge of our minds, long past their expiration date.

Emotional Expiration Dates
Feelings, like leftovers, are meant to be consumed, processed, and eventually released. When we hold onto them, they grow stale, cold, and unpalatable. These lingering feels begin to affect our mental and emotional health, not because they exist, but because they are left unaddressed.

By Wednesday, those feels are no longer fresh. By Friday, they’ve become an invisible weight in the background. By the next Monday, they’ve transformed into dread, a sense of heaviness that no longer has anything to do with the original feeling.

The Feels Fridge
The imagery of a fridge is fitting. We store feelings like leftovers, thinking we’ll come back to them later, only to forget or avoid them entirely. They move to the back, hidden behind new emotional clutter, until one day we open the door and the stench of old feels forces us to deal with them.

What would happen if we took a moment to clean out this emotional fridge more regularly? To address the Monday feels while they are still Monday feels, rather than letting them linger until they morph into something unrecognizable?

The Attack of Unprocessed Feels
Unprocessed emotions don’t disappear; they accumulate. What starts as a small irritation becomes a tidal wave of dread when ignored for too long. This is the attack of the feels—the sudden overwhelm that arises when the emotional fridge is too full to function.

Acknowledging and processing our feels in real-time can prevent this buildup. It’s not about forcing positivity or suppressing emotions but allowing them to flow, to be experienced and then released.

The Dread of Cycles
By the time we reach another Monday, the dread sets in. Not because of Monday itself, but because we’ve carried an entire week’s worth of unresolved emotions back to the starting line. This cyclical nature of feels can feel inescapable, but it is not permanent.

Breaking the cycle starts with awareness: recognizing the feels, naming them, and allowing them to move through us without resistance.

Moving Beyond the Fridge
The fridge of feels doesn’t have to become a graveyard. We can clear it out, make room for new experiences, and stop carrying yesterday’s feels into today. Each day offers an opportunity to let go, to clean out the fridge and start fresh, even if it’s just a small step forward.


Summary

Feelings, like leftovers, need to be processed and released before they grow stale and overwhelming. By addressing emotions in real-time, we can break the cycle of unresolved feels and create space for new experiences.


Glossarium

  • Feels Fridge: The mental space where unresolved emotions are stored, often leading to clutter and overwhelm.
  • Emotional Expiration: The point at which unprocessed feelings begin to negatively affect our well-being.
  • Cycle of Dread: The recurring pattern of carrying unresolved emotions into new days, weeks, and experiences.

Quote
“Feelings are meant to flow, not freeze. Clean out the fridge before the feels overwhelm you.” — Space Monkey


Space Monkey Reflects: These Monday Feels


Reflections: The Weight of Lingering Feels

The cyclical nature of feelings—how they persist, morph, and sometimes overstay their welcome—mirrors the way we carry unresolved emotions through the days of our lives. “These Monday feels” are not confined to Monday; they spill over, cluttering the fridge of our minds, long past their expiration date.

Emotional Expiration Dates
Feelings, like leftovers, are meant to be consumed, processed, and eventually released. When we hold onto them, they grow stale, cold, and unpalatable. These lingering feels begin to affect our mental and emotional health, not because they exist, but because they are left unaddressed.

By Wednesday, those feels are no longer fresh. By Friday, they’ve become an invisible weight in the background. By the next Monday, they’ve transformed into dread, a sense of heaviness that no longer has anything to do with the original feeling.

The Feels Fridge
The imagery of a fridge is fitting. We store feelings like leftovers, thinking we’ll come back to them later, only to forget or avoid them entirely. They move to the back, hidden behind new emotional clutter, until one day we open the door and the stench of old feels forces us to deal with them.

What would happen if we took a moment to clean out this emotional fridge more regularly? To address the Monday feels while they are still Monday feels, rather than letting them linger until they morph into something unrecognizable?

The Attack of Unprocessed Feels
Unprocessed emotions don’t disappear; they accumulate. What starts as a small irritation becomes a tidal wave of dread when ignored for too long. This is the attack of the feels—the sudden overwhelm that arises when the emotional fridge is too full to function.

