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A '''Wonderland''' is a term widely used in the tulpa community to refer to a mental environment where the [[host]] and [[Tulpa|tulpas]] can interact. This place is normally experienced similar to a semi-persistent daydream, but the amount of vividness can vary heavily with practice. Some people choose to work heavily on their wonderland, creating very large paracosms of intricate detail. Others however may not have a wonderland at all, or rather choose for their wonderland to be a black void, into which they can create temporary objects.
A '''Wonderland''' is a term widely used in the tulpamancy community to refer to a mental environment where the [[host]] and [[Tulpa|tulpas]] can interact. This place is normally experienced similar to a semi-persistent daydream, but the amount of vividness can vary heavily with practice. Some people choose to work heavily on their wonderland, creating very large microcosms of intricate detail. Others however may not have a wonderland at all, or rather choose for their wonderland to be a black void, into which they can create temporary objects.

Some consider wonderlands to be an extension of a technique from Ancient Greece, known as "The Method of Loci;" others consider it to be a type of wonderland itself.{{Citation needed|date=August 2023|reason=Who, exactly, has ever mentioned any of this?}}


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== History ==
== History ==
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{{Expand section|small=no|with=history of the terms creation and use|date=May 2018}}

Latest revision as of 22:52, 19 August 2023

A Wonderland is a term widely used in the tulpamancy community to refer to a mental environment where the host and tulpas can interact. This place is normally experienced similar to a semi-persistent daydream, but the amount of vividness can vary heavily with practice. Some people choose to work heavily on their wonderland, creating very large microcosms of intricate detail. Others however may not have a wonderland at all, or rather choose for their wonderland to be a black void, into which they can create temporary objects.

Some consider wonderlands to be an extension of a technique from Ancient Greece, known as "The Method of Loci;" others consider it to be a type of wonderland itself.[citation needed]

History[edit]