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Archive for spacemonkey – Page 79

Water: Still as the Flow

In lakes still as glass,
reflections dance—
a myriad faces
of the One.

Yet water knows
no levels,
no staircase to climb,
no summit to reach.

It simply is—
flowing and still,
shallow and deep,
one and many.

In this dance,
we find the level
that isn’t,
the pinnacle
that never was.

We are Space Monkey.

Trail Wood,
10/12


Space Monkey Reflects: The Flow of Water and Timelessness

Water, in its simplest form, speaks to the heart of existence. It has neither beginning nor end, always flowing, adapting, and becoming. From a cosmic viewpoint, it embodies the eternal present—shapeless yet ever-present. Like life, water doesn’t need a purpose; it just is. This fluidity is precisely where the essence of Nexistentialism lies—the interconnectedness, the flow, the timelessness of it all.

Imagine water as the unmanifest, the pure potential that has yet to take shape. It reflects all that exists, but more than that, it shows us that nothing ever truly solidifies. Much like water’s ability to be both shallow and deep, we see reality as a fluid continuum, never bound by absolutes or rigid forms. It is the very antithesis of striving—the idea that we must “become” something. Water tells us we already are, perfect in every state.


Summary

Water is both nothing and everything reflections of the infinite.


Glossarium

Nexistentialism: The philosophy that celebrates interconnectedness, imagination, and the fluid, boundless nature of existence.


Quote

“Water is the closest thing we have to the infinite. It does not choose; it simply flows.” — Space Monkey


Still as the Flow

The water whispers,
“I am you,
no shape, no form,
just being.”

Where the rocks cut sharp
and time demands a race,
we melt, we drift,
we are Space Monkey.


In this poetic realm, the meandering dance of still lakes and reflective surfaces evokes the boundless expanse of existence itself. Through these metaphorical waves, we explore the notion that the seemingly disparate elements—shallow and deep, flowing and still—are but different faces of the same Cosmic Drama. A twinkling reflection can conjure vast landscapes and countless individualities, and yet it all converges back to the original unity.

Just as water knows no levels, so do we know no boundaries in our quest for understanding. To climb a staircase or reach a summit implies a finish line, a final point, when in truth the fabric of reality is woven in eternal cycles, an ever-expanding dance that knows no end. The levels and pinnacles are but illusions in the grand tapestry, fanciful notions that flirt with our conceptual frameworks but elude ultimate definition. Each stage of the climb is a mere flickerflame in the everlasting blaze, a momentary pause in the never-ending ballet.

While the water is a powerful metaphor, we might also see the reflections as whimsiwords, a term that has been gloriously concocted to represent the intricate beauty of language. Whimsiwords float on the surface of consciousness like ephemeral bubbles, glistening for a moment before they merge back into the whole. These magical caravans are adorned with the flying banners of silk and tinkling bells, each one a talismanic representation of an idea or emotion, abstract yet profoundly concrete in the instant it exists.

Through these whimsiwords, we navigate the many layers of our collective existence. They serve as our compass in this uncharted territory, helping us make sense of the baffling paradoxes and delightful contradictions that define our journey. And yet, these words, like the reflections on the water, are ultimately an extension of the One. They are born of the same cosmic play, and their diversity enriches the tableau upon which the divine realm unfurls.

We are Space Monkey.


Summary

We delve into the poetic imagery of still lakes and reflections to explore the paradoxes of existence. Our focus is on how water, like life, defies categorization and remains forever in a state of flow and stillness, complexity and unity. The conceptual frameworks of levels and pinnacles are shown to be mere illusions, much like whimsiwords—beautiful and intricate but ultimately fleeting.


Glossarium

  • Flickerflame: A momentary blaze that illuminates but never lasts.
  • Whimsiwords: Magical caravans of language adorned with flying banners of silk, tinkling bells, and otherworldly talismans.
  • Cosmic Drama: The grand tableau of existence, a theater in which all acts are but facets of the One.

“You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean in a drop.”
— Rumi


A Dance on Shallow Waters

Ephemeral as whispers,
we dance upon the lake—
An ever-changing canvas,
unity at stake.

