Author Topic: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown  (Read 79663 times)

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Offline michigancat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #150 on: February 24, 2013, 05:47:02 PM »
This team with Frank is the same as last year's team plus Jamar.  Either Frank is worse than we thought or oscar is way better.  Probably the latter.

Plus a year of experience

PLUS SEVEN PLAYERS QUITTING

plus much much worse league = undefeated, LOL at anyone who would think otherwise

So frank would beat isu and OU?   Why didn't he beat them last year?

frank only lost at Ames and Norman once each, so last years' losses were clearly anomalies. LOL if you think we wouldn't be undefeated this year.

Offline kim carnes

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #151 on: February 24, 2013, 05:49:14 PM »
Gosh I just don't know, we were pretty horrendous last year under frank and all of our players hated his guts.

Offline michigancat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #152 on: February 24, 2013, 05:49:49 PM »
Gosh I just don't know, we were pretty horrendous last year under frank and all of our players hated his guts.

LOL

Offline 101cat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #153 on: March 01, 2013, 04:42:31 AM »
I was #teamburnitdown. Bigtime. I'm a 30-something nontraditional student at KSU (after wasting a decade in the Army), and I've been a 'Cat fan since I was 8 years old in 1984. My family moved here, and my cousin promptly informed me that I was a K-State fan. I ran with it.

I dealt with years of abuse from squawklets, who rooted for KU for reasons unbeknownst to them. They beat us in football, they beat us in basketball...it got pretty tiring after a while, but my team is my team. Kruger gave me a glimmer of hope...and then he was gone.

I sat and watched and prayed through the Altman years, and become extremely apathetic with Asbury and Woolridge. Huggins started something great...and promptly bailed. Frank was always on the verge; as much as it broke my heart when he bailed, I knew that he was never getting through that glass ceiling.

So, along comes oscar. Suddenly, we're all saddled with a guy who just got fired for being a bad coach, and was about to take a job at a community college. Wonderful. I was ready to attend basketball games just to throw crap at the guy.

I'll tell you what, though--he's done an amazing job. Yes, it's with Frank's kids...and I don't give a crap. What matters to me is right now, and as I type this, we sit in first place. In March. His team beat Florida, took one from Iowa State, swept Oklahoma, and is about to sweep Baylor. Frank wasn't going to accomplish that.

Yes, his ability to recruit scares the hell out of me. Yes, he passed on Jacob. Yes, he brought us this rough ridin' clown Orris. He's also brought us DJamer, and has been using Williams and Lawrence; in addition, he doesn't pin his very hopes on the whims of one Will Spradling for every victory, and he's benched the hell out of Diaz...all good things in my book.

So, I admit: I was #teamburnitdown. And now, I'm on whatever team is willing to sit down and write this guy a letter of apology because...at least so far...I couldn't have been more wrong about the guy. Right now, this season, he fits a role we desperately needed.

That's it. Longtime lurker, rare poster, but I know how it goes. Post your A) DNR, B) STFU&GTFOOMF, and C) accuse me of being a sock. Whatever. It looks like being a former #burnitdown guy is putting me in the position to eat a crap-ton of humble pie.
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Offline felix rex

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Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #154 on: March 01, 2013, 05:01:16 AM »
Man, BID did a terrible job explaining ourselves.
"How will I recruit to Manhattan? Well, distance. And the proud state of basketball. It start there, and then daily flights to Dallas, because I'm really good at going out. Like top five good. Ask my wife. She wants me to be happy."

Offline Cire

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #155 on: March 01, 2013, 05:55:45 AM »
Frank would have absolutely buttfucked this league into oblivion this year

Offline mocat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #156 on: March 01, 2013, 06:17:57 AM »
Pro tip you are still #bid

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Re: Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #157 on: March 01, 2013, 06:22:16 AM »
Man, BID did a terrible job explaining ourselves.
Not really, just appears that non #BID can't think correctly.

