and pls give an example of food additives and where it will be added and its purpose thnx
First, check with your local and state law enforcement organizations and see if they have or can recommend a motorcycle training program for civilians. I went through one before I got my first motorcycle and it probably saved my life. It will also save you a bundle on insurance premiums. If you just want it for local travel and relatively short trips, then you can buy for looks. If you're planning to take it touring on seriously long journeys, then you want a motorcycle designed for that, not something that's pretending to be a racer. Once upon a time, I spent a year riding a touring motorcycle all over Europe. I encountered one or two people trying to do it on racing style motorcycles. They spent a lot of time complaining about back pain. I didn't. Other than that, everyone is probably going to recommend their favorite bike to you. Personally, I like Hondas and hate BMWs (it's a long story). Your mileage, as they say, may vary.
Yes, it's too powerful for a rookie, and you sound over-confident: An excellent recipe for a brief and eventful motorcycling career. [1] Buy used: Most new riders will drop their bike at least once, and it is better to drop one that wasn't pristine to begin with. [2] Avoid all 4-cylinder bikes as a first bike. Look at 250s or perhaps a Suzuki SV650 or GS500, or the Ninja 250 or 500. Nothing bigger. A larger bike will actually hold you back in your learning curve.
Corn syrup--to most everything thats canned, bagged or otherwise not fresh. Additives help give a food a longer shelf life. That's it. They're obscenely unhealthy, but no one really reads the label anymore so no one notices.
You've got enuff moxie to get you killed in hurry. That happens a lot to kids who learn on a video game. Go to a dealer and sit on one, with both feet on the floor you might survive.