Interesting to see such an amount of work done but it fails to take into account that a single month of meditation is not nearly enough to even begin to properly feel the beneficial effects it can have.
In some areas, simply feeling might also still be a better choice than quantifying.
I felt that after 4-5 months, you get "used" to the travelling, you're not as excited anymore. The best thing to do then is either take a longer break in a nice place or simply start travelling in a different way. Another option that seems to work is to switch continents, everything is new then.
1000/month is a bit of an exageration, more like 400 if you work less than 5 years for your employer. You also need to work at least 2 years for your employer.
Oh, and don't be so eager to jump on the neo-liberal thought wagon. Some people travel, most use it to raise babies.
Those I know were getting around 1000 a month. All 5 of them.
I'm not against time credit (babies need their parents, sick people need help) but some abuse the system.
As I've worked for 15+ years in various consulting firms, I have a CV in 2 sections. A brief one with a simple outline of personal information, formal education and a 1-line summary of positions held, then a much more verbose section detailing the projects I've worked on. The first section is maybe 1.5 pages these days. The second section is easily 7 or 8 pages and is not always sent, only when a customer asks for more detailed information.
In your case, I would suggest to emphasise your programming projects. See it as some kind of portfolio.
Nobody will be reading the transcripts so don't include them. Include your GPA score if you think the rest of the CV is not entirely convincing. These are the kind of indicators that people will look at for people that are straight out of school and are not expected to have a lot of practical experience.
When I'm on the other side of the table and reviewing a CV for (junior) positions I'm basically looking for a few indicators:
1. The person has the ability to think at a certain level that is right for the job
2. They have some relevant experience or have shown an interest in the topic
3. I'm not starting from zero with this person.
4. Can they pick up new skills reasonably quickly and are they willing to do so
Thank you, I have a considerate amount of outside of school projects that I am putting together. Most of it I feel are small demos and games and such that I used to teach myself new technologies and such, nothing actually in use or all that useful, but I hope it at least somewhat demonstrates my abilities.
In some areas, simply feeling might also still be a better choice than quantifying.