Tulpa
Template:About Template:Short description Template:More medical citations needed A tulpa is a materialized being or thought-form, typically in human shape, that is created through spiritual practice and intense concentration.<ref name="Campbell">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Rojcewicz1987">Rojcewicz, P.M., 1987. The "men in black" experience and tradition: analogues with the traditional devil hypothesis. Journal of American Folklore, pp.148-160</ref><ref name ="Westerhoff2010">Westerhoff, J. (2010). Twelve Examples of Illusion. Oxford University Press.</ref> The term is borrowed from Tibetan Buddhism. Modern practitioners, who call themselves "tulpamancers", use the term to refer to a type of willed imaginary friend whom practitioners consider sentient and relatively independent. Modern practitioners predominantly consider tulpas a psychological rather than a paranormal phenomenon.<ref name="Vice">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Veissière">Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The idea became an important belief in Theosophy.
OriginsEdit
The concept of tulpas has origins in the Buddhist nirmāṇakāya, translated in Tibetan as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}): The earthly bodies that a buddha manifests in order to teach those who have not attained nirvana. The western understanding of tulpas was developed by 20th-century European mystical explorers, who interpreted the idea independently of buddhahood.<ref name="TrackTulpas">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Theosophy and thought-formsEdit
20th-century Theosophists adapted the Vajrayana concept of the emanation body into the concepts of 'tulpa' and 'thoughtform'.<ref name="Mikles">Template:Cite journal</ref> In her 1905 book Thought-Forms, the Theosophist Annie Besant divides them into three classes: forms in the shape of the person who creates them, forms that resemble objects or people and may become ensouled by nature spirits or by the dead, and forms that represent inherent qualities from the astral or mental planes, such as emotions.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The term 'thoughtform' is also used in Evans-Wentz's 1927 translation of the Tibetan Book of the Dead,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and in the Western practice of magic.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Page needed Some have called the Slender Man a tulpa-effect, and attributed it to multiple people's thought processes.<ref name="Chess2014">Chess, S., & Newsom, E. (2014). Folklore, Horror Stories, and the Slender Man: The Development of an Internet Mythology. Springer. pp. 132</ref>
In his book The Human Aura, occultist William Walker Atkinson describes thoughtforms as simple ethereal objects emanating from the auras surrounding people, generated by their thoughts and feelings.<ref name="Panchadsi">Template:Cite book</ref> In Clairvoyance and Occult Powers, he describes how experienced practitioners of the occult can produce thoughtforms from their auras that serve as astral projections, or as illusions that can only be seen by those with "awakened astral senses".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Alexandra David-NéelEdit
Spiritualist Alexandra David-Néel said she had observed Buddhist tulpa creation practices in 20th-century Tibet.<ref name="TrackTulpas"/><ref name="Campbell" /> She called tulpas "magic formations generated by a powerful concentration of thought".<ref name="David-Neel">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp David-Néel believed a tulpa could develop a mind of its own: "Once the tulpa is endowed with enough vitality to be capable of playing the part of a real being, it tends to free itself from its maker's control. According to David-Néel, this happens nearly mechanically, just as the child, when her body is completed and able to live apart, leaves its mother's womb."<ref name="David-Neel"/>Template:Rp She said she had created such a tulpa in the image of a jolly Friar Tuck-like monk, which she claimed had later developed independent thought and had to be destroyed.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Westerhoff2010"/> David-Néel raised the possibility that her experience was illusory: "I may have created my own hallucination", though she said others could see the thoughtforms that she created.<ref name="David-Neel"/>Template:Rp
TulpamancersEdit
Influenced by depictions in television and cinema from the 1990s and 2000s, the term tulpa started to be used to refer to a type of willed imaginary friend.<ref name="Mikles" /> Practitioners consider tulpas sentient and relatively autonomous.<ref name="Vice" /> Online communities dedicated to tulpas spawned on the 4chan and Reddit websites. These communities call tulpa practitioners "tulpamancers". The communities gained popularity when adult fans of My Little Pony started discussing tulpas of characters from the television series My Little Pony.<ref name="Vice" /> The fans attempted to use meditation and lucid dreaming techniques to create imaginary friends.<ref name="Veissière" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Surveys by Samuel Veissière explored this community's demographic, social, and psychological profiles. These practitioners believe a tulpa is a "real or somewhat-real person".<ref name="Veissière" /> The number of active participants in these online communities is in the low hundreds, and few meetings in person have taken place. They belong to "primarily urban, middle-class, Euro-American adolescent and young adult demographics"<ref name="Veissière" /> and "cite loneliness and social anxiety as an incentive to pick up the practice".<ref name="Veissière" /> 93.7% of respondents said their involvement with the creation of tulpas had "made their condition better"<ref name="Veissière" /> and led to new, unusual sensory experiences. Some practitioners have sexual and romantic interactions with their tulpas, though the practice is controversial and trending toward taboo.<ref name="Samuel">Template:Citation</ref> One survey found that 8.5% support a metaphysical explanation of tulpas, 76.5% support a neurological or psychological explanation, and 14% "other" explanations.<ref name="Veissière" />
Practitioners believe tulpas are able to communicate with their host in ways they sense do not originate from their own thoughts. Some practitioners report experiencing hallucinations of their tulpas. Practitioners that have hallucinations report being able to see, hear and touch their tulpas.<ref name="Veissière" />
Veissière's survey of 141 respondents found that the rates of neurodivergence including autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was significantly higher among the surveyed tulpamancers than in the general population. He speculates that these people may be more likely to want to make a tulpa because they have a higher level of loneliness. Tulpamancers were typically white, articulate, and imaginative and lived in urban areas.<ref name="Somer2021"/> A 2022 study found people who did not have psychosis and experienced more than one unusual sensory phenomenon (in this instance autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) and tulpamancy) were more prone to hallucination than people who experienced only one of the two sensory phenomena.<ref name="Cooper2022">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Somer et al. (2021) describe the Internet tulpamancer subculture as being used to "overcome loneliness and mental suffering", and noted the close association with reality shifting (RS), a way of deliberately inducing a form of self-hypnosis to escape from reality into a pre-planned desired reality or "wonderland" of chosen fantasy characters.<ref name="Somer2021"> Somer, E., Cardeña, E., Catelan, R.F. et al. Reality shifting: psychological features of an emergent online daydreaming culture. Curr Psychol (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-021-02439-3</ref>