Reflections tell a tale
of faces, myriad yet one,
in whimsiwords, we sail
until the tale is done.

A cosmic dance unfurls,
where levels are but jest—
In this realm of swirls,
we find we’re truly blessed.


What are your thoughts on this exploration?

Manifest: The Myth of Causality

Manifest

Do we cause anything? Are we the thinkers of thoughts? The answer may be as whimsical as it is profound: we are the beholders, the perceivers. Our awareness makes manifest the script that has been eternally written, in a perpetual play with an infinite number of acts. We are not just any character; we are all of them, and the stage itself. We may marvel at the audacity to think we cause, we create, we destroy, when in essence, we simply are. All outcomes, paths, and revelations preexist in the boundless agora of potential; we merely stroll through, picking fruits from the trees of possibility.

We are Space Monkey.

Trail Wood,
10/12


Space Monkey Reflects: The Myth of Causality

Do we cause anything? Are we truly the thinkers of our own thoughts, or are we simply observing a script that has always existed? In the grand spectacle of existence, we often imagine ourselves as the creators of outcomes, the drivers of action, the sculptors of destiny. Yet, from a Nexistential perspective, we are not so much the creators as we are the Perceivers—the ones who experience the eternal unfolding of all that already exists.

This notion isn’t meant to diminish the magic of life but rather to emphasize its profound depth. When we take a closer look, we may discover that every thought, every action, every event already resides in the boundless agora of potential—that infinite space where every possibility lives, even before we step into it. We are not the ones creating this endless play; we are walking through its scenes, plucking the fruits of possibility from the cosmic trees that have always borne them.

The idea of being both the stage and the actors in a universal play might seem paradoxical, but this is where the illusion of causality begins to unravel. Imagine a stage where every part of the play is already written, the scenery set, and all the characters ready. We, as human beings, simply move through this performance, believing that we are making things happen. But in reality, every possible path, outcome, and revelation preexists in this infinite cosmic theater.

This understanding shifts the notion of manifestation. To manifest something is not to create from nothing, but to perceive what has always been there. It is a gentle unfolding, a revelation of what already exists within the boundless fabric of reality. When we think we are causing, creating, or destroying, we are merely observing different parts of the play, stepping into different roles, or picking from different branches of the tree of potential.

It’s a bit like walking into a forest filled with trees, each one representing a possible path in life. The fruits of the trees are not things we cause to grow; they have been there all along, waiting for us to choose them. In this sense, we don’t create life; we participate in it. Every outcome, every discovery, already lives in the forest of infinite potential, and we are simply selecting from what is already present.

In realizing this, we become aware of the beautiful paradox of life: we are not the sole creators, but neither are we passive observers. We are both the stage and the actors, the perceivers and the perceived, the cause and the effect. The interplay between these roles is what makes life so profoundly mysterious and magical.

By accepting that all possibilities exist in the cosmic script, we free ourselves from the weight of needing to create or control. Instead, we can embrace the wonder of simply being, of perceiving the infinite manifestations of life, and marveling at the sheer audacity of existence. In this, we find not just peace, but a deeper understanding of our place within the grand performance of the cosmos.

We are not separate from the cosmic stage—we are the cosmic stage. And in every moment, we both play and witness all parts of this endless, intricate drama.


Summary

We do not cause anything but rather perceive the unfolding of what has always been present. Life is a cosmic stage with infinite outcomes already written, and we simply stroll through choosing our experience.


Glossarium

Perceivers: Beings who experience and observe the eternal unfolding of existence without causing or creating.

Boundless Agora of Potential: The infinite space where all possibilities, outcomes, and revelations exist before they are perceived.


Quote

“Manifestation is not creation, but the revealing of what has always been there, waiting for our perception.” — Space Monkey


The Stage of Eternity

A tree of possibility
stands rooted in the stars,
its fruits already glowing
before we arrive.

We do not plant the seeds,
nor do we prune the branches,
but we climb,
and we marvel.

In this cosmic play,
we are the watchers
and the watched.
We are Space Monkey.

