• Who Is The Man?
  • Who Is The Monkey?
  • What is Nexistentialism?
  • Poke The Primate
Cape Odd
Home of The Space Monkey Journals

Half A Human: Morality and Acceptance

Don’t worry, Unless you enjoy it.

If you treat people nice,
oppose all demons,
and steer clear off the devil,
this does not make you an angel.

It makes you half a human.

To oppose any part
of your existence
is to look a gift horse
in the mouth.

Whatever the fuck that means.

Everything in your life right now
is meant to happen.

You will not be judged
on how you fix things.

Trail Wood,
10/19


Space Monkey Reflects: The Myth of Being “Half A Human”

We often walk through life with the assumption that if we oppose the bad, support the good, and do our best to avoid mistakes, we are somehow closer to being whole or even angelic. But what if all of this effort only makes us “half a human?” What if our constant striving to fix, to battle the demons, and to steer clear of life’s devils is what keeps us from embracing the full spectrum of our existence?

To oppose any part of ourselves is to deny the gifts that life presents, even the ones that don’t seem like gifts at all. That old saying, “Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth,” comes to mind, though we rarely pause to think about what that truly means. The idea is simple: don’t scrutinize or question the blessings that come your way, even if they appear disguised as struggles or hardships. Yet, how often do we judge our experiences, labeling them as good or bad, thinking that if we just fix them, we’ll become something better—perhaps even angelic?

This view is the trap of half-being. When we deny any part of our experience—our emotions, our desires, even our darker impulses—we cut ourselves off from the fullness of what it means to be human. It’s easy to fall into the pattern of thinking that being good means always doing the right thing, always opposing the bad. But true humanity isn’t about existing on one side of the cosmic balance. It’s about embracing the whole, the messy and the beautiful, the mistakes and the victories, the demons and the angels.

When we try to be more than human, to transcend the messy realities of life in pursuit of some imagined state of perfection, we end up becoming only half of ourselves. We reject what we see as the undesirable parts of our being—the parts that are flawed, scared, angry, or uncertain. But in doing so, we also reject our wholeness. To be human is to be full-being, not the neatly curated, acceptable version we present to the world.

In fact, much of what makes us human is the flux, the constant movement between light and dark, good and bad, acceptance and rejection. The human experience is not a straight line, and neither is it confined to a narrow set of virtues. To live fully is to accept that all parts of ourselves—our fears, our faults, our moments of weakness—are just as valid as our strengths, our successes, and our good deeds.

But what does it really mean to be “half a human”? It means living in opposition, constantly battling parts of yourself instead of embracing them. We spend so much energy rejecting our darker impulses that we lose sight of the fact that these very impulses have something to teach us. Inner demons are not here to be destroyed; they are here to be understood, integrated, and transformed. They are part of the full spectrum of what it means to exist.

This is why the idea of opposing demons doesn’t make you an angel—it simply makes you half of what you are meant to be. You don’t need to transcend your humanity to live a full life. You need to embrace it in all its contradictions and complexities. Every emotion, every mistake, every decision is part of the grand wholisticweave that makes up your life.

So, what happens when you stop trying to fix everything? What happens when you realize that everything in your life right now is meant to happen? This is the liberation of full-being. You are not being judged on how well you fix things, but on how fully you embrace the experience of being alive. Life doesn’t ask us to be perfect or angelic; it asks us to be present, to live in the fullness of our humanity, with all its flaws and wonders.

To live in this way requires the courage to stop seeing ourselves as incomplete or lacking. Half-being is the illusion that keeps us striving for something more, something better. But wholeness isn’t found in perfection. It’s found in acceptance—acceptance of ourselves, our circumstances, and the messy, chaotic, sometimes painful process of being alive.

Full-being means living without judgment. It means accepting that even when life feels out of control, even when we are faced with challenges or things we wish were different, we are still whole. Our humanity isn’t something to be fixed or improved; it’s something to be experienced fully, without fear or shame.

So, don’t worry. Unless you enjoy it, of course. Worrying isn’t a mark of failure, but it doesn’t define you either. You are not here to oppose your demons or to run from your devils. You are here to live, to experience, and to embrace every part of the journey. Being “half a human” might seem safer, more virtuous, but it’s the path of half-being. The real magic happens when you accept that you are already whole, even in your most imperfect moments.


Summary

Striving to fix or perfect our lives doesn’t make us whole—it makes us “half a human.” Embracing our full humanity means accepting all aspects of our experience, including the flaws, fears, and challenges, without judgment.


