The symptoms of schizophrenia can be divided into two types, positive and negative. In this lesson, we'll look at both types of symptoms, examples...
11:51 PM
As we said, positive symptoms are when something is added to a person's experience that is not normally experienced by other people. Most people associate schizophrenia with the positive symptoms of the disorder.
11:52 PM
In Hattie's case, the voices she hears are a positive symptom; they are something added that most normal people do not experience. On the other hand, her lack of emotion is a negative symptom; feelings are a normal thing, and here, they've been taken away. Let's look closer at both the positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia.
[Well idk about recommend but I probably wouldn't try and disuade mentally I'll people from tulpamancy beyond the standard it's permanent, never alone, responsible ect. Since I do think that tulpas can help with a lot of things and I don't really think they mind too much after being created to have to deal with the problems. Besides more than 1 person dealing with something makes it easier. As long as they take care of each other it should be fine.]
1:23 AM
[Except for loneliness-related issues. Totally recommend tulpas for that.]
But, I would not encourage people who are already experiencing persistent and uncontrollable hallucinations - or people who have DID, as another example - to create a tulpa.
1:24 AM
In the case of DID, they should facilitate communication between their alters. In that way, they could even end up with the equivalent of 'tulpas' anyway.
[I know DID systems have used it to gain more stability. After all one more in a system of 15+ isn't a big deal if they are the kind of person and sufficiently non-bound by the trauma to help out.]
I have concerns about people claiming 15+ fully functioning tulpas. Rather, that does sound more as fragmented personality. At the very least, I do feel somewhat sad for the 13-14 that will almost certainly be inactive at any given point in time.
Would feeling slightly uncomfortable around your tulpa when narrating/active forcing hinder one's progress?
It's been 6+ months and narration still feels like trying to awkwardly talk to a classmate I don't know too well (the tup isn't vocal)
As long as you're speaking to them as if they're actually there, as if there's someone trying to hear and respond to you, you're fine.
10:08 AM
Doesn't matter how you feel about it as long as you act and think as if there's a tulpa there. That expectation is what cues your brain to make something tulpa-like in the first place.(edited)
I do talk to them as if they're listening so we're good :> And I've been sure they exist for a while.
It's hard for me to imagine my tup would be interested in the stuff I like to think about. So I'm like. Shy about it? The problem with treating them like another human being is that I assume they aren't interested, haha...
People have reported success with imposition early on, but I'd personally wait until you've established some reliable form of communication and are able to visualize decently.
I think i watched a video saying that in that person, the original host became dormant and one of the tulpa became the new front. idk
But it wasn't in the bad way you seem to be looking for, i guess.(edited)
I have quite honestly never heard of such a thing. Only paranoia about it.
6:56 PM
The only "malicious tulpas" I have seen, to respond to the typical concerns behind that question, are ones where the host was abusive and inconsiderate towards the tulpa... at least, that was the indication based on their behavior if they were even being legitimate.
6:57 PM
Most of them behaved in a quite trollish way, so I wouldn't even give much credence to their claims.
Quite frankly, there are unfortunately quite a few roleplayers in tulpa communities. That said, while I doubt what they've said at the outset, I can't agree with discounting the possibility as 'roleplay' without having spoken to them myself.
I've seen some instances where it was pretty clear people were roleplaying, but I only see that very infrequently. When people say there are "tons of roleplayers" in the community they never really point out specific examples and I'm left wondering where these "tons of roleplayers" are
I've discussed it before, and in the interest of politeness I don't particularly care to actively call people out unless they are making fairly clear claims that are false - or more importantly, advising other people of the veracity of their experiences using it as a basis to provide faulty information.
However, as for "how I can tell", there are a few ways that I typically use. Cadence is helpful, but in addition people also tend to create one-dimensional 'characters' they can pretend to be.
When I hear "roleplaying" I think of something completely fabricated, when in reality many of those instances are just exaggerated for effect or somebody being overly worried/misinterpreting their tulpa's intentions. It's not usually the case where that person doesn't actually have a tulpa at all and they're making up everything out of nowhere
I would define a role-playing individual (relative to an actual tulpa) as somebody acting out a character whose 'personality' they create - this frequently manifests as a caricatured 'character' that lacks depth.
6:55 PM
Oh, it certainly could be considered such.
6:55 PM
However, when people try to pass it off as a fully developed and independent tulpa, that is where I draw the line.