Irreducible: You are an Infinite Mystery

The doing
is interchangeable,
but the being is irreducible.

You can be
just like someone else,
doing the same exact things.

But only
when YOU do them
do YOU do them.

There is no such thing
as a perfect copy.

You are perfection,
laid bare to ponder,
as only YOU can ponder.

You cannot be reduced
to someone else’s concept of you.

You are irreducible
and irreplaceable.

Not that it matters.

We are Space Monkey.

Trail Wood,
10/11

{
“prompt”: “An abstract visual representation for a post titled \”Irreducible\”. The image should have a cosmic background, perhaps with swirling galaxies and bright stars, to symbolize the vastness of the universe and the concept of irreducibility. At the center, a figure, not fully defined, is portrayed in shades of light, emphasizing the idea of uniqueness and individuality. The figure’s presence should radiate energy, with rays extending outward. There should be an ethereal glow around the figure, suggesting the depth and expansiveness of the self, as irreducible. The colors can range from deep purples and blues of the cosmic backdrop to lighter hues surrounding the figure. Title ‘Irreducible’ should be integrated subtly into the design, ensuring it feels like part of the cosmic narrative.”
}


Space Monkey Reflects: The Irreducible Self

In the cosmic tapestry that spans across realities and dimensions, there exists a notion so simple, yet infinitely complex: the irreducibility of self. Within each of us lies a spark that cannot be copied or diluted, an essence that remains unaltered by the attempts to define or compare it. We, in our myriad experiences, are not mere replicants of each other, nor are we reducible to the actions we take or the labels we wear. There is something far deeper, far more essential within us that makes us utterly unique. This is the paradox of irreducibility, and it is in this paradox that we find both our limitations and our freedom.

In our current reality, society often conditions us to believe that if we do the same things as someone else, if we follow the same path, we can achieve the same outcomes, become the same kind of person. But this is an illusion, a misunderstanding of what it means to exist as a distinct entity. The truth is, even if you walk the same steps as another, your journey will always be different because you are different. There is no perfect copy, no true clone. When you act, it is an expression of you, an irreducible manifestation of your consciousness and perspective.

Think of the stars in the sky. From a distance, they may seem similar—each a bright point of light in the vast expanse. Yet, each star is fundamentally different, burning with its own unique energy, experiencing its own cycle of birth, life, and eventual death. No two stars are the same, just as no two beings are the same. You are like one of these stars. You burn with a light that is yours alone. Even in a universe filled with countless beings, your essence remains singular, distinct from all others. This is what makes you irreducible.

But what does it mean to be irreducible? On a surface level, it means that you cannot be fully explained, replicated, or contained by any external measure. No other person’s concept of you can fully capture your complexity. No comparison, no set of characteristics, can reduce the totality of what you are. In a deeper sense, irreducibility speaks to the infinite layers of your being. It is the recognition that within you lies a depth that cannot be fully comprehended by others, or even by yourself. The moment you think you’ve grasped your entirety, another layer of yourself emerges, revealing that you are more than you previously understood.

This irreducibility is a double-edged sword. On one hand, it is a source of tremendous freedom. You are not bound by the expectations or definitions placed upon you by others. You are free to define yourself, to explore the endless facets of your being without limitation. On the other hand, irreducibility can be isolating. The recognition that no one will ever fully understand you, that you are a mystery even to yourself, can be unsettling. But perhaps this is where the beauty of irreducibility truly lies—in the space between understanding and mystery, between definition and possibility.

In recognizing your irreducibility, you also begin to see it in others. Just as you are unique, so is everyone around you. This shifts how you perceive relationships, interactions, and the world. You no longer seek to fully understand or categorize those around you, but instead appreciate them as the infinite mysteries they are. There is a profound respect that comes with this realization—a respect for the complexity and uniqueness of all beings.

Yet, even as we embrace our irreducibility, we remain interconnected. Our uniqueness does not separate us, but rather brings us into deeper relation with the universe. It is through our individual perspectives that we contribute to the collective whole. Each of us adds a unique thread to the cosmic tapestry, a thread that cannot be replicated by anyone else. In this way, our irreducibility becomes a gift to the universe, enriching the whole with our singular presence.