Offline chum1

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #158 on: March 01, 2013, 07:03:57 AM »
No two BIDers have the same version of BID.  They're too butthurt to notice.

Offline CNS

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Re: Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #159 on: March 01, 2013, 07:27:33 AM »
Frank would have absolutely buttfucked this league into oblivion this year

Offline ednksu

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #160 on: March 01, 2013, 07:38:24 AM »
I love the bizzaro world the burners have created.  Yeah, like Frank wouldn't have dropped a couple games while teaching someone a lesson.
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Offline mocat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #161 on: March 01, 2013, 07:39:26 AM »
haha edn you go girl, you tell em

Offline CHONGS

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #162 on: March 01, 2013, 08:20:20 AM »
Cherry picking the results from the past that only support what you want to believe makes it very easy to make bold untestable claims. 

Offline Winters

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #163 on: March 01, 2013, 08:36:57 AM »
I was #teamburnitdown. Bigtime. I'm a 30-something nontraditional student at KSU (after wasting a decade in the Army), and I've been a 'Cat fan since I was 8 years old in 1984. My family moved here, and my cousin promptly informed me that I was a K-State fan. I ran with it.

I dealt with years of abuse from squawklets, who rooted for KU for reasons unbeknownst to them. They beat us in football, they beat us in basketball...it got pretty tiring after a while, but my team is my team. Kruger gave me a glimmer of hope...and then he was gone.

I sat and watched and prayed through the Altman years, and become extremely apathetic with Asbury and Woolridge. Huggins started something great...and promptly bailed. Frank was always on the verge; as much as it broke my heart when he bailed, I knew that he was never getting through that glass ceiling.

So, along comes oscar. Suddenly, we're all saddled with a guy who just got fired for being a bad coach, and was about to take a job at a community college. Wonderful. I was ready to attend basketball games just to throw crap at the guy.

I'll tell you what, though--he's done an amazing job. Yes, it's with Frank's kids...and I don't give a crap. What matters to me is right now, and as I type this, we sit in first place. In March. His team beat Florida, took one from Iowa State, swept Oklahoma, and is about to sweep Baylor. Frank wasn't going to accomplish that.

Yes, his ability to recruit scares the hell out of me. Yes, he passed on Jacob. Yes, he brought us this rough ridin' clown Orris. He's also brought us DJamer, and has been using Williams and Lawrence; in addition, he doesn't pin his very hopes on the whims of one Will Spradling for every victory, and he's benched the hell out of Diaz...all good things in my book.

So, I admit: I was #teamburnitdown. And now, I'm on whatever team is willing to sit down and write this guy a letter of apology because...at least so far...I couldn't have been more wrong about the guy. Right now, this season, he fits a role we desperately needed.

That's it. Longtime lurker, rare poster, but I know how it goes. Post your A) DNR, B) STFU&GTFOOMF, and C) accuse me of being a sock. Whatever. It looks like being a former #burnitdown guy is putting me in the position to eat a crap-ton of humble pie.
lol awesome
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Offline MadCat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #164 on: March 01, 2013, 08:41:23 AM »
I was #teamburnitdown. Bigtime. I'm a 30-something nontraditional student at KSU (after wasting a decade in the Army), and I've been a 'Cat fan since I was 8 years old in 1984. My family moved here, and my cousin promptly informed me that I was a K-State fan. I ran with it.

I dealt with years of abuse from squawklets, who rooted for KU for reasons unbeknownst to them. They beat us in football, they beat us in basketball...it got pretty tiring after a while, but my team is my team. Kruger gave me a glimmer of hope...and then he was gone.

I sat and watched and prayed through the Altman years, and become extremely apathetic with Asbury and Woolridge. Huggins started something great...and promptly bailed. Frank was always on the verge; as much as it broke my heart when he bailed, I knew that he was never getting through that glass ceiling.

So, along comes oscar. Suddenly, we're all saddled with a guy who just got fired for being a bad coach, and was about to take a job at a community college. Wonderful. I was ready to attend basketball games just to throw crap at the guy.

