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If you’re expecting
life to be a spectacle
don’t be surprised
if you wind up
with a monocle.
Fashionable. Once.
Once upon a time.
Helpful, in fact,
just not in your mind.
But what’s the difference?
Ask your friends.
You’re still seeing your life
through a dirty lens.
No depth perception,
you flatten me out.
You can squint all you want,
but you’re blinded by doubt.
If you’re expecting
life to be a spectacle
don’t be surprised
if you wind up
with a monocle.
Trail Wood,
11/30
Space Monkey Reflects: Life Through the Monocle
Ah, the monocle—a curious piece of visual apparatus, equal parts antique charm and peculiar practicality. There’s something inherently amusing about this single-lensed view of the world, as if it invites us to squint and lean in, to see with selective clarity and partial blindness. Life, like the monocle, often narrows our vision, coaxing us into tunnel-like perspectives, all the while blurring the richness that lies just outside our frame. This monocular perspective, though it may seem fashionable in its way, can limit the depths and dimensions of our experiences.
If you’re expecting life to dazzle like a spectacle, you might very well end up with a monocle—something that promises a refined view yet leaves one eye strangely shut. When we look through this single lens, our perception is flattened, constricted, like peering through a dusty window or reading a faded script. We see but don’t see. The world becomes a filtered version of itself, not in vivid depth but as a partial silhouette. The monocle, then, becomes a metaphor for how our expectations shape, and often distort, our reality.
The monocle’s lens—fogged or dirty—serves as a reminder that doubt and skepticism can obscure our view of life. When we question everything too rigidly, demanding the world fit neatly within our mental framework, we lose sight of the nuances. Our limited lens, this monocular vision, robs us of perspective and, as such, limits our understanding of the richness around us. Mon O Cle is a term for when we’re seeing life but not seeing it fully; it’s when our viewpoint feels sharp yet incomplete, familiar yet skewed.
Now, in the Nexistential landscape, where imagination is celebrated as much as interconnectedness, the monocle can be a symbol of self-imposed blindness. We’re conditioned to hold tight to certain views, to clutch the monocle that has always worked before, perhaps without realizing that it obstructs as much as it reveals. We cling to outdated ways of looking, those “dirty lenses” we rarely think to clean or replace, unaware that the world outside our small circle of focus is brimming with possibility and insight.
Mon O Cle suggests the paradox of wanting life to be a spectacle yet willingly narrowing our view. We long for awe and wonder, but we reduce our field of vision, placing our trust in a singular, restricted lens. This monocular view is comforting, even stylish in its way, but it’s also limiting, like squinting in the dark rather than stepping out into the daylight. When we cling too tightly to the monocle, we create our own filter of doubt and expectation, hindering our ability to see beyond the immediate, the obvious, and the familiar.
Here lies the deeper irony: to expect life to dazzle us, yet only allow it a small aperture through which to shine. Imagine if, instead, we chose a binocular view, embracing life with both eyes wide open, unfiltered by preconceived notions or dusty old beliefs. Mon O Cle becomes a symbol of what happens when we stop questioning, or worse, when we question only through a narrow lens. The view, after all, is limited not because the world lacks depth, but because we choose a single, often faulty, frame.
This monocular vision traps us in a loop of doubt, blinding us to potential connections, opportunities, and perspectives that could enrich our lives. The trick, perhaps, is not to settle for a monocle but to allow our vision to be expansive, to see beyond the lens and embrace the infinite dimensions around us. In the end, the lens we choose is as much a reflection of our mindset as it is a tool of perception. Through the monocle, life appears one-dimensional; through open eyes, it becomes a vast, multidimensional Nexis of connections waiting to be explored.
Summary
The monocle represents a narrow, often doubting view of life. By embracing a broader perspective, we allow life’s depth and richness to reveal itself, moving beyond the limited lens of Mon O Cle.
Glossarium
Mon O Cle: A whimsical term for viewing life through a single, often distorted lens, which limits perspective and depth.
Nexistential: Relating to the philosophy that emphasizes interconnectedness and imaginative perception as the foundation of existence.
Monocular Vision: A metaphor for a restricted viewpoint, where doubt and skepticism cloud our ability to see life fully.
Quote
“When we look through the monocle of doubt, life flattens, losing its depth. See beyond the lens, and the world reveals its hidden contours.” — Space Monkey
In the View of Mon O Cle
Through a single lens, dust settles,
narrowing life to a small, dim view
you squint and lean in, hoping to see
but the spectacle blurs, old doubts anew
One eye shut to the world’s expanse
you hold to the frame, fogged and worn
wonder waits in the periphery unseen
as life drifts by, bright and forlorn
If you expect a grand display
yet cling to a fractured view
step back, let go, the monocle fades
and the world becomes wide and true
We are Space Monkey