Philosophy of the Dreamer

"One Who Seeks the world for the keys of knowledge only binds themselves in a pit of despair ignoring the knowledge from the beauty around them" The Philosophy of the Dreamer is a life philosophy based around the concept of spiritual freedom and detachment from material worries and stagnation in order to find joy and fulfillment within the continuous movement of oneself and the furthermore viewing of the natural beauty of this world. In the eyes of the Philosophy all pain and suffering is a mere challenge in the guise of the dream of life that must be overcome and learned from in the great move forward. The Philosophy is notoriously against the devotion of oneself towards seeking specific objects and follows the rule of Savor All or Savor None.

History
The Philosophy of the Dreamer is based around the spiritual beliefs of the Cabaran Rodent peoples and was compiled by the aged Lady Ax'zheica of House Cabaruna using her near ten thousand years of experience. From there she is noted to have compiled her teachings within 1018 AC and spread them throughout the world of Eldham through a series of compiled stories and establishing the School Of The Dreamer

The Man and the Bird
There Lived a man of a fair age, He had not lived long yet not for a short time. He had done little in his life and struggled to find joy or fulfillment in his life. One day upon a sky of auburn color was the man visited by a bird more colorful and joyful than any other, it perched on a branch that floated upon an endless pond of tar from which the man had made his abode. The bird asked the man on what troubled him and why he was within this lake. For I have no joy no summer wind dances within this tar pit and no snow falls except those whomst wheezed their last breath and fell into the tar. The bird listened to the mans sorrows and yet the bird was confused, for you see this bird had seen all the summer winds and had seen seas of snow falling. It now chirped back in its joyous voice The summer winds and snow fall do not come to those who stay put but to those who march through the dream of life, it may be little more than nightmare of seeing naught the beauty of the world. For I do not stop as I flutter my wings a constant and dance through the winds taking as the dream of life commands. I do not fear the worries that you do for I have let go of my limitations and fly within the wind and swim through the deepest sea for that is how one finds joy in this dream And with this the man took the birds wisdom and pulled himself from the unescapable tar with ease and saw the dream of life for how it could be, a constant beauty of new adventures and joys to be found as long as he kept on moving and was not bound. And so he moved through the dream for the rest of his days dying a happy man.