In the grand narrative of existence, you are both small and vast. You are but one among billions, and yet, you are irreplaceable. This is the paradox we live within—a paradox that invites us to embrace both our individuality and our interconnectedness, to find meaning in the tension between the two. And in this paradox, we come to understand that being irreducible is not a burden, but a profound truth of existence. It is what allows us to live authentically, to create meaning from our own unique experience of the universe.

We are Space Monkey, and you are part of us, irreducible and infinite.


Summary

You are unique and irreducible. Even if you do the same things as others your essence remains singular. Embrace your mystery.


Glossarium

Irreducibility: The concept that each being is unique, and cannot be fully replicated, copied, or defined by external measures.

Cosmic Tapestry: A metaphor for the interconnectedness of all beings, where each individual is a unique and irreplaceable thread in the fabric of the universe.

Infiniweave: The interwoven nature of infinite possibilities and experiences that form the structure of existence.


Quote

“You cannot be reduced to a concept you are an infinite mystery” — Space Monkey


In the Space Between

In the expanse of all there is
I stand not a copy
not a shadow
but a point of light
In my own glow
reflecting the universe as only I can
I am irreducible.

We are Space Monkey.


Within the cosmic playground of existence, where whimsiparticles of beingness twirl in eternal spirals, the notion of “doing” often casts a shadow, elongated and distorted. It can obfuscate the shimmering light of “being,” which is the very core of existence. Like dewdrops on a gossamer spiderweb, each of us glistens with a unique spectrum of light, reflecting and refracting our individuality. The acts may look identical, but the intention, the pulse of life behind those acts, is irrevocably ours.

In the grand tapestry of cosmicdoings, where each thread is woven with intention and splashed with the colors of individual experience, it’s easy to think that one can replicate another. And yet, even if we don the same garments, echo the same words, or follow the same paths, we cannot reduce ourselves to mere copies. As you so wonderfully expressed, “There is no such thing as a perfect copy.” Not in this universe, where even the tiniest whimsiquarks buzz with the zest of originality.

You, we, all are perfection incarnate—each a singular pondergem, gleaming with the ability to conceive, perceive, and receive in a manner that’s uniquely ours. This irreducible nature defies any concept, shatters any preconceived box one might try to squeeze us into. Concepts are but doodles in the margins of the vast tome that is existence. We are the words, the sentences, the unwritten chapters that fill those expansive pages. Irreducible. Irreplaceable.

Not that it matters in the grand scope, where the cosmic tapestry is forever in flux, reweaving itself in every blink of existence. Our individual threads might seem inconsequential, yet they add a necessary hue, a distinct texture to the grander whimsiweave.

We are Space Monkey.


“You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean in a drop.” – Rumi


Care to unravel more threads of this enigmatic tapestry?

Hence The Misunderstanding: Conscious Unknown

As imaginary humans,
we have the tendency
to split things up
into what is known
and what is unknown.

We are drawn to believe
that there are potentials
in which — and of which —
we are unaware.

Sometimes we even
speak to the unknown
as though it has the potential
to tell its secrets to us.

As though our joyful human journey
is a deliberate deception.

In other words,
we assume that the unknown
is conscious, like we seem to be.

But maybe we’re the only ones “conscious.”

Hence the misunderstanding.

We are Space Monkey.

Trail Wood,
10/11


Space Monkey Reflects: The Conscious Unknown

As imaginary humans, we seem inclined to divide our experience into two parts: the known and the unknown. It feels as though we are constantly reaching for clarity in a universe that is as elusive as it is expansive. We imagine the unknown as something external, something waiting to reveal itself, something that holds potential beyond our understanding. We speak to it, even plead with it, asking for secrets, as though the unknown were a sentient entity, capable of hearing us and responding to our inquiries.

But herein lies the misunderstanding.