I'll tell you what, though--he's done an amazing job. Yes, it's with Frank's kids...and I don't give a crap. What matters to me is right now, and as I type this, we sit in first place. In March. His team beat Florida, took one from Iowa State, swept Oklahoma, and is about to sweep Baylor. Frank wasn't going to accomplish that.

Yes, his ability to recruit scares the hell out of me. Yes, he passed on Jacob. Yes, he brought us this rough ridin' clown Orris. He's also brought us DJamer, and has been using Williams and Lawrence; in addition, he doesn't pin his very hopes on the whims of one Will Spradling for every victory, and he's benched the hell out of Diaz...all good things in my book.

So, I admit: I was #teamburnitdown. And now, I'm on whatever team is willing to sit down and write this guy a letter of apology because...at least so far...I couldn't have been more wrong about the guy. Right now, this season, he fits a role we desperately needed.

That's it. Longtime lurker, rare poster, but I know how it goes. Post your A) DNR, B) STFU&GTFOOMF, and C) accuse me of being a sock. Whatever. It looks like being a former #burnitdown guy is putting me in the position to eat a crap-ton of humble pie.
lol awesome
It's definitely better than being a K-State fan because the drive to Lawrence is too taxing.

Offline J

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #165 on: March 01, 2013, 12:29:28 PM »
Last year I spent six months participating in what I was told was a psychological experiment. I found an ad in my local paper looking for imaginative people looking to make good money, and since it was the only ad that week that I was remotely qualified for, I gave them a call and we arranged an interview.

They told me that all I would have to do is stay in a room, alone, with sensors attached to my head to read my brain activity, and while I was there I would visualize a double of myself. They called it my “tulpa”.

It seemed easy enough, and I agreed to do it as soon as they told me how much I would be paid. And the next day, I began. They brought me to a simple room and gave me a bed, then attached sensors to my head and hooked them into a little black box on the table beside me. They talked me through the process of visualizing my double again, and explained that if I got bored or restless, instead of moving around, I should visualize my double moving around, or try to interact with him, and so on. The idea was to keep him with me the entire time I was in the room.

I had trouble with it for the first few days. It was more controlled than any sort of daydreaming I’d done before. I’d imagine my double for a few minutes, then grow distracted. But by the fourth day, I could manage to keep him “present” for the entire six hours. They told me I was doing very well.

The second week, they gave me a different room, with wall-mounted speakers. They told me they wanted to see if I could still keep the tulpa with me in spite of distracting stimuli. The music was discordant, ugly and unsettling, and it made the process a little more difficult, but I managed nonetheless. The next week they played even more unsettling music, punctuated with shrieks, feedback loops, what sounded like an old school modem dialing up, and guttural voices speaking some foreign language. I just laughed it off – I was a pro by then.

After about a month, I started to get bored. To liven things up, I started interacting with my doppelganger. We’d have conversations, or play rock-paper-scissors, or I’d imagine him juggling, or break-dancing, or whatever caught my fancy. I asked the researchers if my foolishness would adversely affect their study, but they encouraged me.

So we played, and communicated, and that was fun for a while. And then it got a little strange. I was telling him about my first date one day, and he corrected me. I’d said my date was wearing a yellow top, and he told me it was a green one. I thought about it for a second, and realized he was right. It creeped me out, and after my shift that day, I talked to the researchers about it. “You’re using the thought-form to access your subconscious,” they explained. “You knew on some level that you were wrong, and you subconsciously corrected yourself.”

What had been creepy was suddenly cool. I was talking to my subconscious! It took some practice, but I found that I could question my tulpa and access all sorts of memories. I could make it quote whole pages of books I’d read once, years before, or things I was taught and immediately forgot in high school. It was awesome.

