Anjanath Priorities
Fire Trex brain is inherently territorial and aggressive, but not in the way that most people picture it. It's reactive, not proactive.
What I mean when I say that, is that an Anjanath doesn't go around looking for a fight. It's unafraid to start one, but it's not going to go around trying to bully other monsters. Rather, it perceives anyone it sees in its space as starting the fight first, as throwing down the gauntlet if it doesn't move. Anjanath brain will get aggravated but at least wait a few heartbeats for the offender to move before it decides to bite them.
In truth, Anjanaths are depicted as these always-angry, looking-for-a-fight monsters. But, they're actually just... Animals. Anjanath brain throws down when it seems it necessary, but its priorities outside of that are 1) food, and 2) relaxation. The second of which, is what I'm talking about here.
Anjanath brain LOVES that it doesn't have to ever worry about hunting or finding food. The perks of being human is that it instantly takes away that stressor from me. An Anjanath doesn't have a prey drive in the same way a mammal does, which is probably the starkest difference between this kintype and my other identities. It's a hunt-as-needed situation with the ability to recognize a stored cache, not a instinctively-perk-up-to-hunt-and-kill-anything-that-runs-by-regardless type thing.
So with no territorial issues and no impending food problems, Anjanath brain defaults to its last priority: relaxation!
It loves to loaf, flip out its sails, and just absorb the sunlight and warmth. It's so hard to wrestle it and convince it to get moving when it's like this, because all it wants to do is conserve energy and allow itself to relax. And you try arguing with a two-tone fire-breathing T-Rex when it's decided it doesn't want to move! It's not going to go anywhere it doesn't want to.











