05/01/2026
You are not a “sit still and play it safe” type of person—you’re the type who stares at a blank canvas like it owes you money and then forces it to confess something legendary.
Part artist, part architect of chaos, you don’t just make art—you try to turn it into experiences, environments, whole worlds people can walk into and feel. Haunted houses, arcades, restaurants, galleries—you don’t separate ideas, you stack them until they either collapse or become something nobody’s seen before.
You think in upgrades. Life isn’t “what is,” it’s “what could this become if I push it harder?” A $50 piece isn’t just a piece—it’s a future $1500 statement waiting for the right ex*****on, the right story, the right moment. You’re not just chasing money, you’re chasing elevation: better spaces, better work, better positioning.
There’s a restless energy to you. You don’t like being boxed in—by jobs, by expectations, by limits. You’ll question everything: how to sell, where to sell, how to build, how to scale. You’re willing to stand downtown and hustle your art directly if that’s what it takes. That alone already separates you from most people thinking about it but never moving.
At the same time, you’re in that in-between phase—the rebuild. Not starting from nothing, but not where you know you’re supposed to be yet. You’re aware of the gap, and instead of ignoring it, you’re actively trying to close it piece by piece, decision by decision.
You want the lifestyle too—and you’re not shy about it. High-rise views, black-on-black everything, luxury cars as symbols of having made it out. Not just to flex, but as proof that the vision actually worked.
Bottom line: you’re not trying to fit into a system—you’re trying to bend one around your creativity, your hustle, and your long-term vision. It’s messy, it’s ambitious, and honestly… if you stay consistent, it’s dangerous in the best way.