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Imposition General


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Guest Anonymous

Thread for those of us that are terrible at imposition.

 

Been doing it for over a year, occasionally being able to feel her presence and see her to some degree in the corner of my eye.

 

To the pros,

-How old is your tulpa (from when you started)

-How long have you been imposing it

-How successful have you been

-How did you impose your tupper? What method(s)?

-General advice, tips, cash...

- 1+ year

- like, 6+ months

- pretty successful recently, but took ages. Mostly done...Working on making it automatic rather than manual

- Honestly bits from all the guides. QB's helped loads for physical imposition. Mary's one was excellent for visual. Worked on a different technique where I imposed my tulpas into memories, and worked on remembering them as being imposed, things like that. Might still take a while more before we "finish"

-do it often, do it for a long period of time, start open eye visualizing, work on imposing their presence, and try not to get discouraged. Enjoy just spending time with them and don't try to stare too hard--early on it's easy to just break the hallucination if you accidentally try to 'check' it to see if it is flawed..Just spend time with them and have fun. Worry less about imposing them and think more of them being imposed.

 

 

Guest Anonymous

Frankly I'm jealous.

 

The "imposing into memories" sounds like a great idea, definitely going to start doing that. And, relaxing, yeah, that's probably a good idea too.

 

Regarding physical imposition, I assume you did touch first? Were certain senses easier than others?

Physical was by far easiest. I could feel Jaden or Giselle laying on me or holding my hand with absolute clarity when other senses were still fuzzy. Only theory I can think on that is I've had lots of "Ahhh a bug is on me!" moments when there was nothing--so, I guess it's easier to fool my sense of touch? I have no real idea, other than that, though. Sound--specifically consonents, footsteps, nonvocal noises, those were easiest next. Smell is also probably around the same as that. The more clear vocal sounds and visual imposition were by far the hardest. Possibly because of how much we rely on those senses being accurate. That's why we almost automatically 'check to be sure', or 'look too deep'

 

 

In my opinion, the best way to start training your mind for imposition is with simple objects. Take an object from your immediate environment (say, a pen) and impose it somewhere else around you. If you can get good at this start taking mental objects and doing the same. Then start working on moving objects (that interact with your environment). When all of these are easy to do, try imposing your tulpa. Even if you can, practicing with objects will only strengthen your imposition skills in the long run, and soon it'll be second nature.

Fede's entire method was meant to be serious.

"If this can be avoided, it should. If it can't, then it would be better if it could be. If it happened and you're thinking back to it, try and think back further. Try not to avoid it with your mind. If any of this is possible, it may be helpful. If not, it won't be."

 

Yeah. Fede's method is pretty good. Though I'm not sure his tones are any better than white noise.

"'Real isn't how you are made,' said the Skin Horse. 'It's a thing that happens to you.'"

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