Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Speaking as a Catholic myself, I was curious of how many other people here happen to be Christian, especially seeing as I know some extremists see tulpas and anything related to stuff the mind can do as being dangerous or demonic, without knowing the science behind it.

 

So, any other Christians on here? Or are you of a different religion but your tulpa is Christian, or vice versa?

Everything we perceive is reality is all interpreted by our heads. So technically, even though only their tulpamancer can see them, tulpas can be said to be as real as anything else.

  • Replies 76
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • 4 weeks later...

I'm Catholic and my tulpa is Christian :)

 

It'd be funny to see a protestant host and a catholic tulpa/reverse

A wise man once said: 'Before judging a man, walk a mile in his shoes. After that, who cares? He's a mile away, and you've got new shoes.'

 

Graced are those who could avoid this phenomenon. This is perhaps the worst expression of evil in humanity's history, but who am I to judge?

I'm a Christian Druid, and though still in development I'm instilling Christianity into my tulpa as well

 

Man that's one of those sentences where "forcing" is just an awful term for tulpa development. "I'm forcing Christianity on her"or "I'm forcing her to be Christian" sounds just terrible. =/

"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth."

-Arthur Conan Doyle

 

I'm a Christian Druid, and though still in development I'm instilling Christianity into my tulpa as well

 

Man that's one of those sentences where "forcing" is just an awful term for tulpa development. "I'm forcing Christianity on her"or "I'm forcing her to be Christian" sounds just terrible. =/

 

Parents force religion on their children all the time yet nobody says anything. Then they tell them that they have the liberty to explore other religions, but the invisible wall has already been solidified by then. Once a belief like that is forced, under careful watch, it won't go away except in certain cases, I'm not speaking about people in general but about tulpas.

A wise man once said: 'Before judging a man, walk a mile in his shoes. After that, who cares? He's a mile away, and you've got new shoes.'

 

Graced are those who could avoid this phenomenon. This is perhaps the worst expression of evil in humanity's history, but who am I to judge?

I'm afraid I'm the exact opposite (atheist), and Chara is too young to really have a religion. (or tell me what she believes) I wouldn't care if she was a different religion then my lack of it, but I'll let her make the choice for herself.

 

Parents force religion on their children all the time yet nobody says anything. Then they tell them that they have the liberty to explore other religions, but the invisible wall has already been solidified by then. Once a belief like that is forced, under careful watch, it won't go away except in certain cases, I'm not speaking about people in general but about tulpas.

 

My own experience was not this way. I was brought up Christian and as a teen grew to resent it, even.declaring myself agnostic for a time. With a spiritual belief, from what I've seen, has to be something you find for yourself in order to really believe it. Being indoctrinated into it, you end up just going through the motions. Saying the right things, but not in your heart and would really believing them.

 

I think tulpa would be the same way. There needs to be a reason to believe. "Because I say so" isn't a reason, even for a tulpamancer.

"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth."

-Arthur Conan Doyle

 

 

My own experience was not this way. I was brought up Christian and as a teen grew to resent it, even.declaring myself agnostic for a time. With a spiritual belief, from what I've seen, has to be something you find for yourself in order to really believe it. Being indoctrinated into it, you end up just going through the motions. Saying the right things, but not in your heart and would really believing them.

 

I think tulpa would be the same way. There needs to be a reason to believe. "Because I say so" isn't a reason, even for a tulpamancer.

 

A lot can be said about this. The way hosts raise their tulpas completely differs from the way parents treat their children, that's because most hosts are with due respect teenagers with little sense of responsibility on the parental level (which I know most people won't feel bad about anyway since it's only natural). A LOT of teenagers have their edgy atheist rebellious phase which they grow out of, I was also raised to believe in religion, it felt like none of it was forced and that the saints I was taught about were.... always there, that everything related to religion was a universal law, then I became an edgy teenager and shit-talked all religions with my conceit for a long while until I grew out of it, and gained more of an interest in religion once again once I realized how unwarranted my bias was.

 

I've been raising a single tulpa for years now (by single I mean one not that she's single as in not in couple). I know she doesn't represent most tulpas, she acts very weird at times, but I do know that she was never that way. She had the mentality that would set her out on a certain belief. She even wore a cute cross pendant for a certain while, which she then changed into a heart because she didn't want to associate love to a religious concept. I won't mention whether we are religious or not although I probably already specified my own position (or I did it in a tf2 pub in an argument with how god specified that we should all do good when i mocked some guy for literally telling the enemy where his entire sentry nest was with his dispenser and tele exit but my memory is deceiving me into thinking that I did it here), but things can be very, very different depending on the tulpa. Just my two cents though.

A wise man once said: 'Before judging a man, walk a mile in his shoes. After that, who cares? He's a mile away, and you've got new shoes.'

 

Graced are those who could avoid this phenomenon. This is perhaps the worst expression of evil in humanity's history, but who am I to judge?

Guest Anonymous

The question was are there any Christian tulpas out there? My host was born and raised in the Roman Catholic church, but isn't faithful really anymore and no longer practices Christianity. I have never had formal religious beliefs other than closely aligning with his. So, at one time, I was Catholic sorta, but now I am not.

 

In fact, my host was told by a Catholic priest (in the confessional) that I am a delusion inspired by the devil to distract Davie from God. He suggested that Davie ignore and suppress me, as any internal alien voices were inherently bad. He suggested that Davie pray to God instead to help him forget about me.

 

That is the day Davie left the church for good.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...