Koichi Tanakais a Japanese engineer who shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2002 for developing a novel method for mass spectrometric analyses of biological macromolecules with John Bennett Fenn and Kurt Wüthrich... (wikipedia)
I suppose the reason I chose electrical engineering was because I had always been interested in electricity, involving myself in such projects as building radios from the time I was a child.
However, the occasional visit of success provides just the excitement an engineer needs to face work the following day.
The thought grew strong in me that since I had gone to the trouble of being born, I might as well be useful in helping people live long and healthy lives. And this thought has always resided in the back of my mind.
When it came time to find employment, I set my sights on becoming an engineer at a home electronics manufacturer, a field that was closely related to my major at university.
From my father, I learned the importance of working sincerely at things to which I had committed myself, and to persevere untiringly even in the face of little progress.
Most of the work performed by a development engineer results in failure.
In such an environment, I was able to study things that could be of immediate usefulness to the world. That learning experience undoubtedly served me well when I eventually entered the work force.
The tenacious character I've possessed since I was a small child propelled me to successfully meet this challenge, and I was able to safely gain acceptance to the university of my choice.
Upon receiving my notification of acceptance to the university, my parents noticed that they were obliged to submit to the university, among other things, a copy of my official family register. After much mental anguish, they decided to inform me of the secret of my birth.
My natural mother died one month after I was born, apparently due to giving birth at an advanced age.
I cannot say that I was a particularly diligent student, especially during the lower grades.
In 1978, I entered Tohoku University, into the Department of Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Technology.
My grandmother valued even the smallest of things.
The Faculty of Technology of Tohoku University is renowned for its tradition of practical studies.
I was born in Japan on August 3, 1959.
My specific task was to search for a matrix that would enable non-destructive ionization of macromolecules by efficiently absorbing the laser energy.
My mother also stressed the importance of working quietly towards achieving my missions in life, without neglecting attention to details.
Together with just about every other student in the school, I devoted a great deal of effort to studying for the university entrance examination.
Find your own dream! Keep this dream and take good care of it and then sometime you will accomplish something [and feel the intense satisfaction that only the achievement of a long held, worthwhile goal can give].