N
Nlnp2
Student
- Sep 22, 2018
- 103
This is going to sound a little bit crazy to you, especially if you don't know anything about the concept that I'm going to talk about. Also this is a serious thread. I'm not trolling, I swear, it's just that I thought about this right now and it seems to me that it could actually work in spite of the lack of evidence. It's an experiment that you can try if you want at your own risk.
There is a community on reddit of people who claim that they can split their consciousness through meditating, therefore create another person living inside their subconscious mind, like an alter. Now it's not exactly it, but it's very similar to dissociative identity disorder. They call them tulpas instead of alters, and it also seems that those identities they create are unable to control the body of their host, unless the host trains himself and his tulpa to do it (switching), he can even train himself to see the tulpa in real life as a permanent hallucination (imposition) and most of the time they turn out to be benevolent instead of destructive like the alters that a person affected by DID has as they claim. Now how do I know those people actually do self-induce some kind of beneficial DID and they're not just lying or whatever? Because I experienced it myself. I tried to create one of those tulpas as a coping mechanism for my social anxiety disorder years ago, and after a month of daily tulpaforcing I started having this voice inside my head communicating with me. It wasn't literally a voice, it was like having thoughts outside of your mind.
Watch this video to better understand what a tulpa is
https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/...5/03/alters-in-dissociative-identity-disorder
So what is this all about?
Here's where I'm going. If you can train your brain to split the "I" (whatever the hell "I/consciousness" even is) into many other Is or consciousnesses, practically just by convincing yourself everyday for one or two hours that there is another person inside your head (because this is how they do it. They close their eyes, meditate, then they visualize their imaginary friend and talk to it like it was a real person. And after months that concept becomes a living sentient thing, no joke), and my educated guess is that this happens due to neuroplasticity, but I could be wrong (There aren't many scientific papers on tulpas as far as I'm concerned, or if there are, I've never heard of them). Then either you could train your brain to believe that you don't exist, and dissipate while another identity takes your place or you could create a tulpa and practice switching with that entity until It becomes the dominant personality. And because tulpas can be dissipated if you stop giving them attention, you could ask the entity to do exactly that. So you would die, and another person would take control of your body.
Now this is just an idea, I don't know if it could actually work. If you want to try it, you do it at your own risk, and maybe you really shouldn't after all. You could really fuck up your psyche and get a mental illness, and you don't want that. I read on a forum that a guy actually did this (but did that really happen? I don't know). He made a tulpa, switched and let his tulpa take permanent control over his body and was dissipated afterwards.
They talk about this here
There is a community on reddit of people who claim that they can split their consciousness through meditating, therefore create another person living inside their subconscious mind, like an alter. Now it's not exactly it, but it's very similar to dissociative identity disorder. They call them tulpas instead of alters, and it also seems that those identities they create are unable to control the body of their host, unless the host trains himself and his tulpa to do it (switching), he can even train himself to see the tulpa in real life as a permanent hallucination (imposition) and most of the time they turn out to be benevolent instead of destructive like the alters that a person affected by DID has as they claim. Now how do I know those people actually do self-induce some kind of beneficial DID and they're not just lying or whatever? Because I experienced it myself. I tried to create one of those tulpas as a coping mechanism for my social anxiety disorder years ago, and after a month of daily tulpaforcing I started having this voice inside my head communicating with me. It wasn't literally a voice, it was like having thoughts outside of your mind.
Watch this video to better understand what a tulpa is
https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/...5/03/alters-in-dissociative-identity-disorder
So what is this all about?
Here's where I'm going. If you can train your brain to split the "I" (whatever the hell "I/consciousness" even is) into many other Is or consciousnesses, practically just by convincing yourself everyday for one or two hours that there is another person inside your head (because this is how they do it. They close their eyes, meditate, then they visualize their imaginary friend and talk to it like it was a real person. And after months that concept becomes a living sentient thing, no joke), and my educated guess is that this happens due to neuroplasticity, but I could be wrong (There aren't many scientific papers on tulpas as far as I'm concerned, or if there are, I've never heard of them). Then either you could train your brain to believe that you don't exist, and dissipate while another identity takes your place or you could create a tulpa and practice switching with that entity until It becomes the dominant personality. And because tulpas can be dissipated if you stop giving them attention, you could ask the entity to do exactly that. So you would die, and another person would take control of your body.
Now this is just an idea, I don't know if it could actually work. If you want to try it, you do it at your own risk, and maybe you really shouldn't after all. You could really fuck up your psyche and get a mental illness, and you don't want that. I read on a forum that a guy actually did this (but did that really happen? I don't know). He made a tulpa, switched and let his tulpa take permanent control over his body and was dissipated afterwards.
They talk about this here
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