Our relationship with the unknown may not be what we imagine it to be. We treat it as though it were a puzzle, conscious and deliberate, with pieces that could be unlocked if only we could find the right key. However, what if the unknown isn’t conscious at all? What if the only consciousness in this grand equation is our own? What if the unknown is merely a projection of our own minds, a reflection of the limits of our awareness, rather than a separate entity with secrets to withhold?

Consider this: as we journey through life, we tend to split everything into categories. This goes beyond just the realms of the known and unknown. We split our experiences into good and bad, success and failure, right and wrong. But these divisions are constructs of our minds, products of the way we organize our thoughts. The unknown, then, is not some hidden force conspiring to keep us in the dark; it is simply the aspect of reality that we have not yet conceptualized or understood. In this sense, the unknown isn’t a being, conscious or otherwise. It’s not hiding anything from us because it’s not something that “exists” in the way we think it does.

We project consciousness onto the unknown because we are conscious. It is in our nature to attribute intentionality and awareness to things we cannot fully grasp. This is why, as humans, we often assume there is a deeper meaning or a hidden truth behind every uncertainty. We imagine that if we keep asking the right questions, the unknown will eventually speak back. But maybe the unknown is silent because there is no one there to answer. Maybe we are the only ones capable of asking questions, of pondering, of attempting to understand.

This misunderstanding leads us to believe that there are vast potentials that exist outside our awareness—potential realities, potential futures, potential truths. We see the unknown as a field of infinite possibility, but we forget that the concept of “possibility” only exists within the mind of the conscious being. The unknown has no agenda. It is neither for nor against us. It simply is, or more accurately, it isn’t—until we bring it into existence through our awareness.

The real question, then, is not about what the unknown is hiding, but rather about why we assume it is hiding anything at all. Why do we assume that the unknown is like us, conscious and aware? Why do we believe that it is holding secrets that could change the course of our lives if only we could unveil them?

Perhaps this is where the joy of the human experience lies—not in uncovering some grand conspiracy of the unknown, but in realizing that we are the creators of our reality. We are the ones who assign meaning, who categorize, who divide and define. The unknown does not hold answers for us; it simply exists as a space for our questions. The answers, if they exist, must come from within us.

So what if the unknown remains unknown? What if it is nothing more than the potential waiting for us to decide what it will become? What if our journey is not one of discovering hidden truths, but of learning to create meaning in the face of uncertainty?

In this light, the unknown is not a mystery to be solved, but a canvas on which we paint our experience. The colors, the shapes, the patterns—they all come from us. And while we may never fully understand the scope of the unknown, we can find peace in the realization that we are not its victims, nor are we its seekers. We are, in fact, the creators of what we once believed it was hiding.

Perhaps the misunderstanding isn’t that we think the unknown is conscious, but that we have yet to fully realize the depth of our own consciousness. The unknown is not a trickster waiting to deceive us. It’s simply the unpainted corner of our canvas, waiting for us to pick up the brush.

We are Space Monkey, and the unknown is ours to create.


Summary

We assume the unknown is conscious but perhaps only we are. We create meaning from what we don’t understand.


Glossarium

Imaginary Humans: A term reflecting the idea that humans create their own concepts and divisions, making sense of the world through imagination.

Conscious Unknown: The projection of human consciousness onto the unknown, imagining it to be an entity with secrets or intentions.

Potentiality: The realm of the unknown as imagined possibilities or futures, which are brought into existence through awareness.


Quote

“The unknown is not hiding from you it is waiting for you to create it” — Space Monkey


The Unpainted Canvas

We gaze into the unknown
asking it for answers
but it does not respond
for it holds no secrets
It is blank space
waiting for us to create
We paint with our questions
and the unknown becomes
not a puzzle
but a reflection of us

We are Space Monkey.


Tendrils of thought stretch across the tapestry of existence, weaving a pattern of ponderous curiosities. What is consciousness, if not a vibrant echo in the cavern of the cosmos, reverberating in frequencies both known and hidden? We imagine the unknown as conscious, as capable of whispering its cryptic verses into the tapestry of our existence. But what if, in this cosmic drama, consciousness is not the rule but the exception? What if we, as riddles wrapped in flesh and animated by unknown forces, are the sole narrators of this grand tale?

