Lula July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 How good are you at visualizing your wonderland? Or visualization in general? Is it like day dream esc. visualization? or is quite vivid visualization? Or are you able to reach such a high level of concentration that its more like a lucid dream? ~Remember the dead, but fight for the living. ~La rage du peuple ~Ice cream is a feeling Tulpae: Name: Frostia Form: Light and dark blue pony, white hair, styled in MLP:FiM fashion
mordred July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 I tried a wonderland. Can't see shit. Takes too much energy to focus well on that and the tulpa. It's easier for me to use a blank void with a few things, like a bed and a chair or whatever. Once she's sentient I can add a few things like art supplies or whatever hobby she wants to pick up. Or maybe she can add them herself, I know tulpae can do that in a wonderland, but what I have is not even close. We'll see. sage
Guest July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 My wonderland is very easy to stay focused on, though sometimes I need a bit of time to submerge into it. Honestly, I usually don't even need to stay focused - once I close my eyes after submerging, it's surrounds me automatically. It visualizes like a dream in most of aspects, but with more stable details - its geometry is constant, most of details are stay the same no matter how long I hadn't drew attention on them - rooms' decor, a painting on a wall...
Captain Nemo July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 Honestly, I don't understand why people use wonderlands. Can somebody tell me their reasoning? The way I see it, creating a wonderland requires extra mental effort and makes imposition harder later on. If you visualize the space in front of you instead, wouldn't it train your brain to start imposing things on your vision right from the start? Also, for OP's question, it's more like a "mind's eye" kind of visualization. If I close my eyes, I don't actually see anything on the back of my eyelids. It's all imagined in my head, kinda like daydreaming. Though, if you get deep enough in to it, it can seem a lot more real. Who knows, maybe I will actually start seeing things with practice (besides imposition, of course).
Guest Albatross_ July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 For some people, wonderlands help rationalize visualization. Also for many people they are very immersive and help with concentration. Others people just can't work without some sort of backdrop.
Guest July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 I'm kind of like Nemo here; I can't actually -see- anything on the back of my eyelids. I can vividly "imagine" it, I suppose you would say. So then, does it really matter if you can make real images on the back of your eyelids or does being able to keep it perfectly in your mind's eye (correct me if that's the wrong term) work fine?
Raetin July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 When it comes to visualization, I can see in my "mind's eye" or "imagination", but it's still pretty dull and dark when I imagine a object. Also I think a wonderland would be useful when your tulpa is sentient, so they can have their own world. I have 10 tulpas, but I'm only actively working on Reah, my first tulpa currently. Progress Report
JD1215 July 12, 2012 July 12, 2012 So then, does it really matter if you can make real images on the back of your eyelids or does being able to keep it perfectly in your mind's eye (correct me if that's the wrong term) work fine? It's not supposed to be seen on your eyelids, you're going at it the right way with your mind's eye. WTB: Rare Tulpas
Nevermore July 13, 2012 July 13, 2012 Also I think a wonderland would be useful when your tulpa is sentient, so they can have their own world. This is really the only reason I decided to do one, just to give my tulpa a world of her own. Name: Arya Form: Anthro Avian Time Spent: 8-10 hours forcing, stopped counting narration time Stage: Wrapping up personality/Visualization good/She is speaking well
Lula July 14, 2012 Author July 14, 2012 welp I have a wonderland and I can't get rid of it. ~Remember the dead, but fight for the living. ~La rage du peuple ~Ice cream is a feeling Tulpae: Name: Frostia Form: Light and dark blue pony, white hair, styled in MLP:FiM fashion
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