Poll

Do you wish more people knew about tulpas?

Yes
7 (26.9%)
No
13 (50%)
Undecided
6 (23.1%)

Total Members Voted: 22

Author Topic: Tulpa Awareness  (Read 45542 times)

Re: Tulpa Awareness
« Reply #30 on: October 23, 2013, 07:11:58 AM »
I have no problem with the article itself, more with the .info thread. People are worrying way too much over publicity after one small note of tulpas in the New York Times. It's all "I want tulpas to be known!" and "No we should stay secret and underground!". This shouldn't matter. It's one article.

Re: Tulpa Awareness
« Reply #31 on: October 23, 2013, 07:44:28 AM »
Though the idea of "spread everywhere forever, everyone must know!!" doesn't really seem like a too good idea right now when most of the communities haven't gotten their shit together. There was a time when I would've been happy to link people to some tulpa-related stuff. Not anymore.

And unfortunately the vocal minority tends to be the one people like to pay most attention to.

Re: Tulpa Awareness
« Reply #32 on: October 24, 2013, 02:21:33 PM »
Sup.

I've been considering this a lot (see: just made a thread about the tulpa zine.)

I don't really have an opinion of the mainstreaming of it. If it happens, it happens, and there will be consequences for everyone, positive and negative. It's inevitable if this occurs, and I think the response shouldn't be "no, that can't happen" or "how can we stop it". I think it becomes an issue of getting shit together and presenting as a community of which the mainstream can communicate with, without coming off as crazies, teenagers, or pretenders. A pre-emptive strike of sorts.

Personally, as someone without a tulpa, I have tried to have conversations about tulpa to multiple people.
A few of them, surprisingly, would recount how they relate to tulpa. For example, an imaginary friend, rogue voices, etc. They all have the sentiment that they thought it was schizophrenic, unusual, and shameful. There seems to be an outstanding paradigm that the human mind does NOT hallucinate on its own (e.g. without drugs); if it does, you're sick.

The rest of those that responded to me prove this point: normally mouth agape, eyes wide, and the more I talk, it seems the less credible I become. They thought I was crazy, and this is coming from someone who does NOT have a tulpa. I can't imagine trying to communicate the idea as a host.

For tulpas to become acceptable in the mainstream, the mainstream has to accept the fact that hallucinations=/=drugs and schizophrenia. I think that when people talk about meditating, etc. as well, it is automatically connotative as being meta and not having real-world effects.

Back to my zine, this is sort of what I want the purpose to be. Something devoid of memes, tropes, and presented as a professional looking publication with production value. It's bells and whistles, but those are what legitimize information more often than not before scientific academia will take a look at it.

Re: Tulpa Awareness
« Reply #33 on: October 25, 2013, 12:52:17 AM »
Hallucinations are totally normal though. Everyone has them, when you fall asleep, as you dream, when you wake up, those spots in your vision that are really blind spots but your brain renders vision there anyway. And as Fede has shown me, these are rather normal as well. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_eye_hallucinations
I agree, but that's sort of my point. Hallucinations aren't treated as normal.

Re: Tulpa Awareness
« Reply #34 on: October 25, 2013, 08:42:50 AM »
Though the idea of "spread everywhere forever, everyone must know!!" doesn't really seem like a too good idea right now when most of the communities haven't gotten their shit together. There was a time when I would've been happy to link people to some tulpa-related stuff. Not anymore.

And unfortunately the vocal minority tends to be the one people like to pay most attention to.

I agree with this. It's not like I want tulpas to stay underground, that'd be stupid. But I don't see any good coming from advertising them.