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  4. What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
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What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?

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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« on: 12/11/2018 17:40:45 »
Subtle gestures of your body language can be an innate response to the behavior of you tailbone and to avoid dizzyness from it wagging. You can start your tail wagging or pass a wagging motion between your hands, knees, balance system, and tail by creating an almost indetectable wobbling in the motion of a tail wag with one of these parts, but it is difficult to make a tailbone gesture with any two methods at the same time. It can experience pauses, a change in motion, or a change in speed in accordance with: emotion caused by thought, outside stimulus's, making gestures, changing focus in your eyes, breathing and a few other things..

When you stifle a tailbone wag it may come out as dizzyness in your ears. Changing focus onto your tailbone can stop this dizzyness, so will wobbling your hands or knees in a motion to the dizzyness. Watching something move back and forth, like a bouncing emoji or shadows through the trees can alter your tail wag and dizzyness. So does making slight movements with your mouth, head, eyes, hands and legs. You may compulsively shake your leg or adjust yourself in your seat. Breathing can change a wag's motion or speed, or put momentary stops in the wag. Breathing in or out can stop or start your tail wag. When Highly interested in something your tail will swing fast, when moderately interested it swings slower or stops. You can be interested in a variety of things: people around, your own thoughts, saying something, doing something.You also may already avoid having thoughts that make you dizzy this way. Doing something other then sit still, like taking a drink, or smoking, provides a moment to away from your thoughts, and you move around which stifles the tail. All of these things you might do already to stop dizzyness from your tail and you don't even know it. Any anxious gesture can be relieved by focusing on your tail.

Wagging your tail all the time because you think its fun or therapeutic can be frustrating, painful, and cause hallucinations. Changing back to a normal state where you adjust your comfort with stifling methods will alleviate this, so will sleep, so will enjoyment of usual activities, driving a car for a while will keep your tail from wagging as your constantly at the edge of your seat focusing on new things.

It doesn't matter if you are out in public or home alone, it will wag either way, As long as you are sitting or standing still, you will feel it. It doesn't matter if you have thoughts or not it will wag either way, however thoughts can have an effect. It doesn't matter if you are calm or emotional it will wag either way. It will sometimes wag when you want it too and other times it won't. It wags frequently along to music then without. When I'm driving I feel it wag almost every time i'm sitting at a red light, then If I move it all I can barely feel over the bumpy road. It doesn't matter if I'm talking to someone it may or may not wag. If I'm walking I can feel it move around, but it more swings around and I can put a momentary glitch in it so it swings slower or differently. That your tail swings when you walk is also true for dogs and is related to balance. After you've been walking and stop and stand still it can still resonate a wag. Just focusing on you tail is meditative. It doesn't matter if you watch it or not it will wag either way.

When wagging alone you may experience a response from voices. Mine will shun me when I intentionally try to wag. I use different methods to start a wag. One of them as I mentioned is wobbling my knees or hands ever so slightly in the motion of a tail wag. I can then pass this motion into my tail. Another trick is to purposely wobble your balance system in your ears to immitate a tail wag. Of all the artificial tail wagging I create, using the balance system to start a wag creates the biggest disturbance with voices. I gather the general impression that voices can wag there tails or at least experience dizzyness on there own, However a ghost or voice cannot keep the dizzyness going in my ears if I use simple techniques like those above to drown out the ghost's wag.

Another method you can try with ghosts is a one wag. By wagging your tail one time and repeating every 5 seconds, you can stimulate another person's tail, or a ghost. It is a complicated trick.

I also notice my spine shake like rotate in circles that I do automatically that makes my head feel like a bobble doll, this gesture can be felt while pretending to swing say a baseball bat, it will make your head dizzy without wagging your tail.

Embrace the dizzyness, embrace the wag.
« Last Edit: 05/04/2019 15:45:00 by trevorjohnson32 »
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #1 on: 12/11/2018 18:05:01 »
One could postulate that the bigger your tail the more it wags, A balanced wag is a thing of hypnotic beauty! lol
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #2 on: 12/11/2018 19:32:21 »
I didn't know this could wag, and I'm still not sure it can.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coccyx
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #3 on: 14/12/2018 03:44:00 »
There seems to be a lot of inherent pressure not to wag the tail deliberately, and if it starts to wag to make it stop quickly. Alternating a slight wobbling motion between your knees and your hands can loosen up the tailbone.
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Offline Kryptid

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #4 on: 14/12/2018 05:38:44 »
I haven't heard anything like this before. Are you sure it isn't all in your head?
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #5 on: 14/12/2018 21:09:06 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 14/12/2018 05:38:44
I haven't heard anything like this before. Are you sure it isn't all in your head?

