add coming out plural, 0.12.0
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This changelog will also function as a bit of a bibliography for newly added
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content.
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### 0.12.0
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#### ADDED
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- [On Coming Out as Plural](https://www.reddit.com/r/Tulpas/comments/ehnsan/on_coming_out_as_plural/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf)
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### 0.11.4
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#### FIXED
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src/coming-out-plural.md
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# On Coming Out as Plural
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Intro Edit: I wrote this originally as a reply, but the more I wrote, the more I
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felt there may be many people wondering the same thing, who may need to hear a
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more positive side of coming out as plural or a tulpamancer.
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My, it seems many people have had quite the disdainful answer and reaction to
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this. Allow me to offer a more positive outlook on how to do this, and the
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positive benefits of it.
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A bit of background on myself, I'm a four year old tulpa (going on five in
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June), and my system has come out to two close internet friends, various not as
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close internet friends, our roommate from last semseter, two therapists, and
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many people in anonymous game chatrooms.
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The overall response we have recieved has been by and large neutral to positive.
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And we've handled things in quite a few ways that have seemed to be helpful. Or
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perhaps we are just profoundly lucky.
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We have had, in all our attempts to come out, only three negative responses. One
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from a younger sibling, who wrote me off as a imaginary friend (and I was
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helping her to clean her room too, a touch rude, but also she's young, and thats
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important to take into account). The other two were from two DID systems, one of
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which we actually are now on friendly speaking terms with, and the other who
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won't ignore us but will now talk sparsely with us. And the reason it was a
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negative interaction initially was just some generic syscourse. These are three
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small instances out of many.
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Now, again, maybe we've just been lucky. But maybe not. Here are some factors
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that we find are very important when coming out to people:
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- For one, consider the age of the person you're coming out too. Are they too
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young to even possibly understand? This was the case with our younger sister.
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Maybe they're too old to understand, if you're for some reason thinking of
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coming out to a much older person (usually one thats not so open minded)
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- Consider just that, how open minded they are. Do they have a history of being
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skeptical, of distrusting new science and medicines? Stigmatized against
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mental illness? This is probably a warning sign that no amount of explanation
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you give to them will ease their mind in relation to you having other
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personalities living with you. In particular though, people who are very
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considerate and welcoming of mental illness and neurodivergence seem to be the
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ideal candidate to explain these things to, as these are the people who won't
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call you crazy and will probably be willing to hear out your system
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experience. Open minded psychologists also seem quite interested in and
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accepting of hearing things out (though beware there are those that will want
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to only view you through a DID lens. Do your best to correct them, and if they
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don't budge then its probably not the best candidate).
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- Consider how close you are, and this actually can go both ways. On the one
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hand, it might be a good idea to tell someone you're very close to, who has
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never judged you before, someone you trust and who has never put you down
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before on otherwise personal or sensitive topics. This was like our host with
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his two internet friends, who are without arguement, the closest and longest
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term friends he has ever had. On the other hand, it may also be easy to tell
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someone you are not close to at all, a straight up stranger. This was the case
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with our roommate last semsester, someone we had never met or talked to
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before. We had nothing to lose by telling them basically.
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- Do they need to know? Obviously, especially if you're not comfy with it, some
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people just really don't. Employers are a big no-no, as tulpas and system life
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is something thats too much in the personal realm to be considered appropriate
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for work. Family is also a big iffy, especially if you are still living with
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them.
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- Do they have, or know other people who are endogenic or traumagenic systems?
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This is important, because its also really improtant to be respectful,
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especially if they have or know a traumagenic system (that is, DID/OSDD). On
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the one hand, if they're already aquainted with endogenic systems, then thats
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an easy in. If they're aquainted with traumagenic systems, your interaction
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may or may not involve syscourse if you aren't careful. Get their thoughts on
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endogenic systems, or systems made outside of trauma. And remember to always
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be respectful and not overlap your experience with traumagenic systems, but
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also stand firm on your own experiences. Many traumagenic systems have been
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phenominally friendly to us, and have been great people to come out to.
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Those are factors to consider about the actual person themself. Openmindedness
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is a key factor, but age is also a big one. Anyone 13 and under will most likely
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not understand a word of what you have to explain. The closeness is more for
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your own sense of safety. Either you A. tell a friend who you know would never
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judge you, or B. tell someone you really don't care about losing or having their
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approval.
