Lake Raro is an inland sea in the north of the continent Zige, south
of the Paban mountains and far north of the Kugma mountain range.
Situated around that sea are various cities, including the capital
city of Raro, where the nyaagcheek, king, lives and works.
Originally, the population was primarily rarite, but after
increasing connections between rarite people and the sela people in
the north, sela make up a sizable portion of the population as well.
Naming Traditions
Family Names
Raron children are named before they are born. When parents
first lay their eggs, they will write the name of the child on
the egg in a color unique to their family; as the sun beats down
on the eggs, however, the name eventually fades. In Raron
tradition, this is the child taking on the name while they are
waiting to hatch.
Other Names
Nicknames are acquired readily over the course of one's life. It
is not uncommon to have a name used by clutchmates, one name
used professionally, and another name used by friends.
Major Language Groups and Dialects
Rarons primarily speak languages from the Sheechsa language
family. One of the primary identifying traits of Sheechsa
languages is that they lack bilabial sounds like /p/ and /b/
because rarites do not have lips. All vowels are also unrounded
for this same reason. It is not impossible for rarites to create
those sounds, but it results in many rarites having an accent when
they speak languages in the Patado language family spoken by the
Paban and Kaloran peoples.
Ideals
Beauty Ideals
Rarons prize jewely as a sign of beauty, even though lack of
jewelry is not perceived as ugliness. For rarites, this can also
manifest as long necks and legs being considered more attractive
than shorter ones, just because they are usually able to display
more jewelry; however, as the sela prove, with their very short
necks, there are workarounds, such as wearing many decorated
sashes instead of necklaces.
Gender Ideals
There are four genders in Raron culture, corresponding roughly
to male (shavve), female (nguuv), both simultaneously (khuuv)
and neither (ga). It is not expected for someone's gender to be
the same over the course of their life. While some have the same
gender from birth until death, most will go through at least one
change.
Shavve Rarons are referred to with the pronouns he/him on this
site. They typically wear feather adornments around their necks
which blend in with the surrounding feathers. These feathers are
either their own or obtained from other shavves, who create the
necklaces themselves and give them to their friends as gifts.
Nguuv Rarons are referred to with the pronouns she/her. Unlike
shavves, nguuvs wear brightly colored feathers with beads and
other eye-catching decorations. Unyozeo shells are popular. It
is a custom for nguuvs to create and wear their own jewelry, but
it is common for nguuvs to host parties where many people
(including other genders) can make their necklaces.
Khuuv Rarons are referred to with they/them. They also make
their own jewelry, but they often wear multiple necklaces at
once of various colors and vibrancies. For rarites with their
long necks, some necklaces will be worn as chokers that sit
higher up, but khuuv sela will sometimes create sashes instead.
It is also common for khuuv to wear beads around their ankles or
to pierce their beaks or lips to hold more jewelry.
Ga Rarons choose a personal sound that can be used as a pronoun
for them. This can make translating their pronouns difficult, so
there are some standard ones: ze/hir and xe/xem are popular
translations. Ga Rarons will often eschew jewelry all together,
but if so it will typically be ankle jewelry only.
Courtship Ideals
Courtship is a public affair. People display their availability
in code, using beaded jewelry and rags to communicate their
interests and availability.
Sexuality is not typically defined by the gender of the
individuals, but some preferences can emerge. There is no stigma
against persuing someone of the same gender nor of a different
gender. Families are encouraged to have multiple genders
involved, but family members do not need to be involved
sexually.
Clutchmates are often the first place that people look to find
mates or family members. These courtships can start innocently
as young children or start when people are older and reignite
the spark.
Relationship Ideals
Children are raised communnally by dedicated professionals, and
children grow up with their clutchmates. When they get older,
families are created consciously by the members and often
consist of friends and clutchmates. A family is registered with
the community. Families tend to be rather large, with the
general principal that larger families are more able to support
the individual members. While small families, as small as two
people, are allowed, it is generally frowned upon to register a
new family with less than 4 members instead of joining an
existing family.
Families are fluid and members can come and go. Some families
last for generations, while others last only a few years. There
is no set makeup of genders, either, but multigendered families
are also encouraged, for healthy diversity of thought and
experience to create wisdom to pass down onto younger
generations.
Choosing a mate is up to the whims of the individuals involved.
Parents who lay eggs may maintain relationships with their
mates, but it is not necessary and it does not matter because
their children may never know who their direct biological
parents were.
Because of the loose nature of the relationships and because
families are not associated with raising children, young people
will often bounce between families at first until they find one
that suits them best. Some families actively recruit others to
help boster their numbers and have their legacy live on, but
others are somewhat closed—not officially, because that is
illegal, but some families make joining extremely difficult to
dissuade would-be family members.