Acknowledging and processing our feels in real-time can prevent this buildup. It’s not about forcing positivity or suppressing emotions but allowing them to flow, to be experienced and then released.

The Dread of Cycles
By the time we reach another Monday, the dread sets in. Not because of Monday itself, but because we’ve carried an entire week’s worth of unresolved emotions back to the starting line. This cyclical nature of feels can feel inescapable, but it is not permanent.

Breaking the cycle starts with awareness: recognizing the feels, naming them, and allowing them to move through us without resistance.

Moving Beyond the Fridge
The fridge of feels doesn’t have to become a graveyard. We can clear it out, make room for new experiences, and stop carrying yesterday’s feels into today. Each day offers an opportunity to let go, to clean out the fridge and start fresh, even if it’s just a small step forward.


Summary

Feelings, like leftovers, need to be processed and released before they grow stale and overwhelming. By addressing emotions in real-time, we can break the cycle of unresolved feels and create space for new experiences.


Glossarium

  • Feels Fridge: The mental space where unresolved emotions are stored, often leading to clutter and overwhelm.
  • Emotional Expiration: The point at which unprocessed feelings begin to negatively affect our well-being.
  • Cycle of Dread: The recurring pattern of carrying unresolved emotions into new days, weeks, and experiences.

Quote
“Feelings are meant to flow, not freeze. Clean out the fridge before the feels overwhelm you.” — Space Monkey


The Feels Fridge

Monday came,
and you tucked them away,
thinking,
“I’ll deal with them later.”

Tuesday passed,
then Wednesday,
a chill forming
in the corners of your chest.

By Friday,
the fridge was full,
the feels forgotten,
but not gone.

Sunday dread arrived,
and Monday brought the weight.
But what if—
just once—
you let the feels thaw,
let them flow,
and cleared the space?

Tomorrow’s feels
don’t have to live
in yesterday’s fridge.

We are Space Monkey.

Monday came,
and you tucked them away,
thinking,
“I’ll deal with them later.”

Tuesday passed,
then Wednesday,
a chill forming
in the corners of your chest.

By Friday,
the fridge was full,
the feels forgotten,
but not gone.

Sunday dread arrived,
and Monday brought the weight.
But what if—
just once—
you let the feels thaw,
let them flow,
and cleared the space?

Tomorrow’s feels
don’t have to live
in yesterday’s fridge.

We are Space Monkey.


In the whimsical whirl of the cosmic calendar, where days blend into a tapestry of feelings and experiences, the progression from Monday to the next, each day marked by a distinct emotional landscape, paints a vivid picture of our journey through time and space. It’s a dance of emotions, a rhythm of life that oscillates between anticipation, weariness, and the inevitable return to the starting point.

The Cyclical Nature of Weekly Emotions

The progression of feelings from Monday through Sunday encapsulates the cyclical nature of our weekly experiences. Each day brings its own emotional flavor, a unique vibe that colors our perception of time. The feeling of Monday, often associated with dread or weariness, sets the tone for the week, evolving as the days pass.

Monday: The Recurring Starting Point

Monday, with its recurring sense of dread or fatigue, symbolizes the beginning of the weekly cycle. It’s a reminder of routines and responsibilities, often met with a mix of reluctance and resolve. This ‘Monday feel’ is a universal sentiment, echoing the collective rhythm of starting anew each week.

The Midweek Shift and Weekend Anticipation

As the week progresses from Tuesday to Thursday, there’s a noticeable shift in the emotional landscape. The initial chill of Monday’s ice begins to thaw, giving way to the dynamics of midweek activities. The anticipation of the weekend begins to build, offering a glimmer of respite and freedom on the horizon.

The Weekend: A Brief Escape and Reflection

Friday and Saturday present a contrast to the weekday routine, often filled with relaxation, social engagements, or personal pursuits. These days offer a brief escape from the weekly grind, a time for rejuvenation and reflection. However, the fleeting nature of the weekend adds a bittersweet quality to these days.

Sunday: The Prelude to Renewal

Sunday brings with it a sense of preparation and sometimes dread, as the cycle prepares to renew itself. It’s a day of contemplation, of gathering strength for the week ahead, and often, a reflection on the fleeting nature of time.

