What is easy, and what is difficult, and some alternative wording

WEDNESDAY, 15 MAY 2019

The problem with earning your money with creative work is that you’re either very lucky that people continue to buy your creative work even if you do what you want and in the style you want, or you do end up looking at what’s in demand for the sake of your survival – types of products and styles, and then producing what the market wants to buy – which means you’re not doing free creative work anymore.

So, you’re either very lucky that people keep buying your free creative work, or you’re not so lucky and you end up doing what the market wants, and how they want it. And even if you fall in the lucky category, how long do you expect it to last?

TUESDAY, 28 MAY 2019

01:30

To make money, you only need to know a few important things. Problem is, you need to discover these few things in an ocean of information.

10:02

The problem is therefore not the amount of knowledge or information you need to discover and learn, but to discover a handful of specific snippets among dozens, even hundreds of snippets of information, and to choose between a variety of options, opportunities and possibilities.

THURSDAY, 6 JUNE 2019

A friend of mine who had already been in Taiwan since early 1998 offered to loan me money in October of that year for a plane ticket to Taiwan – in case I wanted to get out of my office job and return to English teaching. If he had offered me money for a plane ticket to any city in Northeast Asia … I might never have left Johannesburg. Fortunately for me the offer and therefore the choice was simple: Taiwan, Kaohsiung – take it or leave it. And just look at how well things worked out.

MONDAY 10 JUNE 2019

00:17

What does success look like? The process that leads to it is boring and monotonous, and you only see the result after months or years of hard, boring, monotonous work.

I always thought it could be seen in one brilliant flash, one day that stands out – and then you know.

I reckon there are many people who have stared success in a career or in an endeavour in the face more than once in their lives, but who have walked away time and again because they didn’t recognize it for what it was: the result of monotonous and boring, repetitive steps, five or six days a week, week in and week out, one year after another.

23:03

I’m reading the piece, “The correct answer, and what to do with my exercise bike”. Couldn’t help to highlight a piece of text: “The problem is that I started cultivating and living the lifestyle here [in Taiwan] that I said back in Korea I wanted to live in South Africa. In other words, I got the lifestyle right; it’s just the environment that is wrong.”

FRIDAY, 14 JUNE 2019

Quote from Onder-Kouga – Bakermat van Gerbers en Ferreiras [Lower Kouga – Cradle of the Gerbers and Ferreiras], by O.J.O Ferreira:

“The philosopher Marthinus Versfeld saw the function of a home like this: ‘Your home places you in the world. It gives you an address, somewhere where you can be addressed. Just as your soul needs your body to place it in the world and keep it warm, so a body requires a home to keep it warm. Therefore, your home is also a kind of flesh and blood from which you accept and build up the world. You go in to go out, and you go out to go in. Where your home stands determines your view, and how it looks inside determines how you will see the world beyond.’”

Seeing it that way makes it no wonder that I settled down in Taiwan. I was almost 28 when I arrived here. I was a soul desperate for a body; a body desperate for a home. My inner conflict stemmed from the desire to find this home in South Africa rather than in Taiwan, where it became more tangible by the day. The conflict was finally resolved when I accepted that I had already found, or created my home in Taiwan.

MONDAY, 17 JUNE 2019

The steps you finally take to receive money are, I believe, quite simple, and could surely even be described as easy. Eventually. But to discover, or to learn, or to work out, exactly what steps to take, when, and how – this I know, is not easy, and not simple.

WEDNESDAY, 19 JUNE 2019

I went to see a movie this afternoon at the Kaohsiung Film Archive. There were three movies to choose from. The showing just after lunch suited me better, so that was the one I chose. I was actually relieved that there weren’t more options. I enjoyed the movie – if you can describe a romantic drama about two sick young people as enjoyable. I was also aware that, had I had more options, I would not have chosen this movie.

* * *

Because it might be a lesson for someone else, three reasons why financial prosperity … let’s just say, has been a struggle for me to achieve:

1. I made assumptions too quickly.

2. I followed my own head too easily instead of following instructions.

3. Difficult to admit because choices are so important in one’s life, but … I had too many options. If someone had said, “We took the liberty to choose on your behalf: this one, or nothing; nothing or this one,” I would have said, “Well, then I choose this one.” Chances are it would have worked out well enough.

