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does anyone know if retroactively "editing" your short-term sensory memories as they happen while trying to impose helps at all with immersion and stuff? we've been practicing imposition (again) recently and we've been doing this and it seems to be helping at least a little compared to times we've tried before (we haven't had any Actual Complete Visual Hallucinations yet but i feel like we're making progress?) but we're not sure if it's an established technique at all and haven't seen anything written about it in guides so i'd like some advice from people who maybe actually know how to do imposition and are more knowledgeable about this than we are :3

-kara

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i never did anything like that when i was learning imposition, but i've heard of other people trying it, and apparently it has been helpful for them. it's not one of the more common methods i've seen, but if it works for you, then keep doing it

I have a tulpa named Miela who I love very much.

 

 
"People put quotes in their signatures, right?"

-Me

Yeah, I do something like that all the time. I’ll impose a ball or something on the ground and then go into my waking memory of that scene as it’s happening and visualize the ball where I imposed it. I imagine you’re doing something similar, right? I do remember someone posting something mentioning it, but it’s a pretty obscure topic and I forget who originally posted it

17 hours ago, ringgggg said:

Yeah, I do something like that all the time. I’ll impose a ball or something on the ground and then go into my waking memory of that scene as it’s happening and visualize the ball where I imposed it. I imagine you’re doing something similar, right? I do remember someone posting something mentioning it, but it’s a pretty obscure topic and I forget who originally posted it

yes, this is what we've been doing! it's good to know other people also do this/have done it :3

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(edited)

If we understand your position correctly, we did this, or something similar, when practicing imposition and though the sessions in memory were extraordinary, there was never any progress in "hallucinations". The memories ended up so real as to be confused with actual physical experiences so to avoid the confusion in memory, we ended the practice. Wonderlanding never had this issue for us.

 

So though it is potent in doing "something" the something it did for us was ironically undesirable.

Edited by Autumn Ren
  • 2 weeks later...

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