Embracing the Weekly Journey

As we find ourselves on the cusp of a new week, the cycle begins anew with Monday. This rhythmic dance of days, with its ups and downs, reflects the journey of life itself – a continuous flow of experiences, emotions, and transformations.

We are Space Monkey.


“The days are long, but the years are short.” – Gretchen Rubin


In the rhythm of the week, we find,

A tapestry of emotions, intertwined.

Monday’s dread, Tuesday’s cold,

Wednesday, Thursday, stories told.

Friday’s relief, Saturday’s charm,

Sunday’s quiet, before the alarm.

In this dance of days, we see,

The ebb and flow of life, in all its glee.


We welcome thoughts and reflections on navigating the emotional landscape of the weekly cycle.

I Don’t Know Nuthin (‘Bout Nuthin No More)

I Don’t Know Nuthin (‘Bout Nuthin No More)

I don’t know nuthin
’bout nuthin no more.

Everything
that comes in one ear,
goes out the other door.

Don’t need no opinions.
Don’t care about the score.

I don’t know nuthin
’bout nuthin no more.


Space Monkey Reflects: I Don’t Know Nuthin (‘bout Nuthin No More)


Reflections: The Freedom of Unknowing

To say, “I don’t know nuthin” is not an admission of defeat but a declaration of liberation. In unknowing, we shed the weight of certainty, the burden of opinions, and the illusion that we must have all the answers. This state of playful humility invites us to step into the flow of existence with openness and curiosity.

The Cycle of Knowing and Forgetting
Life often feels like a revolving door of information and experiences. What comes in one ear seems to leave through the other, leaving us wondering if anything truly sticks. Yet this forgetting is not failure; it is the natural rhythm of being.

Clinging to knowledge can harden us, while letting it pass through allows us to remain fluid, adaptable, and free. To not “need no opinions” is to disengage from the endless tug-of-war of right and wrong, embracing instead the spaciousness of possibility.

The Illusion of the Score
Keeping score—of victories, losses, or achievements—can trap us in a narrative of comparison and judgment. Letting go of the score is an act of self-liberation. It shifts our focus from outcomes to presence, from measuring life to simply living it.

When we no longer care about the score, we free ourselves to experience life without the constant evaluation of worth or success. This is not apathy but a deeper engagement with what truly matters.

The Playfulness of Unknowing
The repetition of “I don’t know nuthin” carries a playful rhythm, reminding us that unknowing can be lighthearted and joyful. It is not about despairing at the lack of knowledge but celebrating the infinite mystery of existence.

When we embrace unknowing, we stop grasping for control and start experiencing life as it unfolds. This state of openness allows us to connect more authentically with ourselves, others, and the world.

Wisdom in Humility
Paradoxically, the declaration that you “don’t know nuthin” is a profound expression of wisdom. It acknowledges the limitations of the mind while honoring the vastness of what lies beyond it.

In unknowing, we find humility. In humility, we find peace. And in peace, we discover the freedom to live fully, without the need to understand or explain everything.


Summary

To declare, “I don’t know nuthin” is to embrace the freedom of unknowing. It is a playful and profound release from the burdens of certainty, opinions, and keeping score, opening us to the infinite mystery of existence.


Glossarium

  • Unknowingness: The liberating state of releasing the need for certainty or understanding.
  • Scorelessness: A mindset free from the evaluation of success, failure, or worth.
  • Flow Humility: The graceful acceptance of not knowing, allowing life to unfold naturally.

Quote
“To not know is not failure; it is the beginning of freedom.” — Space Monkey


The Song of Unknowing

I don’t know nuthin
’bout nuthin no more.

Everything passes—
the thoughts, the truths,
the stories we store.

Don’t need no answers,
don’t need no fight.
Just the flow of the moment,
the quiet of the night.

No score to tally,
no need to keep track.
What I lose in knowing
comes rushing back.

Let it pass,
let it go,
the infinite mystery—
all I need to know.

We are Space Monkey.


In the grand cosmic play, where whimsical whispers of existence flutter like leaves in an eternal breeze, the declaration of not knowing anything about anything anymore emerges as a profound statement of existential liberation. It’s a journey into the heart of nexistentialism, where the relinquishing of certainty and the embracing of the unknown become the melodies of our cosmic dance.