That was around the time I started “calling up” my double outside of the research center. Not often at first, but I was so used to imagining him by now that it almost seemed odd to not see him. So whenever I was bored, I’d visualize my double. Eventually I started doing it almost all the time. It was amusing to take him along like an invisible friend. I imagined him when I was hanging out with friends, or visiting my mom, I even brought him along on a date once. I didn’t need to speak aloud to him, so I was able to carry out conversations with him and no one was the wiser.

I know that sounds strange, but it was fun. Not only was he a walking repository of everything I knew and everything I had forgotten, he also seemed more in touch with me than I did at times. He had an uncanny grasp of the minutiae of body language that I didn’t even realize I was picking up on. For example, I’d thought the date I brought him along on was going badly, but he pointed out how she was laughing a little too hard at my jokes, and leaning towards me as I spoke, and a bunch of other subtle clues I wasn’t consciously picking up on. I listened, and let’s just say that that date went very well.

By the time I’d been at the research center for four months, he was with my constantly. The researchers approached me one day after my shift, and asked me if I’d stopped visualizing him. I denied it, and they seemed pleased. I silently asked my double if he knew what prompted that, but he just shrugged it off. So did I.

I withdrew a little from the world at that point. I was having trouble relating to people. It seemed to me that they were so confused and unsure of themselves, while I had a manifestation of myself to confer with. It made socializing awkward. Nobody else seemed aware of the reasons behind their actions, why some things made them mad and others made them laugh. They didn’t know what moved them. But I did – or at least, I could ask myself and get an answer.

A friend confronted me one evening. He pounded at the door until I answered it, and came in fuming and swearing up a storm. “You haven’t answered when I called you in rough ridin' weeks, you dick!” He yelled. “What’s your rough ridin' problem?”.

I was about to apologize to him, and probably would have offered to hit the bars with him that night, but my tulpa grew suddenly furious. “Hit him,” it said, and before I knew what I was doing, I had. I heard his nose break. He fell to the floor and came up swinging, and we beat each other up and down my apartment.

I was more furious then than I have ever been, and I was not merciful. I knocked him to the ground and gave him two savage kicks to the ribs, and that was when he fled, hunched over and sobbing.

The police were by a few minutes later, but I told them that he had been the instigator, and since he wasn’t around to refute me, they let me off with a warning. My tulpa was grinning the entire time. We spent the night crowing about my victory and sneering over how badly I’d beaten my friend.

It wasn’t until the next morning, when I was checking out my black eye and cut lip in the mirror, that I remembered what had set me off. My double was the one who’d grown furious, not me. I’d been feeling guilty and a little ashamed, but he’d goaded me into a vicious fight with a concerned friend. He was present, of course, and knew my thoughts. “You don’t need him anymore. You don’t need anyone else,” he told me, and I felt my skin crawl.

I explained all this to the researchers who employed me, but they just laughed it off. “You can’t be scared of something that you’re imagining,” one told me. My double stood beside him, and nodded his head, then smirked at me.

I tried to take their words to heart, but over the next few days I found myself growing more and more anxious around my tulpa, and it seemed that he was changing. He looked taller, and more menacing. His eyes twinkled with mischief, and I saw malice in his constant smile. No job was worth losing my mind over, I decided. If he was out of control, I’d put him down. I was so used to him at that point that visualizing him was an automatic process, so I started trying my damnedest to not visualize him. It took a few days, but it started to work somewhat. I could get rid of him for hours at a time. But every time he came back, he seemed worse. His skin seemed ashen, his teeth more pointed. He hissed and gibbered and threatened and swore. The discordant music I’d been listening to for months seemed to accompany him everywhere. Even when I was at home – I’d relax and slip up, no longer concentrating on not seeing him, and there he’d be, and that howling noise with him.

I was still visiting the research center and spending my six hours there. I needed the money, and I thought they weren’t aware that I was now actively not visualizing my tulpa. I was wrong. After my shift one day, about five and a half months in, two impressively men grabbed and restrained me, and someone in a lab coat jabbed a hypodermic needle into me.