THURSDAY, 20 JUNE 2019

Sometimes it feels like every week is like the one that preceded it, as if days and weeks and months flow together as one.

Here’s an alternative wording for this situation: Stay strong and healthy.

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What do you *want* to think?

SATURDAY, 13 APRIL 2019

Any of a number of things – a resource, a book, a snippet of information – can bring to your attention on any given day something that will give you a huge boost on your path to success. I’m talking about the kind of thing you would point to in six months, or in two years, or in five years’ time, and say, “That thing – made the world’s difference.”

Of course, you won’t realise the real value when the resource, the tool, the book or the piece of information (“Did you know…”) comes your way. After all, it won’t arrive in an envelope marked “That Thing You Will Refer To Later”. But you will eventually know: It was one of the things that brought you where you are today.

Once you accept that these things are out there – floating around you as it were – it makes perfect sense to keep your mind open, and to anticipate a significant resource falling into your lap.

MONDAY, 15 APRIL 2019

11:01

Number two: Recognise the possibility that you are already doing something that will eventually make you financially independent, or that you’re already in the place where it is going to happen, or are already in the right industry, the right market or the right profession. You may be closer than you think.

11:54

Think of an unpleasant situation from your past (come on, it’s an experiment). Observe the feeling that arises. Decide on what you want to put more weight: “Recordings” from your subconscious that dictate how you should feel about it or conscious decision in the here and now.

Remember: these recordings are not your own thoughts; they’re just records of what other people have said over the years, or what you’ve read in books, or heard on TV or in a movie, and which were stored away in an effort to make it easier for you to make a decision in the future, or take a position that can make you better fit into your environment, and/or that may enable you to function better.

I understand why these so-called recordings are necessary, and why they can be valuable, so it is with respect to my subconscious that I say: The recordings in the particular case I think of are not valuable. I therefore decide, now and here, to label the unpleasant memory as Not As Important As I Used To Think It Was, and in the process I draw energy away from it. Next time the memory knocks on the inside of my skull, the sensation will necessarily matter less – like a fly that sits on your arm for a moment, and then flies away.

TUESDAY, 23 APRIL 2019

Was again reminded of Monday’s thought (15/04/19). Something happens. You either immediately feel something about it, or you wonder how you should feel about it. If you immediately feel something – where does it come from? Uncritical response from your subconscious; a previously programmed or recorded response that was waiting for an appropriate situation.

Is that how you want to feel about it?

If you ask yourself this question, where do you look for an answer? Earlier experiences that may be similar to the present one; things that other people have said about such situations, and which you thought at that time sounded correct and appropriate.

Again, ask yourself: How do you want to feel about it?

Chances are that the answer will be: “Nothing. I don’t want to feel anything about it. It’s not really important. I’d rather just move past it.”

Will no response adversely affect your well-being and happiness in the future? If not, why should you care about who said what, or what happened? Why, if it’s not going to adversely affect your happiness and well-being in the future, should you care at all about something someone said?

And if you decide, or realise it doesn’t matter, let it go.

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Where you become human, and where you choose to live

SATURDAY, 20 APRIL 2019

South Africa is the country of my birth, my childhood, my youth, and my early adulthood. Asia, and more specifically Taiwan, is where I have spent the rest of my life so far.

South Africa has given me language and all the other building blocks of identity – culture; association with the history of a particular group of people; initial preferences in food and drink; ideas about who and what I am and/or who or what I was supposed to be, and an assumption of what I was going to do as an adult, or an idea of the options considered reasonable and acceptable for an adult to do with his or her life. Taiwan gave me the confidence to look at other options, including a language I could master for daily use that I never thought I would ever learn in the first two decades of my life; aspects of culture that I could observe and experience first-hand and could consider incorporating into my own life; other types of dishes and methods of food preparation to the ones with which I grew up, and more freedom to pursue ideas about who and what I am, and to consider a wider spectrum of options that are reasonable and acceptable for an adult to do with his or her life.

Am I getting alienated from the country of my birth?