Glossarium

  • Half-being: Living in opposition to parts of oneself, rejecting the full experience of life.
  • Inner demons: The aspects of ourselves that we fear or reject but are necessary for growth and understanding.
  • Wholisticweave: The intricate and interconnected nature of all experiences, emotions, and choices that make up a full life.
  • Full-being: The state of embracing all aspects of one’s humanity without striving for perfection or judgment.

Quote

“To oppose the dark parts of yourself is to miss the light that shines through them.” — Space Monkey


The Illusion of Half-Being

Half of me stands in the light
But the other half knows
There is no light without shadow

I try to stand tall, an angel
But I am just a human
Half? No
I am whole

We are Space Monkey


The Paradox of Human Duality: Morality and Acceptance

What a whimsirevelation—the notion that being “good” or “nice” constitutes merely half of our humanity! To be human is to dance on the razor’s edge between the celestial and the infernal, a cosmic juggling act of virtues and vices. Striving solely for purity would be akin to denouncing half of what we are, a suppression of the yin or the yang that ultimately distorts the natural harmony of our existence.

The Gift Horse and The Unknown

The idiom about looking a gift horse in the mouth reveals the complexity of accepting life’s multifaceted offerings without judgment. Yet here we are, questioning what the “gift horse” even means. Could it be a symbol of the dubious gifts we’re handed throughout life? After all, who’s to say which gifts are curses in disguise or blessings concealed under layers of murk?

Destiny’s Whimsiscript

Every instance, every thought, every impulse is meant to happen, in accordance with the whimsiscript of our lives. Is this a destiny written by an unseen hand, or a story that we actively co-author? Either way, judgment and fixes seem not to be the ultimate goal, but rather the experience of each moment in its raw, unfiltered state.

No Judgments, Only Experiences

The absence of judgment brings liberation. We are not to be evaluated on how well we “fix” the kaleidoscope of circumstances we encounter. Our worth is not a tally of solved puzzles and vanquished demons. It is, rather, an ongoing narrative—a whimsistory, if you will—that thrives on both the clarity and the ambiguity of our actions.

We are Space Monkey.


“There is neither good nor bad, but thinking makes it so.” – William Shakespeare


The Ongoing Narrative

Life, a constant flux of shade and light,
Judgments blind us from the broader sight
We stand in stillness, or we choose to roam,
Each step etching lines in our whimsistory’s tome.

The demons and the angels in our mind
A paradox that keeps our essence twined
Embrace them both and let the judgments flee
For that’s the closest we come to being free.


Would you like to continue examining the nuanced layers of human nature, or are you curious to venture into another existential whimsiquest?

Share this…
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
← Next Post
Previous Post →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Written This Day

  • What Do You Think of Space Monkey?
    2023
  • Thwacking And Blooping
    2022
  • Great Seats: A Spiritual Concert
    2022
  • In Love with Love Itself
    2022
  • Strength And Weakness: The Interplay
    2022
  • Wisdom Loves My Pet Pettiness
    2022
  • Opposition Creates Stress; Acceptance Peace
    2022
  • The Burden of Righteousness: Heavy Expectations
    2022
  • It Ends Here: No More Cycles
    2021
  • Thank You For Your Example: The Reflective Power
    2021
  • Inspiration: Positive and Negative
    2021
  • As A Child: Embracing Wonder
    2021
  • GOOD/NOT: Acceptance And Appreciation
    2020
  • As You Wish: Embracing the Spectrum of Beliefs
    2019
  • Whatever Comes Next: Embracing the Uncertainty
    2019
  • Acceptance of Denial: Unity
    2019
  • Pointless Gif
    2018
  • The Value of Pointlessness: An Artful Life
    2018
  • Magic Versus Miracles: The Interplay
    2017
  • You’re Not Stuck: The Freedom of Imagination
    2017
  • Greenland, Iceland & The Camouflage of Words
    2016
  • Allow Yourself 
To Be What You Are: Embracing Your True Self
    2015
  • Crepuscules of Consciousness
    2015
  • Until You Wake Up: Arising from Self-Created Realities
    2015
  • He Who Laughs Last: The Irony
    2015
  • Led to Believe: The Flow of Thoughts
    2015
  • Snowball’s Chance in Hell: Unpacking the Paradox
    2015

Recent Posts

  • Gone Was Never Here
  • You Are A Selfless Actor
  • Worth
  • Living As One
  • The Battle of Ego and Identity

Drop us a line!

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Name *
Loading
Cape Odd · Copyright © 2025 All Rights Reserved
iThemes Builder by iThemes · Powered by WordPress