I woke up from my stupor back in the room, strapped into the bed, music blaring, with my doppelganger standing over me cackling. He hardly looked human anymore. His features were twisted. His eyes were sunken in their sockets and filmed over like a corpse’s. He was much taller than me, but hunched over. His hands were twisted, and the fingernails were like talons. He was, in short, rough ridin' terrifying. I tried to will him away, but I just couldn’t seem to concentrate. He giggled, and tapped the IV in my arm. I thrashed in my restraints as best I could, but could hardly move at all.

“They’re pumping you full of the good crap, I think. How’s the mind? All fuzzy?” He leaned closer and closer as he spoke. I gagged; his breath smelt like spoiled meat. I tried to focus, but couldn’t banish him.

The next few weeks were terrible. Every so often, someone in a doctor’s coat would come in and inject me with something, or force-feed me a pill. They kept me dizzy and unfocused, and sometimes left me hallucinating or delusional. My thoughtform was still present, constantly mocking. He interacted with, or perhaps caused, my delusions. I hallucinated that my mother was there, scolding me, and then he cut her throat and her blood showered me. It was so real that I could taste it.

The doctors never spoke to me. I begged at times, screamed, hurled invectives, demanded answers. They never spoke to me. They may have talked to my tulpa, my personal monster. I’m not sure. I was so doped and confused that it may have just been more delusion, but I remember them talking with him. I grew convinced that he was the real one, and I was the thoughtform. He encouraged that line of thought at times, mocked me at others.

Another thing that I pray was a delusion: he could touch me. More than that, he could hurt me. He’d poke and prod at me if he felt I wasn’t paying enough attention to him. Once he grabbed my testicles and squeezed until I told him I loved him. Another time, he slashed my forearm with one of his talons. I still have a scar – most days I can convince myself that I injured myself, and just hallucinated that he was responsible. Most days.

Then one day, while he was telling me a story about how he was going to gut everyone I loved, starting with my sister, he paused. A querulous look crossed his face, and reached out and touched my head. Like my mother used to when I was feverish. He stayed still for a long moment, and then smiled. “All thoughts are creative,” he told me. Then he walked out the door.

Three hours later, I was given an injection, and passed out. I awoke unrestrained. Shaking, I made my way to the door and found it unlocked. I walked out into the empty hallway, and then ran. I stumbled more than once, but I made it down the stairs and out into the lot behind the building. There, I collapsed, weeping like a child. I knew I had to keep moving, but I couldn’t manage it.

I got home eventually – I don’t remember how. I locked the door, and shoved a dresser against it, took a long shower, and slept for a day and a half. Nobody came for me in the night, and nobody came the next day, or the one after that. It was over. I’d spent a week locked in that room, but it had felt like a century. I’d withdrawn so much from my life beforehand that nobody had even known I was missing.

The police didn’t find anything. The research center was empty when they searched it. The paper trail fell apart. The names I’d given them were aliases. Even the money I’d received was apparently untraceable.

I recovered as much as one can. I don’t leave the house much, and I have panic attacks when I do. I cry a lot. I don’t sleep much, and my nightmares are terrible. It’s over, I tell myself. I survived. I use the concentration those bastards taught me to convince myself. It works, sometimes.

Not today, though. Three days ago, I got a phone call from my mother. There’s been a tragedy. My sister’s the latest victim in a spree of killings, the police say. The perpetrator mugs his victims, then guts them.

The funeral was this afternoon. It was as lovely a service as a funeral can be, I suppose. I was a little distracted, though. All I could hear was music coming from somewhere distant. Discordant, unsettling stuff, that sounds like feedback, and shrieking, and a modem dialing up. I hear it still – a little louder now.

Offline Ghost of Stan Parrish

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #166 on: March 01, 2013, 01:08:56 PM »
J is the most hardcore #BIDer on the board.   :comeatme:   Followed by Rusty.

I'm team predicting oscar is gonna have a long and successful career at KSU.  (We don't have a hashtag.)  And I'm enjoying the crap out of this potential championship season.
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Offline J

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #167 on: March 01, 2013, 03:02:07 PM »
J is the most hardcore #BIDer on the board.   :comeatme:   Followed by Rusty.