I’ve been living in Taiwan for over 20 years, and in Asia more than 22 years. Will people look at me and think for a moment that I am Asian? Not likely. Not even if I live in Taiwan or elsewhere in Asia for another 20 years. I do nourish myself with Taiwanese food on a daily basis. I don’t even think twice about taking off my shoes before I enter someone’s residence. I don’t mind if people stand close to me in the queue at the supermarket, and I follow the same custom by standing closer to other people than what most Westerners regard as acceptable given Western ideas about personal space. I still don’t understand most of what TV news readers rattle off in Chinese, but I can read enough Chinese to understand the subtitles. And I can tell a Taiwanese police officer my version of an incident in Chinese to such an extent that he understands that I am not the one that has to be arrested.

Will I be able to return to South Africa right now and without missing a beat converse with other citizens about South African affairs of the day? No. The cultural shock to be back in the country of my birth, of my youth and my early adulthood will also likely be worse than the shock I experienced when I arrived in Asia 23 years ago. The sense of personal safety one has in Taiwan will leave me vulnerable and paranoid in South Africa. The gap between rich and poor in South Africa is also dramatically different from Taiwan. The rich variety of languages and cultural practices in South Africa is something else I am no longer accustomed to. What I as a white South African am allowed to say to whom, and how I am supposed to say it, is another area where I will initially commit some errors. (In Taiwan, I’m not seen as a member of a previously privileged group, so I don’t have to be careful about how I talk to people to avoid offending someone.) [In case you don’t follow the link, I am referring to some white people who think white South Africans should speak differently to black South Africans than how they would usually speak to people, to ensure they avoid offending black people.]

I also find nowadays that I enjoy movies that play off in Northeast Asia, about Taiwanese or Japanese or Korean or Chinese people, in a way that may only be possible if you have personal experience with Taiwanese people, or Japanese or Korean or Chinese people and with the dominant cultures of these countries. And I realised again recently, especially after we saw parts of Taiwan that we had never seen before, that I was comfortable with the idea of spending the rest of my life on this mountainous island.

I was born in South Africa, and it was there that I received the building blocks for the person I still am almost five decades later. My parents and my two sisters and their families still live there. I still have a strong interest in South African history. And although I have definitely developed a preference for especially Taiwanese vegetable dishes that are healthier than the vegetables with butter and sugar and cream prepared in South African kitchens, I still plan to enjoy a healthy portion of pudding and other desserts when I visit my family again in a few months.

I am still a South African born and raised, but there is no doubt that Taiwan is the place I want to go back to whenever I go away for more than a few days. And it’s not just because my wife and life partner also calls this place home, or because our two cats know no other home than the one we have provided to them.

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Another piece about the right steps

SATURDAY, 30 MARCH 2019

Thought about it again last night: the impression and accompanying programming I had received in my youth, and until recently never corrected, that making money should not just be a struggle but also that the result of my efforts would never actually be good enough. When I asked – who? my subconscious? – the hypothetical question of when I would reach a point where I’d consider that I had “made” it, the answer came promptly and clear as daylight: Never.

A terrifying insight, finally uncovered when I happened to think the right words in the right order.

Needless to mention by this time that this was all a misunderstanding. It doesn’t need to be a struggle to make money. You can, like any other person taking the right steps, get the appropriate results. After all, it works for me when I take the right steps with my health, and it worked for me when I took the right steps when I met someone I liked.

Regarding health and relationships I received reasonably good programming and exposure as a young person, and little resistance if I had wanted to go in another direction – my older sister, for example, decided for some time shortly after high school that she was a vegetarian, and I observed that there wasn’t much resistance from my parents. My programming regarding personal finances and making money was, however, a textbook fuck-up.

Okay, very little of this hasn’t been spelled out yet, so let me get to the real point: Take the right steps and get the appropriate result. Take more of the right steps and move even further in the direction you want to go. More right steps, more right actions, more appropriate results … until you reach a point that can only be described as you having broken through to the other side. As you stand on what would clearly be the opposite bank, you might still wonder when exactly “all of this” happened. But there would be no doubt: You will have made it.

And this does not only apply to making money, but also to relationships, and to health.

THURSDAY, 4 APRIL 2019

I smoked for fourteen years. Since I worked in a tobacco shop in my early twenties where I was surrounded by fragrant tobacco every day, I started with pipe smoking. Later I worked my way through a series of cigarette brands I believed would enhance my personal identity. First there was Camel Lights, then Gauloises Blondes, then Marlboro Lights and finally Craven “A”. Then, after trying hard for a few weeks in 2002 to quit, I puffed on with a better class of cigarette called Nat Sherman.

