Anything is possible, but it would take an incredible amount of dedication. Bear in mind that "learning Japanese completely" is not really the right question to ask, because once you have the 2 basic writing systems understood, you move onto grammar, and then Kanji ( which there are over 2000 in daily use). So in order to become fluent, you'd need to be immersed, and learn roughly 2000 Kanji outside of grammar and hiragana and katakana. There is a video I found on Youtube the other day where someone studied Japanese, hardcore for 1 1/2 years and his wife used Google Translate to see which was better, and he was able to function remarkably well. So in short, I doubt you'd learn ALL of Japanese, it'd be hard enough to become properly conversational. I'd say 3-4 years would be ideal given daily use. Language is a very long process, there are no quick fixes to mastering an entire language in such short time. Life isn't like the Matrix, where it can be simply uploaded. It takes time, trial and error, experiences, interactions, comprehension, cultural studies, and many more to properly become fluent.