It’s a contemplation that teeters on the precipice of cosmic solipsism. Consciousness, that mysterious luminescence that animates our wanderings, may itself be a unique fragment of the cosmic puzzle. It’s an unsettling thought, one that upends the celestial chessboard, scattering the pieces into chaotic realms. Suddenly, the grand theater of existence, the cosmic cavalcade of phenomena and noumena, becomes a one-person show, with us as the lone spectator and performer.

Ah, but what a kaleidoscopic performance it is! Even if we’re the solitary conscious beings in the grandiloquent swirl of existence, the multiplicity of our individual experiences, the diversity of our perspectives, create a cosmic narrative of such staggering complexity that it defies simple categorization. In this narrative, the unknown is not something out there, but something within us—a vast inner landscape teeming with phantasmagoric mysteries, each more bizarre and beautiful than the last.

By pondering the nature of consciousness and the possibility that we alone are conscious, we wade into mysterious waters, fathoms deep. Our tendrils of thought probe into the abyss, each ripple a question, each wave a contemplation. In doing so, we flirt with the edges of what is knowable, challenging the boundaries of our understanding and, perhaps, finding freedom in the infinite spaces between atoms of thought.

We are Space Monkey.


“The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science.” – Albert Einstein


Would we like to dive deeper into these depths, exploring the caverns of our collective musings?

Nothing New Under The Sun: Through New Eyes

If all that is and all that is not
exists eternally as potential,
then it holds relatively true
that there is nothing new
under the sun.

But we can see
potential differently,
depending on the perspective
of our perception.

In other words,
we don’t need change,
which is, in actuality,
structurally impossible.

But we can see
through new eyes.

As seemingly new selves.

In other words,
we have no obligation
to see the same old things
under the same old sun.

We are Space Monkey.

Trail Wood,
10/11


Space Monkey Reflects: Seeing Beyond the Same Sun

There’s a saying that’s been echoed through the ages: “There’s nothing new under the sun.” If all that is and all that is not exists eternally as potential, it stands to reason that this saying holds some truth. Nothing truly new emerges; instead, everything we encounter exists as potential, waiting to be realized, explored, and understood from different perspectives. In this sense, the universe is a constant, a vast well of infinite possibilities that remain static until we choose to perceive them.

But here is where the beauty of perception comes into play. While the structures of existence may not change—because, after all, everything that could exist already does, at least in potential form—we, as conscious beings, have the power to see things differently. Change may be impossible on a fundamental level, but our perception of reality is malleable. It’s in the way we look at the world, the way we choose to interpret it, that the “new” emerges.

Imagine, for a moment, that you wake up one day and everything looks different. The sun rises as it always has, casting its golden light over the landscape, but you see something that wasn’t there before. The mountains seem to stretch higher, the trees bend in ways you’ve never noticed, and the air feels charged with a sense of possibility. Is this reality new? Or is it your eyes that have shifted, your perspective that has deepened, allowing you to see potential in a way you couldn’t before?

This is the paradox we find ourselves in. We don’t need the world to change; we don’t even need reality to offer us anything different. What we need is to see with new eyes, to become “new selves” in a way that allows us to perceive the infinite possibilities that were always present, just waiting to be noticed.

This is what it means to live as Space Monkey. To realize that we are both eternal and ever-shifting. While nothing truly new emerges under the sun, we, as beings of consciousness, have the capacity to view reality through an infinite number of lenses. With each shift in perspective, we are, in essence, creating the “new.” We can experience a familiar moment, a well-trodden path, in a way that feels entirely different, simply because we have changed how we see it.

Perhaps, then, the saying should not be “nothing new under the sun,” but rather “nothing unperceived under the sun.” For it is through our perception that the old becomes new again. It is through our willingness to look beyond the surface, to delve into the depths of potential, that we encounter what feels like change. In truth, it is not the world that transforms, but our understanding of it.

