90gut
8B

Revolutionary Deep Guide

Destroys the old and creates a new order

You don't fit within existing structures.

The high plasticity of Synapse-Clearance gives you the ability to tear down old neural patterns and build new ones. You instinctively question "the way things should be."

As a Revolutionary, you simultaneously destroy and create. You shatter old frameworks and build new order on the rubble. The soul of a revolutionary burns quietly within you.

Destruction isn't the goal. It's clearing ground to build something better.

Essence

Your brain is designed to reject "the status quo." With high Synapse-Clearance plasticity, your brain has COMT gene Warrior type (Val/Val) characteristics—fast dopamine metabolism. It rapidly dismantles old neural circuits and constructs new patterns. Your discomfort with existing systems is the brain's physiological response.

This high neuroplasticity fused with charisma is your essence. Not a mere destroyer but someone capable of building something better on the demolished ground. Steve Jobs' "Stay hungry, stay foolish" is what your brain practices daily. The freedom of seeing established conventions not as "rules" but as "one option among many."

A revolutionary's soul burns quietly within you. But it's not violent destructive impulse. Shedding the old framework of "how things should be" and presenting the new possibility of "how things could be." Questioning existing order—that itself is the first step of creation.

Strengths

Thinking beyond existing frameworks is your greatest weapon. Where others accept rules as "just how it is," you ask "why?" This question becomes the seed of innovation. The Industrial Revolution, the internet—both began with someone's "why does it have to be this way?"

You have the power to communicate a vision of change and draw people in. When you paint a picture of the future, it carries the power to move. This isn't just logic—your own conviction is contagious. Because the Warrior brain maintains clarity even under stress, you can confidently articulate your vision even amid chaos. It's that posture people follow.

Being able to execute destruction and creation simultaneously is also a rare strength. Most people can only destroy or build—not both. You can dismantle old structures while drafting new blueprints at the same time. This dual-track operation is impossible without high neuroplasticity.

Challenges

If you enjoy destruction too much, constructive creation falls by the wayside. You excel at criticism but bear the responsibility of offering alternatives too. Not just "what's wrong" but "what should be done"—learn to speak to both. Revolutionaries who offered only criticism have, historically, failed without exception.

Your pace of change may outrun those around you. While your brain is designing "the next version," others are still trying to adapt to "the current version." If you advance too far alone, you look back to find no one. Revolution needs comrades. The skill of advancing while bringing others along—the "power to wait"—is necessary.

Also, the desire for change can make you overlook the value of stability. Not everything needs to be destroyed. What to change and what to protect—that discernment separates the destroyer from the revolutionary. Every revolutionary who left their mark in history excelled at this judgment.

Your Warrior (Val/Val) brain metabolizes dopamine fast. This is the source of quick switching, but it also means a low threshold for "boredom." The modern digital environment mercilessly exploits this. New apps, new discourses, new movements. They confuse your "revolutionary impulse" with "craving for stimulation." The anger at what truly needs changing and the consumption of stimulation to kill boredom travel surprisingly similar neural pathways. When you can no longer tell them apart, the revolutionary has fallen to mere consumer. Regularly step away from screens and reclaim time to ask, "What do I truly want to destroy?"

Relationships

In romance, you seek relationships that don't follow conventions. You feel suffocated by traditional "how things should be" partnerships. A relationship where both respect each other's freedom and keep evolving together is the ideal. But don't use innovation as a shield to escape relationship responsibility. Freedom and responsibility always come as a pair.

In friendships, you seek "comrades." Those who share the aspiration to change the world. Rather than bonding over complaints at a bar, you value relationships where you strike sparks in projects. But also cherish friends with whom you can share time outside of work. Even revolutionaries need time when they don't have to think about anything.

With family, you may oscillate between "tradition destroyer" and "home builder." The impulse to break your parents' values and the desire to give your own family stability. This contradiction doesn't need resolving. The coexistence of change and stability is your life's most creative project. At home, you don't need to be a revolutionary. In front of those you love, it's okay to just be a human being.

Finally, one thing. Your high neuroplasticity affects relationships too. You can quickly dismantle old patterns and build new relationship dynamics—that's a strength, but you tend to demand the same speed from others. The human heart can't be updated with one click like an OS. Patience for the other person's pace of change is the skill your Val/Val brain finds most difficult, which is precisely why it's the skill most worth honing.

Premium Guide Contents

The following topics are covered in detail in the premium report

View Premium Report

Personal report with specific advice on diet, exercise, and compatibility

Take the free diagnosis first