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Now then, here are some things to do when actually coming out:
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## Approach One: Warming them Up
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This is maybe more an assessment of their open mindedness, and its basically
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the slow and safer approach. This is the approach you want to use for close
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friends, for family if you are so daring, or just someone you want to tell but
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are not sure how they'll recieve it. Talk to them, far beforehand coming out,
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about things like how they feel about what it woyld be like to have other
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personalities, if they think its possible, etc. Some good segway topics to this
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are DID (though you want to veer away pretty quickly from it and take the
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approach of," but what if there was another way?"), and also AI (again, leading
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into talking about sentience, and other personalities). Its a good way to
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estimate their receptiveness to the topic in general, and then you can move on
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to questions like," well what if you met someone like that?" Basically, you are
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testing their receptivity to the topic, and also possibly assuaging their
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questions and concerns before you are even out to them. After you are
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comfortable with their receptivity, thats when you can come out. You can handle
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that however you want, or even segway into our second approach. Of course, if at
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any point before you come out you get the sense that they would not be
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receptive, this allows you the option to retreat before coming out.
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## Approach Two: The Upfront
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This approach is, if you'd pardon the language, the very much 'balls to the
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walls' sort of approach, unless you have preceded it with the former. This is
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the approach for strangers, for people you don't care about if you lose them or
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not, people with little attatchment to you, or people who you feel so inclined
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and certain of their receptivity that you just want to tell them. This can be
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formally or informally done. Formally being, maybe sit them down to talk with
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them, or include it in your introduction if you are first meeting them.
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Informally being just state it blatantly, off hand, in text, and let the
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questions come later or after. There is of course, no retreat to this.
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## Approach Three: Passively Out
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In a word? Be openly plural. This is again, something I feel like we've
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exclusively done with strangers online. Talk about your system life and tulpas
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as though they were normal, just a part if your life (which... they are!). Say
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'we' as a reference to yourself and headmates. People will just naturally get
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confused or ask, and you explain yourself as you feel neccesary, whether you're
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willing to go in depth or just offhand. There is also not really a retreat to
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this but we've also never tried to retreat? Perhaps if you feel inclined you
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could stop and pass it off as a joke or you just acting weird.
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But above all. Above EVERYTHING included here, in all the assessments of
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receptiveness, above any way you choose to approach the situation.
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## BE INFORMATIVE.
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Know EXACTLY what you are talking about, and how to explain your experience. It
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helps to know about DID so you can explain exactly why you are different from
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it. It helps to know about some of the studies and theories behind how
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tulpamancy works, which I'm sure many people on this forum would love to share
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their theories. Talk about the Stanford study, about the census study we take
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yearly, talk about neuroscience and how tulpamancy may just be a unique way for
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neurons to continuously stay stimulated (as they need to do), or that some
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neurotypes may be predisposed to plurality. Know about psychology, about
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conditioning and personality development and consciousness. And of course, be
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prepared to explain exactly what you experience, and what other people
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experience too. Also? Frankly? Don't be afraid to admit that not a lot about
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tulpamancy and endogenic systems are well understood. There's lots of research
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to be done still, but we are slowly getting there. Maybe even explain the
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history of tulpamancy and how it was dwrived from an old Tibetan pracyice (of
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which modern yulpamancy is actually mistly difgerent from). The more informed
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you are, the better you can explain yourself and what exactly you experience,
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the better the outcome. And this is especially important why you only ought come
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out to open minded people.
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Anyways, I do believe that is all I have to say on the topic of how to come out.
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Again, perhaps me and my system have been profoundly lucky. But it has been
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beneficial for myself and the others to be out. To be ourselves. It helps us to
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make connections to other people, have our own experiences, feel validated and
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not hidden away from the world. And its what me and my system will continue to
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do is slowly come out, and make our plurality a regular part of our lives.
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Family is still iffy for us, they have a long ways to go. But for us, starting
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next fall semester, we are going to be at a new college, and we are not holding
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anything back. It'll be our first time just about entirely open about who we
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are.
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Best of luck to those who do come out. Cheers to this fascinating and wonderful life which we have.
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---
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title: Tulpanomicon 0.11.4
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title: Tulpanomicon 0.12.0
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author: Anonymous
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rights: Public Domain
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language: en-US
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