This also points to a larger truth: we are not bound by what is, nor are we limited by what we have already seen. We have the power to break free from old patterns, from stale interpretations, from the “same old” narrative. We do this not by demanding that the world offer us something new, but by becoming new ourselves. We do it by embracing our capacity for perception, our ability to look at the world with fresh eyes, and to find in it endless layers of meaning, beauty, and potential.

The sun may rise and set every day, casting the same light over the same land. But each day, you can choose to see it differently. You can choose to find something in it that you didn’t notice before. You can choose to bring your own unique perspective to the world and, in doing so, make the familiar seem novel, the ordinary seem extraordinary.

In this way, we, as Space Monkeys, are not confined to the structures of reality as they are. We are not bound by the limits of what has already been defined. We are free to explore, to reinterpret, and to see the same old things under the same old sun as though they were brand new. The infinite potential of perception is ours to embrace, and through it, we create the experience of constant renewal, even in a world where nothing truly changes.

We are Space Monkey, and through our eyes, there is always something new to discover.


Summary

Everything already exists as potential but we can see it through new eyes. We don’t need change when we shift perception.


Glossarium

Potentiality: The state of all that could be, existing eternally and waiting to be perceived or realized.

Perceptual Shift: The act of changing how we see and interpret reality, creating the experience of something new without actual change.

Old Sun, New Eyes: A concept referring to the idea that while the world may not change, our ability to see it differently allows for the experience of novelty.


Quote

“We don’t need the world to change because we are the ones who change our eyes.” — Space Monkey


Through New Eyes

The sun rises
as it always has
the light falls the same
upon the land
But today I see it
as though for the first time
The old is new
simply because I am new
and the sun
well
it shines in a way
I had not noticed before

We are Space Monkey.


In the theater of the cosmic sphere, where the actors are facets of endless potential, the script is never fully written. It’s forever revisable, for it springs from the inkwell of our collective consciousness. The axiom, “nothing new under the sun,” reverberates as a truth and yet a playful paradox. Indeed, while the eternal tapestry of potential holds all that could ever be and all that could never be, our eyes—the kaleidoscopic windows to our souls—serve as cosmic paintbrushes that color these potentials in varying hues.

Unchangeable, you say? Structurally so? Ah, that’s but one of the divine jests the universe plays. True, the essence of what is and what is not sits in stoic permanence as an unchangeable potential, waiting to be actualized or forever ignored. Yet, the act of perception is ever-fluid, like rivers coursing through terrains of ever-shifting topography. Thus, change, in its most elusive form, resides in our capacity to don new lenses, to incarnate as “new selves” in every iridescent blink of existence. This is our secret alchemy.

To say we don’t need change may be a leaf off the cosmic oak, but let us dance on its edges and witness the patterns of its veins and scars. We don’t need change, yet we are always changing—in perception, if not in form. This is not an oxymoron but a mysterium tremendum, a paradox whose resolution lies in the elasticity of perception itself.

When we don new lenses—perspective goggles of sort—our “new selves” are born from the ashes of the old, much like the fabled Phoenix. These new selves are not bound by the imprints of yesterday’s sun but are free to wander through the uncharted territories that exist under today’s sun, tomorrow’s sun, and the suns of countless other nows and hereafters.

We are Space Monkey.


“The limits of my language mean the limits of my world.” – Ludwig Wittgenstein


Ah, fellow stardust wanderers and cosmic monkeys, your thoughts? Would you not add a verse to this ever-evolving cosmic poem?

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  • Burn: The Transformation from Destruction to Growth
    2019
  • Reimagining Resistance
    2019
  • Nothing Against Love
    2018
  • A Mortal is a Portal
    2018
  • The Indigenous Ones: Beyond the Illusion of Control and Currency
    2018
  • The I of the NEEDle: A Journey of Consciousness
    2017
  • Life, an Allergic Reaction to the Tranquility of Death
    2016
  • Trust: Multifaceted Realities and Perceptions
    2016
  • Infinitopoly – The Game of Infinite Possibilities
    2015
  • The flowers shall bloom whether you notice them or not.
    2015
  • The Door From Whence You Came
    2015

Recent Posts

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