Yes, I think it is frowned upon. It's fine in a standalone program that uses no libraries, but once you start using libraries, the possibility of library A's monkey patch interfering with library B, or with your monkey patch interfering with library C, starts to go up. There are techniques for keeping the potential for harm under control, though.
In Ruby 2, you can apply monkey patches selectively, so that they are only in effect for your code. They won't be seen by any libraries you are using. This is called... um... lemme think...
Oh, right. refinements.
In previous versions of Ruby, it's good practice to put your monkey patches all in one directory: lib/mylib/patches, for example.
Wait. Never mind. I answered a different question than you asked.
You're extending, not monkey patching. Yes, that's also frowned upon. Here's why: When you extend a class such as String or Array, your object has the entire interface of what you're extending. This can cause maintenance nightmares later. I just read a great article about that. I'll post the link if I can find it. Anyhow, better is to use delegation: Your object has a String or Array (or whatever), and selectively delegates methods to it.
The modules Forwardable and SimpleDelegator are useful for this.
The last time I tried to use refinements, I ran into trouble with rspec. I think it was because rspec was using reflection, and refinements aren't represented in reflection. But rspec has changed a lot since then, so maybe it works now.
@Cereal Three Things to Know about Composition. There's the links to the articles that explains why someone might not want to derive their class from String or Array or whatever.