I'm team predicting oscar is gonna have a long and successful career at KSU.  (We don't have a hashtag.)  And I'm enjoying the crap out of this potential championship season.

I rise
I rise
I rise.

oscar rises

oscar HAS RISEN

Offline MadCat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #168 on: March 01, 2013, 03:10:32 PM »
J is the most hardcore #BIDer on the board.   :comeatme:   Followed by Rusty.

I'm team predicting oscar is gonna have a long and successful career at KSU.  (We don't have a hashtag.)  And I'm enjoying the crap out of this potential championship season.

I rise
I rise
I rise.

oscar rises

oscar HAS RISEN
oscar IS RISEN, INDEED!  :peek:

Offline chum1

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #169 on: March 01, 2013, 03:13:38 PM »
Team BID needs to have a meeting and get its crap together.  This is pathetic.

Offline wetwillie

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #170 on: March 01, 2013, 07:29:05 PM »
Team BID needs to have a meeting and get its crap together.  This is pathetic.

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Offline kougar24

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #171 on: March 01, 2013, 09:01:02 PM »
whoa, avatar deja vu

Offline rob mccolley

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #172 on: March 02, 2013, 01:51:10 AM »
I hear ya man. That happened to me too.

Last year I spent six months participating in what I was told was a psychological experiment. I found an ad in my local paper looking for imaginative people looking to make good money, and since it was the only ad that week that I was remotely qualified for, I gave them a call and we arranged an interview.

They told me that all I would have to do is stay in a room, alone, with sensors attached to my head to read my brain activity, and while I was there I would visualize a double of myself. They called it my “tulpa”.

It seemed easy enough, and I agreed to do it as soon as they told me how much I would be paid. And the next day, I began. They brought me to a simple room and gave me a bed, then attached sensors to my head and hooked them into a little black box on the table beside me. They talked me through the process of visualizing my double again, and explained that if I got bored or restless, instead of moving around, I should visualize my double moving around, or try to interact with him, and so on. The idea was to keep him with me the entire time I was in the room.

I had trouble with it for the first few days. It was more controlled than any sort of daydreaming I’d done before. I’d imagine my double for a few minutes, then grow distracted. But by the fourth day, I could manage to keep him “present” for the entire six hours. They told me I was doing very well.

The second week, they gave me a different room, with wall-mounted speakers. They told me they wanted to see if I could still keep the tulpa with me in spite of distracting stimuli. The music was discordant, ugly and unsettling, and it made the process a little more difficult, but I managed nonetheless. The next week they played even more unsettling music, punctuated with shrieks, feedback loops, what sounded like an old school modem dialing up, and guttural voices speaking some foreign language. I just laughed it off – I was a pro by then.

After about a month, I started to get bored. To liven things up, I started interacting with my doppelganger. We’d have conversations, or play rock-paper-scissors, or I’d imagine him juggling, or break-dancing, or whatever caught my fancy. I asked the researchers if my foolishness would adversely affect their study, but they encouraged me.

So we played, and communicated, and that was fun for a while. And then it got a little strange. I was telling him about my first date one day, and he corrected me. I’d said my date was wearing a yellow top, and he told me it was a green one. I thought about it for a second, and realized he was right. It creeped me out, and after my shift that day, I talked to the researchers about it. “You’re using the thought-form to access your subconscious,” they explained. “You knew on some level that you were wrong, and you subconsciously corrected yourself.”

What had been creepy was suddenly cool. I was talking to my subconscious! It took some practice, but I found that I could question my tulpa and access all sorts of memories. I could make it quote whole pages of books I’d read once, years before, or things I was taught and immediately forgot in high school. It was awesome.

