User blog comment:SamjaySyndrome/What are your aim?/@comment-10380701-20150206121936

I always have the mindset that I cannot achieve a 100% completion run in real life. As such, I'm gonna commit to speed running my life while getting as much achievements as possible. That translates to doing my best while learning as much as I can.

While I want to become awesome in shit, I know I can't. So I just learn anothing thing. Rinse and repeat until I become an all-rounder. And now, I'm a jack-of-all-trades who can create videos, draw art, make videogames and conceptualize universes on a whim.

Creating an OC for the RWBY wiki is a trial run of sorts to test my mettle in settling in another's 'verse.

That, and a pasttime to pretty much push my weapon making capabilities into the limit.

I won't match anyone's resolve in one subject. So I'll compensate by matching their one resolve with fifty-five smaller resolves.

This contradicts Bruce Lee's nugget of wisdom regarding the mastery of 10,000 Kicks over Kicking 10,000 times. I feel like it's important to note that.

But why do I do these?

Because I'm jealous of everyone and everything. And I don't view that as a bad thing, as my envy acts as a source of resolve that drives me to learn and learn and learn until there's nothing more to learn or I can't understand the next part.

In fact, my true goal is straight up impossible in my life. I just set the bar so that I know what I'll reach for.

And that bar is to surpass the real legends of our life.

For example, I want to surpass Leonardo da Vinci in artwork. But that's the funniest joke in the century.

And yet, slowly and surely, I'm at least taking a step in a staircase that takes a trillion steps. I won't reach the end, but I"ll be proud of what I can reach.