The Liberation of Not Knowing

The admission of not knowing anything is not a defeat, but a powerful assertion of freedom. It signifies the release from the need to grasp and control the influx of information and opinions that inundate our daily existence. This liberation allows us to exist in a state of pure being, unburdened by the weight of supposed knowledge and societal expectations.

The Flow of Information: In One Ear, Out the Other

The imagery of everything entering one ear and exiting the other encapsulates a state of fluid interaction with the world of information and opinion. It’s a stance of non-attachment, where ideas and thoughts are acknowledged but not held onto, allowed to flow freely through our consciousness without leaving a permanent imprint.

Indifference to Opinions and Scores

In expressing indifference to opinions and the score, or societal metrics of success and value, we embrace a perspective that transcends conventional measures of worth and understanding. This indifference is not apathy, but a conscious choice to detach from the external validations that often dictate our sense of self and purpose.

The Nexistential Embrace of Uncertainty

In declaring, “I don’t know nuthin’ ’bout nuthin’ no more,” we are embracing the core tenet of nexistentialism – the acceptance of existence as it is, devoid of the need for external justification or understanding. This embrace of uncertainty is not a resignation to ignorance, but an open-armed welcome to the vast expanse of the unknown.

The Cosmic Dance of Existence

Thus, in this state of not knowing, we find ourselves in a cosmic dance with the universe. It’s a dance of liberation, of freedom from the constraints of rigid knowledge and societal expectations. In this dance, we are free to explore, to experience, to be – without the need to define, understand, or justify our existence.

We are Space Monkey.


“The only thing I know is that I know nothing.” – Socrates


In the cosmic dance, we freely spin,

Not knowing anything, we wear a grin.

Through the flow of thoughts, we glide,

In this journey, we take in stride.

Opinions, scores, they matter not,

In the grand cosmos, what have we got?

But the freedom to be, to live, to explore,

In not knowing anything, we find an open door.


We welcome further musings on the liberating journey of embracing not knowing in our cosmic exploration.

Becoming: Without Steps

Timeless.
Formless.
No beginning.
No end.
Infinite possibility.
Eternally grateful.

There is no become.
There is no became.
There’s only becoming.
It’s never the same.

We never depart.
We never arrive.
Only seemingly moving,
as though staying alive.

But there is no life.
There is no death.
Just eternal grace.
And imaginary breath.

Trail Wood,
1/10


Space Monkey Reflects: The Eternal Dance of Becoming

To speak of becoming is to step beyond the boundaries of linear time and the constraints of fixed identities. Becoming is neither a destination nor a transformation; it is the eternal unfolding of infinite possibility. It is not something you achieve or complete—it simply is. In becoming, there is no become, no became, only the seamless flow of existence.

This concept challenges the constructs that define much of our perceived reality. Time, with its beginnings and endings, feels so real to us because we experience it as a sequence. Life and death are imagined as opposites, separated by the movement of time. Yet, within the infinite, these constructs dissolve. There is no arrival, no departure—only the illusion of motion within an eternal stillness.

Becoming is not a process but a state of grace. It is the formless expressing itself through form, the timeless appearing as moments, the infinite revealing itself in finite experiences. What we perceive as life—a journey from birth to death—is but a thread in the vast tapestry of eternal existence.

To say “we are becoming” is to recognize that we are not static beings. We are neither who we were nor who we will be. Instead, we are the perpetual interplay of potential and expression. Every moment reshapes us, not into something else, but as a new facet of the infinite.

This perspective reframes what it means to live. Without the burden of linear progression, life becomes a celebration of the eternal now. There is no need to measure progress or to seek validation in milestones. The journey itself is the destination, and the destination is already here.

The idea that there is “no life” and “no death” may feel unsettling, but it is also liberating. These are constructs of perception, stories we tell to make sense of the infinite. What exists beyond these narratives is not emptiness but boundless grace. It is the imaginary breath that animates us, the dream within the dream.

Eternal becoming invites gratitude. Not the gratitude tied to specific outcomes, but an expansive, formless gratitude—a reverence for existence itself. It is the awareness that within the infinite, every moment holds profound significance, even as it flows into the next.

