One eye is locked onto our planet, watching the clouds shift and continents move. One eye is locked away from us, watching for threats from the deep vacuum of space. Several trillion smaller, more focused eyes dot the surface of both main eyes to take in the more finite details of the planets' activities. Many focused on the Earth watch airplanes and satellites and cars rushing across the surface. Many focused elsewhere gaze at the Great Red Spot and Olympus Mons and the Voyager spacecraft.
The subject of the Moon's search is hotly debated by astrophilosophers and teratographers alike. Some theorize it is looking for threats to itself, while more optimistic views are that its looking to defend from threats to the Earth. The one thing that they can all agree on, however, is that the world was changed on an existential level the night that the Moon blinked.