David:
Wow - what a great story of persistence and inspiration!!!
Congratulations on your achievement!!!
Thanks
-- Larry Hadrava, Larryh_at_INE.com CCIE #12203 (R&S) Internetwork Expert, Inc. http://www.INE.com >----- Original Message ----- From: "David Hunter" <davidhunterccie25481_at_hotmail.com> Sent: Fri, September 25, 2009 13:12 Subject:CCIE#25481 All, I've been reading GroupStudy archives for the last 6 years. I have never subscribed before. I've been waiting for the opportunity to post my story, like hundreds of others have done when they passed, so here's my chance. I passed the R&S test at RTP on Monday, Sept. 21. My 8th attempt. It has been a long and grueling journey. I passed the Written in August 2003. I've learned a lot about humility, perserverance, forgetting mistakes in the past, self-sacrifice, suffering, sleep deprivation, frustration and hard work along this journey. But now I also know the real feeling of personal achievement! To sum up the reasons for my eventual success in one sentence, the Bible says somewhere: 'in the multitude of counselors, there is wisdom.' Well, I have definitely had a GREAT multitude of 'counselors', and I would like to thank them all now. First, to God, Elena, my family and friends, who have all accompanied me on this journey of ups and downs, a huge thanks! I couldn't have done it without your faith in me! To NetMaster: an excellent school. Thanks Bruce, Val and John - you are excellent teachers, and the labs are brutal. I studied every technology thoroughly. I also learned so much about considering all of the options, spotting the issues, and "owning" each technology by labbing each one up. NetMaster definitely pushed me up to the top of the CCIE hill when I was close for so long. To CyscoExpert: I learned so much from CyscoExpert. Their labs were also brutal. Thanks Bahram, Naren, Mitch, Bacho, Peter and Tom. You taught me so much. Besides the technologies, I learned from them the value of configuring accurately, verifying everything, reading slowly to catch all of the details, and that passing the test depends on understanding, not typing speed. To my friends John and Dewan, who are also going for the lab next week: Thanks for your constant encouragement and for drilling me with questions. You guys helped enormously. To my first CCIE teacher Pete Koulouris: Thanks for your help also. What I remember most from Pete is that the CCIE requires sacrifice, for some people enormous sacrifice. After flunking the test so many times, this advice helped me to keep going to the end. To my friend Miguel: Thanks. Miguel's advice was to read the doc CD and the blueprint closely. I read through each command on the doc CD and analyzed all relevant commands very thoroughly, including configuring them and typing ? after to see all of the available keywords. Also, I found some surprises on the blueprint, like DVMRP and no IPv6 BGP! To Mike Dongvillo, a quad-CCIE I used to work with: Thanks. I learned the value of details! Details really make the difference between passing the test and failing. Last but definitely not least: Thanks so much to GroupStudy! I owe so much to people like Scott Morris, Brian McGahan, Brian Dennis, Wayne Lawson, Narbik Kocharians, and so many others who have generously contributed to this website over the last 6 years by patiently answering questions. My journey is finally complete, and it was well worth it!! To all of those who have failed a few times, my advice is: I have felt your pain. Even as recently as last week. But now that I am on the other side of the line, I feel such enormous relief that I didn't give up. Don't ever give up! Like Scott Morris said before: What do they call a doctor who passes the medical exam after failing a few times? A doctor. Sincerely, David Hunter CCIE#25481Received on Fri Sep 25 2009 - 12:26:13 ART
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