That was around the time I started “calling up” my double outside of the research center. Not often at first, but I was so used to imagining him by now that it almost seemed odd to not see him. So whenever I was bored, I’d visualize my double. Eventually I started doing it almost all the time. It was amusing to take him along like an invisible friend. I imagined him when I was hanging out with friends, or visiting my mom, I even brought him along on a date once. I didn’t need to speak aloud to him, so I was able to carry out conversations with him and no one was the wiser.

I know that sounds strange, but it was fun. Not only was he a walking repository of everything I knew and everything I had forgotten, he also seemed more in touch with me than I did at times. He had an uncanny grasp of the minutiae of body language that I didn’t even realize I was picking up on. For example, I’d thought the date I brought him along on was going badly, but he pointed out how she was laughing a little too hard at my jokes, and leaning towards me as I spoke, and a bunch of other subtle clues I wasn’t consciously picking up on. I listened, and let’s just say that that date went very well.

By the time I’d been at the research center for four months, he was with my constantly. The researchers approached me one day after my shift, and asked me if I’d stopped visualizing him. I denied it, and they seemed pleased. I silently asked my double if he knew what prompted that, but he just shrugged it off. So did I.

I withdrew a little from the world at that point. I was having trouble relating to people. It seemed to me that they were so confused and unsure of themselves, while I had a manifestation of myself to confer with. It made socializing awkward. Nobody else seemed aware of the reasons behind their actions, why some things made them mad and others made them laugh. They didn’t know what moved them. But I did – or at least, I could ask myself and get an answer.

A friend confronted me one evening. He pounded at the door until I answered it, and came in fuming and swearing up a storm. “You haven’t answered when I called you in rough ridin' weeks, you dick!” He yelled. “What’s your rough ridin' problem?”.

I was about to apologize to him, and probably would have offered to hit the bars with him that night, but my tulpa grew suddenly furious. “Hit him,” it said, and before I knew what I was doing, I had. I heard his nose break. He fell to the floor and came up swinging, and we beat each other up and down my apartment.

I was more furious then than I have ever been, and I was not merciful. I knocked him to the ground and gave him two savage kicks to the ribs, and that was when he fled, hunched over and sobbing.

The police were by a few minutes later, but I told them that he had been the instigator, and since he wasn’t around to refute me, they let me off with a warning. My tulpa was grinning the entire time. We spent the night crowing about my victory and sneering over how badly I’d beaten my friend.

It wasn’t until the next morning, when I was checking out my black eye and cut lip in the mirror, that I remembered what had set me off. My double was the one who’d grown furious, not me. I’d been feeling guilty and a little ashamed, but he’d goaded me into a vicious fight with a concerned friend. He was present, of course, and knew my thoughts. “You don’t need him anymore. You don’t need anyone else,” he told me, and I felt my skin crawl.

I explained all this to the researchers who employed me, but they just laughed it off. “You can’t be scared of something that you’re imagining,” one told me. My double stood beside him, and nodded his head, then smirked at me.

I tried to take their words to heart, but over the next few days I found myself growing more and more anxious around my tulpa, and it seemed that he was changing. He looked taller, and more menacing. His eyes twinkled with mischief, and I saw malice in his constant smile. No job was worth losing my mind over, I decided. If he was out of control, I’d put him down. I was so used to him at that point that visualizing him was an automatic process, so I started trying my damnedest to not visualize him. It took a few days, but it started to work somewhat. I could get rid of him for hours at a time. But every time he came back, he seemed worse. His skin seemed ashen, his teeth more pointed. He hissed and gibbered and threatened and swore. The discordant music I’d been listening to for months seemed to accompany him everywhere. Even when I was at home – I’d relax and slip up, no longer concentrating on not seeing him, and there he’d be, and that howling noise with him.

I was still visiting the research center and spending my six hours there. I needed the money, and I thought they weren’t aware that I was now actively not visualizing my tulpa. I was wrong. After my shift one day, about five and a half months in, two impressively men grabbed and restrained me, and someone in a lab coat jabbed a hypodermic needle into me.

