Vos January 28, 2014 January 28, 2014 It proves that you're not lying for attention, which is the reaction many people have. Right, but why would you care if people thought you were lying for attention?
xtar January 29, 2014 January 29, 2014 If you're really concerned about the credibility of your tulpa, it'd probably be best to work on possession to the point where you can both write your names at the same time, with different hands. What about naturally (or through practice) ambidextrous people?
Bacn January 29, 2014 January 29, 2014 What about naturally (or through practice) ambidextrous people? Even if you're ambidextrous, writing takes such an incredible amount of brainpower and focus. I don't know if anyone is capable of writing two different things at the same time naturally, but I would bet that making a tulpa is certainly the best way to go about pulling it off.
xtar January 29, 2014 January 29, 2014 Even if you're ambidextrous, writing takes such an incredible amount of brainpower and focus. I don't know if anyone is capable of writing two different things at the same time naturally, but I would bet that making a tulpa is certainly the best way to go about pulling it off. People are capable of this (I sometimes do this to help students in learning to write), a quick google of 'writing with both hands at the same time' should pop up some results. Yes, it does require focus and is challenging. I also have to read upside down on the job quite a bit too and that's also doable.
ThunderClap January 29, 2014 January 29, 2014 You could always draw over them/trace them. My guide on tulpa creation Please consider making a private grant to tulpa.info to keep the community alive.
Yori January 29, 2014 January 29, 2014 I just had this idea today, but I can't test it yet. Your eyes can ONLY move smoothly when you're focused on a moving object. Otherwise, they can only move in discrete jumps. If your tulpa is visually imposed, you should be able to take advantage of this to prove to someone else that you can literally see your tulpa, by standing a foot or two away from the other person, facing each other, and watching your tulpa as they move between you. I've noticed this myself, actually! I tested it to make sure I could move smoothly without jumps at all with my finger just now. I've pretended to see something moving back and forth (was in my own world looking at a ghost walking that wasn't there in a.. yeah, embarrassing) and that always happened, jumps. It'd be convenient if perhaps an eye expert or neuro person who already had this confirmed for themselves and would say it themselves agreed to let you prove you are seeing something move back and forth ^^ My lip hurts.
xtar January 30, 2014 January 30, 2014 That eye thing is called saccadic eye movement btw. Just google that up and hallucinations on Google or pubmed or something and see what pops up.
Arctic_Freezer March 28, 2014 March 28, 2014 My tulpa is fully imposed and id really like to prove it to my best friend. I will try this out
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