Advice


As you may already know, the one day I let go of everything was the day of sentience.  This will be the moral of this entire blog.



I tend to ramble, so I made the four important points in bold. 

1. Don't fear and don't worry.
 
When I first started, it was 'fact' that parroting was to be avoided-- or else your tulpa would fail and become a puppet. We know better these days, that if our intentions are to make a sentient tulpa, then our brains will work to make it happen.

If you are trying, you are doing it right. Think of doubting yourself as if you were doubting the fact that you try. The second tip depends on this one.

In order to realize that worrying cannot benefit you, take this logical deduction:
When weighing costs and benefits, you need to look ahead to the future. If there are unknowns involved, as in trying to weigh the results of something never tried before, one will not get an accurate cost/benefit analysis. Therefore, we conclude there is no benefit involved.

Plus, wouldn't you rather tell your tulpa that you were calm and collected?

2. Be at peace.

To be at peace, un-anchor yourself from what makes you unhappy. Spend time with someone you wish you could. For me, it was my dad. All you need is one thing that can bring you peace.

3. Believe all responses come from your tulpa unless you know 100% certain otherwise.


If you are trying to make a sentient tulpa, then your brain will work to accomplish this. Parrot your unconscious, effortless, natural thoughts and, with enough neuron firings, those thoughts will transition from effortless to invasive. A tulpa will be born.

4. Simplify.

Do you have a lot to think about? Is your schedule heavy? A tulpa will be worth it, but you might need to drop a hobby or other responsibility. If you do not know how much you can handle, here's a test for you.

You have free time if:
You stay up late on your own accord.
You are often bored.
You do not keep a daily schedule.

You need to simplify if:
You are taking lessons, classes, and work.
You feel bad for not being able to keep up with a hobby.
The gaps in your schedule are filled by surprise meals, movies, and trips.

Rambling

It took me a year to learn all of this:
I doubted my strategies and methods.
I lacked a satisfaction that I could turn to.
I doubted every word my tulpa said.
Even in the summer, without school, I had unrealistic goals which wore on me.

I think of your mind as an economy:
If you hear a tip, you assume it is from a credible source, which means you assume that it will work. Therefore, you do not spend mental resources on pondering your success. Stress, worrying, doubt, and imagining complex scenarios will tax your mental economy. You would be surprised at how well you can think if you take it easy and take things one moment at a time. Problems, if any, will probably be small and will work themselves out naturally. If you have a mental sanctuary such as a sport, a friend, or a talent which you can recuperate with, whatever problems you have cannot take that away from you.

There was another online tip that seemed just as credible whether you feel as if you are neglecting your tulpa, you have trouble with extended attention, you forget to keep up, or you want to fill in the gaps between conversations:
-Assume your tulpa is sentient from the moment you start. Imagine it behind you or otherwise with you all day long. This gives a head start on imposition, makes them grow faster due to always being thought of, and does wonders for your visualization skills.


~Toggle


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