I woke up from my stupor back in the room, strapped into the bed, music blaring, with my doppelganger standing over me cackling. He hardly looked human anymore. His features were twisted. His eyes were sunken in their sockets and filmed over like a corpse’s. He was much taller than me, but hunched over. His hands were twisted, and the fingernails were like talons. He was, in short, rough ridin' terrifying. I tried to will him away, but I just couldn’t seem to concentrate. He giggled, and tapped the IV in my arm. I thrashed in my restraints as best I could, but could hardly move at all.

“They’re pumping you full of the good crap, I think. How’s the mind? All fuzzy?” He leaned closer and closer as he spoke. I gagged; his breath smelt like spoiled meat. I tried to focus, but couldn’t banish him.

The next few weeks were terrible. Every so often, someone in a doctor’s coat would come in and inject me with something, or force-feed me a pill. They kept me dizzy and unfocused, and sometimes left me hallucinating or delusional. My thoughtform was still present, constantly mocking. He interacted with, or perhaps caused, my delusions. I hallucinated that my mother was there, scolding me, and then he cut her throat and her blood showered me. It was so real that I could taste it.

The doctors never spoke to me. I begged at times, screamed, hurled invectives, demanded answers. They never spoke to me. They may have talked to my tulpa, my personal monster. I’m not sure. I was so doped and confused that it may have just been more delusion, but I remember them talking with him. I grew convinced that he was the real one, and I was the thoughtform. He encouraged that line of thought at times, mocked me at others.

Another thing that I pray was a delusion: he could touch me. More than that, he could hurt me. He’d poke and prod at me if he felt I wasn’t paying enough attention to him. Once he grabbed my testicles and squeezed until I told him I loved him. Another time, he slashed my forearm with one of his talons. I still have a scar – most days I can convince myself that I injured myself, and just hallucinated that he was responsible. Most days.

Then one day, while he was telling me a story about how he was going to gut everyone I loved, starting with my sister, he paused. A querulous look crossed his face, and reached out and touched my head. Like my mother used to when I was feverish. He stayed still for a long moment, and then smiled. “All thoughts are creative,” he told me. Then he walked out the door.

Three hours later, I was given an injection, and passed out. I awoke unrestrained. Shaking, I made my way to the door and found it unlocked. I walked out into the empty hallway, and then ran. I stumbled more than once, but I made it down the stairs and out into the lot behind the building. There, I collapsed, weeping like a child. I knew I had to keep moving, but I couldn’t manage it.

I got home eventually – I don’t remember how. I locked the door, and shoved a dresser against it, took a long shower, and slept for a day and a half. Nobody came for me in the night, and nobody came the next day, or the one after that. It was over. I’d spent a week locked in that room, but it had felt like a century. I’d withdrawn so much from my life beforehand that nobody had even known I was missing.

The police didn’t find anything. The research center was empty when they searched it. The paper trail fell apart. The names I’d given them were aliases. Even the money I’d received was apparently untraceable.

I recovered as much as one can. I don’t leave the house much, and I have panic attacks when I do. I cry a lot. I don’t sleep much, and my nightmares are terrible. It’s over, I tell myself. I survived. I use the concentration those bastards taught me to convince myself. It works, sometimes.

Not today, though. Three days ago, I got a phone call from my mother. There’s been a tragedy. My sister’s the latest victim in a spree of killings, the police say. The perpetrator mugs his victims, then guts them.

The funeral was this afternoon. It was as lovely a service as a funeral can be, I suppose. I was a little distracted, though. All I could hear was music coming from somewhere distant. Discordant, unsettling stuff, that sounds like feedback, and shrieking, and a modem dialing up. I hear it still – a little louder now.

Offline eastcat

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #173 on: November 08, 2013, 10:19:57 PM »
Burn it the eff down
 :buh-bye:

Offline bones129

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Re: Can I get a roll call for #teamburnitdown
« Reply #174 on: November 08, 2013, 10:22:00 PM »

Don't burn it down...BLOW IT UP.