bila bila June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 I was wondering as I was doing my exams if my tulpa would help me. Of course, she isn't fully sentient (a bit vocal) and I haven't let her into my sub-concious yet. Anyway, I was wondering if tulpae can get things wrong. Like tell you wrong information or getting a math question wrong. Is that possible? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
glitchthe3rd June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 Sure they can. Best way to avoid it is to make sure you know your stuff beforehand. Never use a tulpa as a crutch when it comes to testing, they won't be able to handle it. "Science isn't about why, science is about why not?" -Cave Johnson Tulpae: Luna, Elise, Naomi My progress report Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ShyGuy65 June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 A tulpa can be wrong. Whether or not that's connected with tulpa as cheat sheet we don't know. Tulpa cheat sheet is supposed to be like accessing your subconscious for accurate memories, though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Anonymous June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 Absolutely. If tulpas were right 100% of the time I'm fairly sure there'd be much more "intellectual savants" who could use their tulpa to get 100% of every single test they ever took and have a super-human memory. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phi June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 A tulpa can also be wrong in another sense. I read somewhere on these forums that somebody's tulpa tripped down the stairs. Thinking about that really lightens up my mood on rainy days, it just seems funny to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andrew June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 A Tulpa only knows as much as the subconscious it lives in. i.e. It only knows as much as you do, even if it accesses that data differently. "What did you do today?" "Oh, you know, got called a hater by a schizophrenic's marijuana-fueled wolf hallucination." "Righteous!" I call her Philos. My BLOG is updated daily. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lyranon June 12, 2012 Share June 12, 2012 If you asked Ly the answer would be no. But i know better. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThatOneGuy June 13, 2012 Share June 13, 2012 Andrew said it pretty much accurately. Orange juice helps with concentration headaches. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest June 13, 2012 Share June 13, 2012 If you know it subconsciously, your tulpa should know, unless you treat it like a baby. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
G|d30n June 15, 2012 Share June 15, 2012 A tulpa can also be wrong in another sense. I read somewhere on these forums that somebody's tulpa tripped down the stairs. Thinking about that really lightens up my mood on rainy days, it just seems funny to me. But yeah, it's pretty much been said that they only know what you know. I'm curious though--if you memorized something incorrectly, and your tulpa was around for when you learned it originally and for when you memorized it, would they recall the source material or would their memory be clouded by the incorrect version you drilled into your own memory? I'm inclined to think the latter just since the subconscious isn't the superhero it was thought to be in the days of Freud or that it's portrayed to be in movies featuring hypnosis and such. Still, it would be an interesting experiment, but hard to do deliberately without effecting the results with the awareness of what you were doing. Progess on my tulpa, Lauren. Lauren's survey and stylometric test. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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