Congratulations again and thank you for your kind words [said with
thick Serbian/Icelandic accent] ;-)
-- Marko Milivojevic - CCIE #18427 (SP R&S) Senior CCIE Instructor - IPexpert On Sat, May 19, 2012 at 10:17 AM, marc abel <marcabel_at_gmail.com> wrote: > As you know I passed my lab in RTP yesterday. Thank you all for the > congratulations and well wishes. There are a few people I wish to thank > personally for their support in this process. > > After I obtained my CCNP in 2009 I decided I wanted to pursue my CCIE. I > figured it would take me about a year and a half. 6 months for the written > and year to prep for the lab. I managed to hit pretty close on the written > I read the following books pretty much cover to cover in about 6 months: > > BCMSN study guide > Routing TCP/IP VOL 1 + 2 > Fundamentals of MPLS > > So in January 2010 I started preparing for lab. I purchased the IPExperts > blended learning solution which at the time featured the videos of a > scruffy Scott Morris. I worked my way through all the Vol 1 and somewhere > about then IPX came out with new videos featuring Joe Astorino. I watched > all these videos numerous times as well. I finally felt prepared to go sit > a boot camp and went to the 5 day R+S taught by Joe. I learned a ton during > these 5 days but could still see I had a ways to go. I kept labbing from > the IPX vol 2 + 3 books. > > Next I attended the OWLE or one week lab experience, this time taught by > Marko Millojovec. I found the class very hard, I jokingly started calling > it the One Week Layer Two Experience because it would seemingly take me all > day to get out of the layer 2 section of each lab. This showed me that I > still had a ways to go and I became discouraged for a while. > > Finally I snapped to and decided I had come too far to give up. I had about > 6 months to go before my written was to expire so I decided I would hit it > hard and make an attempt before that date. It was about this time I met > Steve Di Bias through this list and we began exchanging emails on topics we > were unsure. 3 weeks before my lab I took advantage of IPX's generous > retake policy and sat both the R+S and OWLE experience. Going in I was > beginning to feel confident, but a couple weeks with Marko let me know that > I still had big gaps. Marko is an awesome instructor, and I was amazed at > how much his english and accent had improved in such a short time. I highly > recommend anyone take a course with him if you can. You won't get a slide > show, you will get good explanations reinforced with the proof from the > command line. During this class I also made friends with Thomas Raabo and > Christophe Lemaire who I have continued to correspond and appreciate their > support. > > So I went into my first attempt knowing it was likely going to be > for practice, but determined to give it my best shot. I sat in San Jose in > July 2011. I was only able to solve 6 of the troubleshooting tickets in 2 > hours so I knew by 10:00am that this was not my time. I still gave the > config section my all but only managed about 50%. I had now seen the beast > and extended the clock on my written exam. I finally knew at just a high > level you really have to be operating to pass this test. Before this I > think I underestimated what I was up against. > > The common thought I read on here is that you must have a one track mind, > you must say good bye to your friends and family, eat drink and breathe > CCIE. I really bought into this and spent the next few months with a one > track mind. It was during this time that we started the study groups with > Steve Di Bias, Jay McMickle, and Chris Moore. These group sessions were > pretty cool, we would take turns driving the keyboard while the others gave > input on strategies to try. It was really helpful to have insight into how > others approached the tasks and requirments. > > I would like to say a word of warning here though. This one track mind > everyone recommends is a dangerous thing. Even when I wasn't labbing I > couldn't unplug. I was becoming more distant from my wife, and even when we > had a few times out with friends I had a hard time. I felt like I had > nothing to talk about, none of them wanted to know about MPLS :). I felt > like the CCIE was eating my personality. Finally my wife had enough, and > nearly left me. I had to beg her to stay. I had to relearn balance in my > life. I had a second lab date fast approaching but my family had to come > first. So be careful out there, without your family the certification is > pointless. > > So in December 2011 the four of us; Steve, Jay, Chris, and myself headed to > San Jose. I could tell Steve was really dialed in and I had high hopes for > him. Well I went 6 for 10 on the troubleshooting again, and once again knew > by 10:00am that I was have a $1500 lunch. Again I decided to do my best on > the config section. This time at least I was able to make it through the > whole thing. There were a couple really big things I wasn't able to solve > though. I think I ended up about 67 percent on the config this time. My man > Steve knocked it out of the park that day though and became the first of > our group to slay the dragon. On his first time! > > At this time something awesome happened, and for this I can't thank him > enough. Jay McMickle offered to let me use a rack of equipment that Steve > had been using. This was a game changer for me. Previous to this I was > using IPX rack rentals, which are awesome but have one gigantic flaw. As > with any rack rental you have to know when you can study, and you need a > large block of time to do it. For a guy who is trying to find balance and > juggle a full time job, a family, consulting work, and the CCIE this can be > pretty tough. Now because of Jay's generosity I was able to lab any time I > had a spare hour. During lunch breaks, while my son was napping, and into > the wee hours. This allowed me to finally have family time, but to still > get in all the hours you need to prepare. To be prepared it is not enough > to know the commands, you need to have muscle memory of the commands. Your > fingers need to know the solutions even before your brain. > > So Jay recently passed and I was so happy for him. I could tell by > our preparation that I was going to be close behind. Labs that previously > took me 10 hours I was now doing in 3. One thing I did different this time > was not scheduling far in advance. If you look you see that you only need > to book a week or two in advance these days. So instead of picking a date > and trying to be ready, I waited until I was ready and then picked a date. > > So again, thank you to everyone that supported me along the way, and I hope > I don't forget anyone but a heartfelt thank you to: God, my wife, Jay > McMickle, Steve Di Bias, Chris Moore, Marko Millojovec, Joe Astorino, > Thomas Raabo, Christophe Lemaire, IP Experts and my employer. > > -- > Marc Abel > CCIE #35470 > (Routing and Switching) > > > Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.net > > _______________________________________________________________________ > Subscription information may be found at: > http://www.groupstudy.com/list/CCIELab.html Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Sat May 19 2012 - 12:09:33 ART
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