Just take an iq test, if you score at least 125, you should be able to become anything you wish:
"The Terman longitudinal study in California eventually provided historical evidence on how genius is related to IQ scores.
[80] Many California pupils were recommended for the study by schoolteachers. Two pupils who were tested but rejected for inclusion in the study because of IQ scores too low for the study grew up to be Nobel Prize winners in physics:
William Shockley[81][82] and
Luis Walter Alvarez.
[83][84] Based on the historical findings of the Terman study and on biographical examples such as
Richard Feynman, who had an IQ of 125 and went on to win the Nobel Prize in physics and become widely known as a genius,
[85][86] the current view of psychologists and other scholars of genius is that a minimum IQ, about 125, is strictly necessary for genius, but that IQ is sufficient for development of genius only when combined with the other influences identified by Cox's biographical study: opportunity for talent development along with the characteristics of drive and persistence. The largest recorded IQ to date is Physicist / Engineer Kim Ung-yong has a verified IQ of 210, As well as Kyle Micallef, who recorded the largest verified IQ by anyone under the age of 18 (20th of June 2001), (IQ 191). Both Kim Ung-yong and Kyle Micallef are classified as "Genius" as referenced by a verified IQ test.
[87][88][89][
not in citation given] Charles Spearman, bearing in mind the influential theory that he originated—that intelligence comprises both a "general factor" and "special factors" more specific to particular mental tasks—, wrote in 1927, "Every normal man, woman, and child is, then, a genius at something, as well as an idiot at something."
en.wikipedia.org