There isn't much to tell about me, but here is all that I can share:
I was born in Woodstock, but have lived in, and still do live in, Harvard.
Unlike most people, I didn't go straight into college after high school.
Instead, I worked at a few different jobs for a couple of years before deciding to go back to school.
I started attending a few classes back in 2018 for game design, but I didn't really get into the idea of messing with animations all that much.
After that semester ended, I went back into the workforce for a couple of years, and had saved up enough money to go for my associates
degree in science, which I obtained last year.
Now, I am taking classes to focus on programming and software development.
I have a few motorcycles that I like to work on, as mentioned before.
I have a 2008 Kawasaki Vulcan 500, a 1982 Yamaha XJ650 Maxim, and a 1962 Honda CL350.
The Vulcan is the one I currently ride on and it was given to me when my mother passed away.
I didn't know her at all, but the man she was with when she passed asked me if I wanted it, and I said yes.
The Yamaha is the first bike that I ever bought, and I have worked on it for a few years now, and the only thing left for it is to get it street legal.
The Honda is the most recent, but also the oldest bike that I have ever worked on. It was a bike that was abandoned on my family's farm for a while,
and I decided that it should be saved from rotting away. Currently it needs a few parts to get the spark timing right, but I am
waiting until the spring comes around to start working on it again.

From left to right is my Vulcan, the second is a picture of a Maxim that I found online
since I don't have any personal pictures of it, and the third is the Honda I am currently working on.
I also have a plan to grap this old unknown motorcycle called a Csepel, which is a Hungarian motorcycle that was made for two years around the 1960s.

I don't know much about it, but I have researched it and it seems like they only made 250cc versions of it because of the laws in Hungary at the time.
When I get the free time, I go out and play airsoft.
There's even one coming up on the 22nd that is based on the movie Red Dawn, where in an alternate universe, the Soviet Union grows strong enough
to invade a small town in Colorado, where the high school students have to band together to fight back against the invaders.
The event itself is being held at the Badlandz Airsoft field in Crete, IL and I have gone to this event before.
How the game is played is that there are two or three teams, the US, the Soviet Union, and sometimes the civilians, when there's enough people.
Depending on what the main objective is, the teams will have to work together to accomplish it, usually it's a capture the flag or king of the hill.
Here are a few pictures from the last event I went to.