No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag, which should only take a short time.

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #6 on: 15/12/2018 05:49:42 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 14/12/2018 21:09:06
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #7 on: 15/12/2018 18:28:03 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 15/12/2018 05:49:42
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 14/12/2018 21:09:06
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?

reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #8 on: 15/12/2018 19:51:22 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 15/12/2018 18:28:03
Quote from: Kryptid on 15/12/2018 05:49:42
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 14/12/2018 21:09:06
No, there are many crazy tricks that can be done once your profficient at the tail wag.

Such as?

reading people's gestures and controlling there behaviour through gestures of your own is kind of fun. You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public, its a very subtle gesture but one can see it even in there peripheral vision.
None of what you have said here, or elsewhere in the thread, makes any sense.
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Offline Kryptid

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #9 on: 16/12/2018 02:29:53 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 15/12/2018 18:28:03
You can see another persons tail wag while standing in public

I don't buy it.
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #10 on: 16/12/2018 05:12:14 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 16/12/2018 02:29:53
I don't buy it.

It's noticeable when your standing, say in a line at the store or at a diner checkout or a bar, as a gesture in the legs. Once you get your tail wagging you can pass it off to another person who might adjust his legs, then after a couple seconds adjust them again at which point your up to make a gesture back. Its all about emotion of thought and body language.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #11 on: 16/12/2018 05:34:27 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 16/12/2018 05:12:14
It's noticeable when your standing, say in a line at the store or at a diner checkout or a bar, as a gesture in the legs. Once you get your tail wagging you can pass it off to another person who might adjust his legs, then after a couple seconds adjust them again at which point your up to make a gesture back. Its all about emotion of thought and body language.

I'm skeptical that mere leg adjustments reveal much of anything about one's tailbone.

Do you have some reputable source for this information to back up your claims?
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #12 on: 16/12/2018 10:55:16 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 16/12/2018 05:12:14
It's noticeable when...
It plainly isn't or someone else here would have noticed it.
Provide some evidence that you are not just making this up.
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #13 on: 16/12/2018 17:17:12 »
I don't now its my discovery that wagging will cause you to become dizzy, that isn't anywhere else on the net. However when I first took interest in this subject back in 2012 there was a website and still are a few that do confirm that the human tailbone does in fact still wag. I can't find them anymore.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #14 on: 16/12/2018 21:48:22 »
Come back when you have evidence.
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Offline trevorjohnson32 (OP)

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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #15 on: 16/01/2019 20:44:40 »
So I've been fooling around with making gestures and wagging my tail in public since I wrote this. A few of the gestures I've noticed people naturally make when I stimulate there tail to wag are esp. moving their legs or adjusting the way they stand, shaking there leg, or this sort of jolt of tension through the waist that causes them to stand straight as if someone had just poked them in the back. I'll get back to you as I become less of a baby at this information.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #16 on: 16/01/2019 20:59:19 »
If you just come back with this
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_bias
Nobody will be impressed.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #17 on: 16/01/2019 21:08:00 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 20:44:40
So I've been fooling around with making gestures and wagging my tail in public since I wrote this. A few of the gestures I've noticed people naturally make when I stimulate there tail to wag are esp. moving their legs or adjusting the way they stand, shaking there leg, or this sort of jolt of tension through the waist that causes them to stand straight as if someone had just poked them in the back. I'll get back to you as I become less of a baby at this information.

How would that even work? How is anyone going to see your tailbone moving through your pants in the first place?
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #18 on: 16/01/2019 21:16:32 »
Quote from: Kryptid on 16/01/2019 21:08:00
How would that even work? How is anyone going to see your tailbone moving through your pants in the first place?

Good day to you sir! Well like I said I'm only about 2 months old at watching for this, so it certainly hasn't become second nature yet. But when another person's tail starts to wag it is visibly noticeable as a circular motion in there entire waist. Almost everyone adjusts there legs pretty quickly. You can stimulate another person's tail by making gestures, or by wagging your own, and then stopping, its strange the wag will pass itself around between people.
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Re: What causes the human tailbone to wag/Dizzyness?
« Reply #19 on: 16/01/2019 21:22:43 »
Quote from: trevorjohnson32 on 16/01/2019 21:16:32
But when another person's tail starts to wag it is visibly noticeable as a circular motion in there entire waist.

And how do you know that this circular motion that you see in other people is indeed due to their tail wagging?
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