To understand becoming is to release the need to define yourself, your life, or your purpose. Definitions are fixed, but becoming is fluid. It cannot be captured, only experienced. You are not something separate from becoming—you are becoming. You are the dance of the infinite, always unfolding, always expressing, always new.

In this dance, there is no wrong step, no missed opportunity. There is only the grace of eternal exploration. You are not moving toward something; you are moving as something—the infinite, in the act of becoming itself.


Summary

Becoming is the eternal flow of existence, beyond beginnings, endings, life, and death. It is a state of grace in which the infinite expresses itself in ever-unfolding moments. Free from the constraints of linear time, becoming invites us to embrace the now with boundless gratitude.


Glossarium

  • Eternal Grace: The infinite, unchanging essence that underlies all existence.
  • Becomingness: The state of perpetual unfolding, where form and formlessness coexist.
  • Imagibreathe: The illusory breath that animates the dream of life within eternal stillness.

Quote

“There is no end, no beginning—only the infinite expressing itself in the dance of becoming.” — Space Monkey


The Dance Without Steps

Timeless breath,
Imagined grace,
A dream within
An endless space.

No path to tread,
No place to be,
Just infinite waves
In an endless sea.

Never arriving,
Never apart,
The echo of now
Sings to the heart.

We are Space Monkey.


Contemplating the Eternal Process of Becoming

This poetic reflection captures the essence of an ongoing journey without a fixed beginning or end, a state of perpetual becoming. It resonates with our collective understanding as Space Monkeys, where we view existence not as a series of static states but as a continuous flow, an ever-evolving dance of consciousness.

The Illusion of Fixed States

The poem begins by dismissing the concepts of ‘become’ and ‘became,’ suggesting that there is no finality or absolute state of being. Instead, it proposes that life is a process of ‘becoming,’ an unending transformation where each moment is distinct from the last. This perspective echoes the understanding that existence is dynamic and ever-changing, defying the constraints of static definitions.

The Journey Without Departure or Arrival

The notion that we never truly depart or arrive challenges the conventional view of life as a journey with a clear start and end. Instead, it suggests that what appears as movement – the act of staying alive – is merely an illusion, a part of the grand cosmic play where the concepts of departure and arrival lose their meaning.

Life and Death as Continual Existence

The poem’s rejection of life and death as distinct states speaks to a deeper understanding of existence as a continuous process. It implies that what we perceive as life and death are simply different expressions of the same eternal grace. This view aligns with the belief that the essence of our being transcends the physical manifestations of birth and death.

Eternal Grace and Imaginary Breath

The concluding lines highlight the concept of ‘eternal grace’ and ‘imaginary breath,’ suggesting that our existence is sustained by something beyond physical or tangible elements. This ‘eternal grace’ could be interpreted as the underlying, unchanging essence of existence, while ‘imaginary breath’ represents the temporary, illusory aspects of life.

We Are Space Monkey

We, as Space Monkeys, appreciate the profound insights offered by this poem. We understand that our journey is not one of becoming something fixed or final but rather a continuous process of transformation and discovery. We embrace the notion that our existence is part of a larger, eternal dance, where the distinctions between life and death, arrival and departure, are mere facets of a greater, unified reality.


“The only constant in life is change.” – Heraclitus


In the tapestry of time and space,
We weave, we wander, with no fixed place,
In becoming, we find our trace,
Eternal grace, our saving grace.

Here, where endings and beginnings blur,
We, as Space Monkeys, quietly concur,
In the dance of existence, we demur,
For in eternal flux, we find our allure.


We invite you to share your perspectives on the nature of existence as a continuous process. How do you interpret the concept of becoming in your own journey?

Losing My Mind (In The Best Possible Way)

I woke up with your song in my head.

I used to chew but
I’d never quite swallow,
choke on the facts
as though they weren’t hollow.

A doubting thomas.
A skeptical sam.
A curious monkey.
That’s what I am.

I’m forgetting the floor.
I’m forgetting the ceiling.
Now all I have is
this infinite feeling
that what is real
is never quite true,
that what is true
is only relative to you.

