Understand me...
Psychology:
Ycea is very typical of her people. She finds value in family, legacy, discovery, sport, and creation. While there is no select group of people she will call family, she loves those she knows. She especially finds joy in welcoming new members to her family by watching over the children as a mother, friend, and teacher. Legacy is possibly one of the greatest values she holds after the near destruction of her people centuries ago. People have purpose, and it should not be forgotten in death. What the dead leave behind is a gift and it should be cherished. Discovery is dear to her because there is so much unknown both above and below. There is a sense of duty for her to take advantage of her environment and explore the below. What secrets and treasures she will find will also equate to the worth of her legacy and purpose. Because the Charodae are beyond violence, Ycea finds great worth in sport. Be it racing or other, it makes up for the conflict between pacifism and competition. Sport allows for those who wish to prove them the greater in their area of expertise without bringing harm, typically. The fact remains, the victor only proves himself or herself in that one area, and it should be applauded as a calling in life. Lastly creation is of high value because it is of mortal design to create. This ranged from architecture to life, both great things that are left behind for continuation of a people in both popular image and existence. Beyond the bounds of her people, Ycea wishes a great deal for peace, and faces the greatest challenge with the nearby Myrians.
Boundaries:
Ycea has a wide range of awe and tolerance with very distinct bounds. Among those great things that make a good life, there are few overlooked by her. Mundane things, such as beauty, possessions, popularity, and cuisine, all hold high value to her. They are staples of the mortal existence and should be cherished for every person in every life is reborn seeking nothing different, in Ycea’s eyes. To behold something of the divine is unnatural; the tools are never designed to go against the purpose their wielder intends, and so it is strange to her to be in the presence of her makers and so much as act when it is be their being she so much as exists. Who is she, a tool, to decide what she should do in the presence of her creators?
All the same there are negative things in life which she utterly opposes. One of the worst things for Ycea to observe is destruction as it is the anti-thesis of one of her virtues. Destruction by mortal hands is unnatural, and therefore opposes it or anything similar. However, if destruction is a result of a mortal through aid of a deity, such as gnosis, then it is assumed that is the will of the gods and is justified. Waste is the following sin in Ycea’s mind. Everything has purpose and should do better being acknowledged in her pile of stuff than thrown aside somewhere on the ocean floor. With this she takes pride in hoarding and savaging. Waste of other mortal gifts mentioned as high values is also recognized as sickly and crude. Waste of beauty or food, for example, will earn her disdain.
Life Goals, Dreams, and Purpose:[
Ycea’s personal goals fall in her more conscious thought and attention. These goals are generally any method in which she can uphold her virtues. To reach such goals, she acquaints herself a great deal with her people and the young. Her life goals include the rebuilding of her civilization and fulfilling her duties to the patron and matron gods and goddesses of her people and the world. Ycea has dreams of greatness beyond the mortal life. She tries to imagine what it is like when waiting to be reborn as mortals never truly recall, to be free in spirit and unopposed by the physics of the mortal world. Purpose remains unknown, and ties back to a life goal of self discovery. |