Guest Anonymous August 17, 2012 August 17, 2012 I rarely get any headaches, and only got pressure once, but I've determined it's on what feels like the dorsal rostral frontal lobe or dorsolateral parietal lobe. Neither lobes deal with anything I'd assume a tulpa would have control over. Generally the frontal lobe controls voluntary movement and most cognitive tasks, while the parietal lobe works almost entirely with touch sensation and determining relative space. Oddly most people say it's around the anterior frontal lobe, but It'd make much more sense to occur near the temporal lobe if anything. It'll be interesting to see why if we ever get proper funding for research.
Guest Anonymous August 17, 2012 August 17, 2012 When I get headaches from forcing it doesn't seem to come from any one area. It just feels like my whole head is throbbing lightly.
Avalanche August 17, 2012 August 17, 2012 Usually contained right in the centre. Switches between centre right and centre left, depending on.. I don't know what. I mean dead centre, not the middle at the front or back or the sides, right in the middle. Sometimes it reaches to the top of my head too, and it feels either quite strong and painful, to being persistent and dull. I get any sort of headache about 20% of the time. frt
Knapp August 17, 2012 August 17, 2012 It varies greatly, though none in my face or in my neck. Name: Philip Age: (7 June, 2012) Form: Male teenage human, light brown hair, green eyes, jeans & hoodie Name: Amalia Age: (15 Dec, 2012) Form: Female teenage fairy, black hair, blue eyes, white dress
Weird0 August 17, 2012 August 17, 2012 Ive never had big deals with headache in my life. Maybe once or twice a year. But the first week of tulpaforcing caused me the sickest permanent headache. Well it wasnt even pain more like pressure in the front lobe and pariental lobe. After that i get mild headaches here and there but they fade very quickly and are not even worth mentioning i guess. They say great science is built on the shoulders of giants - not here. At Tulpa.info we do all our science from scratch; no hand holding.
Asgardian August 18, 2012 August 18, 2012 Well, from a neurological point of view, I'd assume it is generally the prefrontal cortex, maybe even the visual cortex when visualizing(duh). And since the brain itself has no nociception, I can imagine it is rather a blunt pain. Indirect perception of rearranging neurons. "Sorry for that, my communication implants are idiologically biased."
Guest August 19, 2012 August 19, 2012 Always on the frontal lobe. Rarely in the back. Well, to correct myself, it was only tickling pressure, never headache, and I often got it near the ears, too.
DoctorGod August 19, 2012 Author August 19, 2012 Thanks for all the input... Really. It's both disappointing and amazing how almost nobody feels it in the same parts of the head. This makes things interesting though.. as it keeps mystifying this phenomena(*in lack of a better word). I don't have any degree in neurology, but it should be safe to have it unofficially documented that the location of the "pain" is different for everyone. Not an interesting conclusion, but it had potential and still is to some value. This is how you create a tulpa: http://bit.ly/OOVdOn
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