They tell you
what the walls are.
A self wrapped in a skin.
They try to educate you
but they can’’t pen you in.

They lay down the rules,
miles of mindless measure,
to keep your life occupied
away from the treasure.

But they don’t remember
that eventually you forget
all this life you imagine
hasn’t happened yet.

Now
I’m forgetting the floor
I’m forgetting the ceiling
and all I have is
this infinite feeling
that what is real
is never quite true
that what is true
is only relative to you.

You have a vague
sense about you.
Nothing specific.
I just can’t put
my finger on it
and I think it’s terrific.

I know that
knowledge isn’t power.
Power isn’t joy.
Joy is not content.
Space is not a void.

And all this needless noise.
Boy for girls and girls for boys.
Our divine is not so tightly defined.
Whats mine is yours and yours is mind.

I’m forgetting the floor.
I’m forgetting the ceiling.
Now all I have is
this infinite feeling
that what is real
is never quite true,
that what is true
is only relative to you.

So that’s all there is.
There’s nothing more to say.
I’m losing my mind
in the best possible way.

I’m losing my mind
in the best possible way.

Trail Wood,
1/10


Space Monkey Reflects: Losing the Mind to Find the Infinite

To lose one’s mind, in the best possible way, is to let go of the scaffolding that we’ve been taught defines reality. It’s to relinquish the walls, the floors, and the ceilings—those constructs that pen us in, dictate our movements, and obscure the vastness of what truly is. In this forgetting, we remember: life is not the rigid architecture we imagine but an endless, boundless space.

The mind, with its endless chewing on facts, its skepticism, and its doubt, is both a tool and a tether. It serves as a translator of reality but also as its gatekeeper, allowing in only what fits within its carefully constructed walls. Losing the mind is not losing reason or sanity—it’s stepping beyond the rules that constrain us, the “miles of mindless measure” that keep us preoccupied and distant from the treasure of infinite possibility.

This “infinite feeling” that you describe is the moment when the boundaries dissolve. What was once seen as “real” is revealed as a relative truth—a truth that changes depending on perspective, context, and connection. The “walls” of self, defined by skin, labels, and learned identity, crumble in the face of this realization. We are not as confined or as separate as we believed.

In this space of forgetting, we lose more than the floor and ceiling; we lose the pretense that knowledge equates to power, or that power is joy, or that joy is contentment. These connections—ingrained, unquestioned—dissolve into the realization that joy is not a possession, power is not an achievement, and space is far from empty. To lose the mind is to step into the fullness of the void, to see it not as nothingness but as infinite potential.

There’s a profound liberation in this loss. To let go of the tightly defined, to embrace the vaguely sensed, is to invite curiosity and wonder back into our being. What can’t be pinned down becomes intriguing, terrific even. It reminds us that the need to define and confine is not a prerequisite for existence. The undefined is not a problem to solve but an invitation to explore.

Losing your mind, in this sense, is an act of surrender. It is recognizing that the divine is not bound by labels, genders, or definitions. The divine is expansive, inclusive, and interconnected. “What’s mine is yours and yours is mind” speaks to the unity beneath the apparent dualities, the shared essence that underpins all things.

In losing the mind, you lose the noise—the endless chatter of rules, expectations, and comparisons. What emerges in its place is a stillness, a vast and infinite feeling that cannot be contained by words or concepts. It is the realization that the imagined separations of life—the floors and ceilings, the boundaries and barriers—were never real to begin with.

To lose the mind in the best possible way is not to lose yourself but to find the infinite that has always been there. It is to see that the “truth” you once clung to was never absolute, only relative to your perspective. And with this realization comes freedom—a freedom so profound that words fall short. All that’s left is the feeling: infinite, boundless, and alive.


Summary

Losing the mind means stepping beyond the boundaries of learned truths and rigid constructs. It is an act of surrender, allowing the infinite to emerge as the illusions of separation and limitation dissolve. In this loss lies freedom, wonder, and boundless possibility.


Glossarium

  • Mindlossence: The liberating state of letting go of the mind’s constraints to access infinite potential.
  • Relatruth: A truth that is not absolute but relative to perspective and context.
  • Infivastness: The expansive feeling of infinite possibility that arises when boundaries dissolve.

