Well done.
Seriously, though, and this is not me being snarky for once on this thread.
Be wary that what God expects is perfection; no amount of soul-shining will be satisfactory. The way that many Catholics I know talk about Purgatory is that they treat it like a payment for their sins, as if suffering can atone or turn the dead body of sin into a living body of Christ.
Yes, I know that the theology is different, but there’s a difference between what’s confessed and what you actually believe, and actions reflect that.
You gotta depend on what Christ has done for you; all good works follow from that. Otherwise, from everything I’ve seen, it’s almost impossible to not get caught in the cycle of do-good-works-be-proud-realize-that-it’s-sin-try-to-make-up-for-it-with-good-works-again. Or worse, just do-good-works-be-proud-abandon-Christ-for-self-worship.