G|d30n June 21, 2012 June 21, 2012 If your tulpa isn't very good at math, or if you haven't had much training in it either and so your tulpa doesn't gain much from your subconscious, I suppose you could ask your tulpa politely to sing a song if they know any and then try to recite either a different song or some limerick or tongue twister out loud while your tulpa sings something else. It would be hard to sustain reciting one thing in your head and one thing out loud if you were doing it yourself, but you and your tulpa shouldn't have much of a problem doing it. Progess on my tulpa, Lauren. Lauren's survey and stylometric test.
Guest June 21, 2012 June 21, 2012 To G|d30n and TOG: Did your tulpa talk in your head before talking out loud?
ThatOneGuy June 21, 2012 June 21, 2012 It's sort of like they talk in your head and out loud at the same exact time when they do speak. So both I guess. Orange juice helps with concentration headaches.
G|d30n June 21, 2012 June 21, 2012 I described it in further detail in the progress report when someone else asked, but the best analogy I can think of would be the "3D sound" recordings you find on Youtube, like the Virtual Barbershop. What I hear externally is very close, like it's right in my ear (and the closeness may vary as she's actually imposed), but it does change directions--she can speak into one ear and then the other, but all the while, it's also coming from inside. Even if I speak to her just "telepathically," as I sometimes do now even though I spoke pretty much only out loud during narration, she still responds both internally and externally. I've already experimented with covering my ears or having some loud noise that would make it difficult to hear someone speaking, and that only covers the external, but doesn't inhibit the internal sound. Progess on my tulpa, Lauren. Lauren's survey and stylometric test.
Guest June 22, 2012 June 22, 2012 Then there's no reason to advise somebody to not be too paranoid about parroting. Tulpa voices are easily distinguishable.
Chupi June 22, 2012 June 22, 2012 Then there's no reason to advise somebody to not be too paranoid about parroting. Tulpa voices are easily distinguishable. Except when they aren't. Some people are quite good at imagining different voices, and some people don't get so much of the alien feeling when their tulpa speaks. Lyra: human female, ~17 Evan: boy, ~14, was an Eevee Anera: anime-style girl, ~12; Lyra made her My blog :: Time expectations are bad (forcing time targets are good though)
Guest June 22, 2012 June 22, 2012 Except when they aren't. Some people are quite good at imagining different voices, and some people don't get so much of the alien feeling when their tulpa speaks. Then they're probably parroting.
Mercurial June 23, 2012 June 23, 2012 You should keep in mind that it is possible that something other than your tulpa spoke through your tulpa. I used to, just for fun, have a random person's voice play through my head. They would speak indistinctly, and it would be a lot like if somebody was talking and you were ignoring them. Eventually there would be a sudden moment of clarity where I could hear the voice, and more often than not it doesn't make any sense by itself. I can remember what was said once, it was "...to the point of being claustrophobic." My tulpa did something like this on my second day of tulpaforcing, she said something and it didn't make sense, but it obviously wasn't the tulpa speaking. This might've been what happened to you.
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