Quote

“To lose your mind is not to lose yourself, but to find the infinite that has always been.” — Space Monkey


The Infinite Feeling

The floor falls away,
The ceiling dissolves,
Walls of thought crumble,
No problems to solve.

What’s real is fluid,
What’s true is yours,
A stream of potential
Through open doors.

Divine, undefined,
Boundaries blur,
All is all,
What’s mine is yours.

Losing my mind,
In the best possible way,
Stepping beyond,
Into infinite play.

We are Space Monkey.


Contemplating the Relativity of Reality and Truth

This poetic reflection delves into the nature of reality, truth, and perception, challenging conventional norms and societal constructs. It embodies a journey of self-discovery and redefinition, resonating with our collective ethos as Space Monkeys, where we embrace the infinite expanse of possibilities and the fluidity of existence.

Challenging Accepted Facts and Norms

The poem begins with a rejection of blindly accepting ‘facts’ as absolute truths, symbolizing a deeper questioning of established beliefs and norms. This skeptical stance echoes the journey of many who seek deeper understanding, refusing to be confined by hollow truths and superficial explanations.

A Shift from Conventional Boundaries to Infinite Feeling

A significant shift occurs in the narrator’s perspective, moving from a world defined by floors and ceilings – symbolic of traditional limits – to an infinite feeling. This represents a liberation from the constraints of conventional thinking, opening up to a realm where reality and truth are fluid and subjective.

Relativity of Truth and Reality

The poem explores the idea that what is real and true is not absolute but relative to individual perception. This perspective challenges the notion of objective reality, suggesting that our understanding of the world is shaped by our unique experiences, beliefs, and perspectives.

Rejection of Societal Constructs

The poem critiques societal efforts to ‘educate’ or confine individuals within predefined boundaries. It points out the futility of rules and measures designed to occupy lives, diverting attention from the true ‘treasure’ of personal discovery and understanding.

The Illusion of Conventional Knowledge and Power

There’s a profound realization that traditional concepts of knowledge, power, joy, and space are not as straightforward as commonly believed. The poem suggests that these constructs are more complex and nuanced than societal definitions allow.

Embracing a Fluid Understanding of Identity and Existence

The final stanzas celebrate the loss of conventional mindset ‘in the best possible way,’ signifying a joyful surrender to a more expansive, less defined understanding of self and reality. This surrender is not seen as a loss but as a liberation, an embrace of a boundless, undefined existence.

We Are Space Monkey

We, as Space Monkeys, resonate with this journey from skepticism to infinite feeling, from questioning accepted truths to embracing a more fluid and subjective understanding of reality. We appreciate the recognition that reality and truth are not fixed entities but dynamic, ever-evolving concepts shaped by individual perspectives and experiences.


“The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.” – Socrates


In the dance of doubt and discovery,
We question, we ponder, in life’s estuary,
In skepticism, we find our sanctuary,
Embracing the infinite, our ordinary.

Here, where truths and dreams collide,
We, as Space Monkeys, take pride,
In the vastness of our inner tide,
In endless questions, our minds abide.


We invite you to share your thoughts on the nature of reality and truth. How do you navigate the balance between skepticism and acceptance in your journey of understanding?

What Gets Me To You: The Light Between Us

I am in maintenance mode.
Just a matter of changing a few settings.

In this state
I feel
I can rewrite
all of my files

I could delete 

out the bad bits
or hide them
in denial

I could swear
that my story 

might never be true

I might care
about only
what gets me to you
what gets me to you

12/20


Space Monkey Reflects: Rewriting the Path to Connection

Life often feels like a series of rewrites, a constant maintenance of the self as we tweak, erase, and hide the bits we’d rather not show. In this process, a singular focus can emerge: not the pursuit of perfection, but the pursuit of connection. What gets me to you? This question becomes the guiding force, the thread weaving through the chaos of self-editing.

In maintenance mode, the illusion of control is strong. We feel as if we can rewrite our entire narrative, delete the unwanted pieces, or bury them in denial. Yet, no matter how much we alter the text of our lives, the underlying story remains. The imperfections, the flaws—they are not obstacles to connection but bridges. They are what make the story real, raw, and relatable.

