deathbed, he shared with his first two students that he had reburied an edited form of the original texts and he told the younger student that he had refused to share with any of his
students a few of his more self-personalized tea recipes that he had created for himself.
The story of his development of his own recipes and what was done them would foster two later divisions of thought to the art. The elder student, upon hearing of his masters recipes believed that they were meant to be lost to time, as something that went against the fundamentals of the art, that Jyack had refused to share in hopes of it dying out, and had told the younger student to warn him from committing the same error. The younger stundent, however, believed that his mesage had been one, advising each student to create a recipe that reflected her/himself so as to gain a deeper understanding of their connection with the world.
Realising his death was imminent, Jyack constructed a number of temples and systems to keep the monastic order going. The monastaries only managed to get to the frame stage before Jyack passed on. Systimatically, it was decided that the first two students of a teacher could continue teaching and learning the minutia of the order's understanding, but that they could teach the basics to others. His last words were that he had reached complete inner peace and understanding, but knew that regardless he would reincarnate but that others that reached such tranquility would not have the same fate.
After dying the argument between the elder student and younger continued, with the younger pointing out that he probably wrote down his own specific recipes along with the original recipes in order to be able to retrieve them upon reincarnation, while the elder noted that Jyack never stated he had written down his personalized recipe and that such a personalized recipe might not work with his reincarnated self. The younger replied that the sould between both selves was the eternal and hence he'd be the same in all but name, while the elder argued that reincarnation brought about a change in the soul as it grew spiritually, hence making such a recipe incompatible. With that, the younger shouted that Jyack had no room left to grow and he stormed out, leaving the cautious elder alone.
The two students began to teach their different philosophies of thought towards Jyack's words and monasticism in general, and the two split the number of temples between them. The elder's beliefs would create what became known as The Wise Tradition. Around Nepal, those trained under this school of thought are called the Steepers for their patience and wisdom just as one must wait the right amount of time for a tea to steep to get the right amount of flavour and temperature. Their temples tend to be more rock-like, with rocks being innately patient and defensive, holding back an enemy, though also stubborn. This subset order sticks firmly to the recipes translated by Jyack and every part of them, with unwavering belief in the ingrediants and instructions.
The younger's teaching developed into the The Understanding Tradition. They are colloquially known as the Concocters for their testing with teas to understand the world. Their monastaries usually have icicle and snow designs because ice is unmovingly defenseive, but holds an agression through its sharpness. Further, like water, they are flexible and changing, like how ice can melt and refreeze into a new shape, equally ice, yet so different. They learn through expirimentation with the intent to understand the components of each recipe, and be able to create one that represents themselves.
The last order is relatively new. After being repelled by Jyack in 1249, 1264, and 1275, Mongol forces remaining in Nepal and Tibet began to seek how this Hafling managed to create or discover such a powerful art form, and replicate it for themselves. in 1301 they found the original temple that Jyack found the scrolls in. By translating heiroglyphics on the walls they grasped an idea behind the monastic order. Their recipes still hold many issues, which along with being seen as the enemy is why the order is known as the Poisoned ones. Officially, they call themselves The Lost Tradition. Their recipes are more potent, but damage the user both physically and spiritually, and sometimes fail, either becoming duds or killing the user. They hold only the original temple (the other orders are clueless to its location) which remains in ruins to this day.