Progress no. 1711269354

Hitting the hay… Be back in a few! 😴 💤

Progress no. 1711207104

Saturday. I am going to a funeral today. The person that passed, went to the hospital because of not feeling well. The person was diagnosed with an unknown bacteria/virus, and soon after passed away. Tomorrow is not guaranteed.

Attending the funeral. Attending funerals always reminds me to put everything I got to each day I am blessed to have.

I once heard a question of how I would know if I have a good day, “How do you know if your day is starting off good? When you wake up and the five people that you love are still alive.”

I am going to study DP-900 for about an hour, before I get ready. Trying to optimize my time.

Breakfast:
Plain oatmeal, no sugar, and black Lipton tea.

I went for a walk…



Daily Walk

Daily Walk

Progress no. 1711185062

Hitting the hay… Be back in a few! 😴 💤

Progress no. 1711163340

Watching Mute on Netflix.


Update @ 22:42:38

I have a feeling I have seen that movie, but do not remember if I did or not.

I felt a bit stressed, so I gave in to resistance and finished the movie.

Going to meditate and then study for the DP-900 exam.

Progress no. 1711147945

Tracking the following:

Weight 170 lb - Goal 140 lb by 09/2024 - 82%
Readiness: Microsoft AI-900 - 05/31/2024 - 5%
$1,200 by December 2024 - 25%

Completed:

ITIL v4 Foundation - 03/15/2024: PASS - 100%
Microsoft DP-900 - 04/12/2024: PASS - 100%

Progress tracker site up!

Time to track my progress!

Progress no. 1711147425

prog·ress

/ˈpräɡrəs/

noun: progress
plural noun: progresses
verb: progress
3rd person present: progresses
past tense: progressed
past participle: progressed
gerund or present participle: progressing

forward or onward movement toward a destination.

  • advance or development toward a better, more complete, or more modern condition.
  • archaic•British
    a state journey or official tour, especially by royalty.

/prəˈɡres/

move forward or onward in space or time.

  • advance or develop toward a better, more complete, or more modern state.

Phrases
in progress — in the course of being done or carried out.

Origin

Origin of Progress

late Middle English (as a noun): from Latin progressus ‘an advance’, from the verb progredi, from pro- ‘forward’ + gradi ‘to walk’. The verb became obsolete in British English use at the end of the 17th century and was readopted from American English in the early 19th century.