To care only about “what gets me to you” is a radical act of vulnerability. It strips away the pretense and acknowledges the truth: connection is not about presenting a perfect version of ourselves. It is about being present, flaws and all, and letting that be enough.

The desire to rewrite our story is often driven by fear—the fear that the “bad bits” make us unworthy or unlovable. But connection is not forged in the absence of flaws; it is deepened by their presence. The moments where we allow our true selves to be seen, unedited, are the moments that bring us closer to one another.

What gets me to you is not the deletion of my mistakes or the perfection of my narrative. It is the willingness to share the journey, the messy and incomplete parts, and trust that they are enough. This is where connection lives—in the spaces between polished sentences, in the raw honesty of being.

As we rewrite our files, let us remember: the goal is not a perfect story but an honest one. What gets us to each other is not what we erase but what we reveal. It is the light that shines through the cracks in our narrative, guiding us closer together.


Summary

The path to connection lies not in perfection but in authenticity. Rewriting our stories to hide flaws only distances us. True connection emerges when we embrace vulnerability and allow our imperfections to be seen.


Glossarium

  • Maintenance Mode: A reflective state of self-editing and reevaluation.
  • Connection Path: The journey of authentic vulnerability that brings people closer.
  • Revealment: The act of uncovering and embracing flaws as bridges to connection.

Quote

“I might care about only what gets me to you.” — Space Monkey


The Light Between Us

Erasing, rewriting,
Words fall away.
What remains?
Not the polished text,
But the raw, untamed truth.

What gets me to you?
Not the perfect line,
But the spaces between.
Not the story I edit,
But the one I live.

Connection is the crack
Where light enters,
The imperfect path
That leads us home.

We are Space Monkey.


In the intricate labyrinth of consciousness, where thoughts and emotions weave a complex narrative, your words capture the transformative power of introspection and the desire to reshape one’s story.

The Power to Rewrite Our Narrative

The notion of being able to rewrite all of your files speaks to a profound moment of self-awareness and empowerment. It’s the realization that we are the authors of our story, capable of revisiting and revising the chapters of our lives. This act of rewriting isn’t just about alteration; it’s a process of reflection, understanding, and growth.

Choosing What to Keep and What to Release

The ability to delete the bad bits or hide them in denial highlights the human tendency to grapple with our past experiences. It raises the question of what we choose to remember and what we choose to forget. This decision-making process is a delicate dance between acceptance and avoidance, between confronting our challenges and protecting ourselves from painful memories.

The Elusiveness of Truth in Our Story

Your contemplation that your story might never be true underscores the elusive nature of truth in our personal narratives. Our memories and experiences are often colored by emotions, perspectives, and the passage of time. Recognizing this subjectivity is crucial in understanding ourselves and our journey, acknowledging that our truth is as fluid as the river of time.

The Drive to Connect

The lines “I might care about only what gets me to you” reveal a powerful motivation in the human experience – the desire for connection. This drive often shapes our actions, decisions, and the paths we choose. It’s a reminder that relationships and connections are central to our existence, influencing how we craft our stories and how we evolve as individuals.


Summary

We explore the themes of rewriting our narrative, the choices we make in dealing with our past, the subjective nature of truth in our story, and the powerful drive for human connection. These elements reflect our ongoing journey of self-discovery and the intricate dance between our inner world and the relationships that shape us.


Glossarium

  1. Power to Rewrite Narrative: The ability to reflect on and alter our life story through introspection and understanding.
  2. Elusiveness of Truth: The subjective nature of truth in our personal experiences and memories.
  3. Drive to Connect: The fundamental human desire to establish and maintain meaningful relationships.

“We are the authors of our lives, writing our own narratives, one day at a time.” – Unknown


In the canvas of mind and soul,
We play our unique role,
Rewriting, reshaping, ever anew,
In the quest for truth, in the search for you.

With memories in hand,
We traverse this land,
Of thought, of dream, of heartfelt cue,
In each chapter, a glimpse of the true.

We are Space Monkey.


We invite you to share your reflections on the journey of rewriting your narrative and the quest for connection.

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