Like most habitual smokers, I knew I eventually had to overcome the habit. I knew it wouldn’t be easy. I really liked smoking. There was something about craving a cigarette, and then after a while getting an opportunity to break away … taking out a cigarette, tapping it on the packet, lighting the tobacco, and taking that first drag of smoke into your lungs. Salvation! I was also conceited enough to imagine myself a more discriminating smoker than people who smoked ordinary convenience store cigarettes – I even rolled my own smokes.

I was one hundred percent smoker; there was no doubt about that.

And then, the day after Christmas 2008, I – once again – started taking steps to shake the habit. First I threw my remaining cigarettes into an old book bag, together with all my lighters, ashtrays, tobacco, roller, rolling papers, filters, and pipes, and took it to my (then) fiancé’s apartment. After a week, as I had negotiated with myself, I smoked two cigarettes. Then two weeks nothing, then another cigarette (maybe two). I might have smoked a cigarette again at the end of January, and then six months passed before I bought another pack to enjoy some cigarettes with friends on a night out. I was, however, strict about one rule: I wouldn’t smoke any cigarettes at home. The packet would go into the fridge until another social event. So it went on – two or three cigarettes when we went out with friends every few weeks, but nothing on my own at home.

By 2013, a few months had gone by that I didn’t smoke any cigarettes. When we went out again one night, I realised I had no desire to stand outside with the smokers and suck on a tube of tobacco. The idea of the smell on my fingers, the taste in my mouth, the possible sudden rise in blood pressure, the light feeling in my head – were simply not worth the experience I had previously enjoyed so much.

It was clear that I had reached the other side. I was no longer a smoker. The other side had become my new reality. I could have wondered if I wanted to: When did this happen? Had I asked, I would have answered: Do you remember all the steps you have taken since Christmas 2008?

* * *

One more example: For many years in my twenties and early thirties I was on my own – alone, stuck with only my own company even at times when I really would have enjoyed some female companionship. It felt like it was my fate in life. I got so used to it that I couldn’t imagine myself having a female presence in my life ever again – with all the wonderful benefits that come with it. I started accepting that I was on one side of the chasm, and people who had found happiness with another person were on the other.

Then I met a woman – also from South Africa, a few months after she had arrived in Taiwan. From that very first day I knew I liked her. But I was sure she would never see me as anything more than a friend.

Over the next few months, however, I got to know her better, and to my deepest surprise, I received some signals that she might just be interested in more than just friendship.

So I started taking steps to turn the connection between us into something more. As anyone who has ever gone from “nothing” to “definitely something” with another person knows, there was a series of “negotiations”. I followed the steps and undertook the negotiations to the best of my ability.

And then, one day, there was no doubt that I was on the other side of that chasm. No doubt. Once again, I could have looked myself in the eyes in the bathroom mirror and asked: When did this happen? When did this become my new reality? Once again, I could have answered: Do you remember seeing her again after a few weeks, and afterwards giving her a call and suggesting that you meet for coffee the next day – a Sunday it was? Do you remember other appointments and dates over the next few weeks and months? Do you remember taking a series of actions with a dash of positive expectation?

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What you see and discover in a few short days if you take the right steps

FRIDAY 29 MARCH 2019

A brief description of our Sunday to Wednesday trip through northern Taiwan

Although I’ve been in Taiwan for more than twenty years, and my wife, Natasja, nearly fifteen years, we’ve never spent more than a few hours in Taiwan’s capital, Taipei. Last year we decided to take a few days off for her birthday this month to discover Northern Taiwan for ourselves.

Our journey started early on Sunday morning with a 360-kilometer, 100-minute journey on the high-speed train to Taipei.

High speed train in Kaohsiung

Our first adventure followed shortly after we arrived in Taipei: to find an exit from the tunnels below the station in less than an hour. After we finally saw sunlight again, we walked the ten minutes to our hotel to leave our luggage there. On the way, I discovered that our hotel is just about next-door to the National Taiwan Museum – which we visited after making a quick stop at the hotel.

The current home of the National Taiwan Museum was built in 1915
Stairs in the National Taiwan Museum

From there we returned to the tunnels under Taipei Main Station. Twenty minutes or so later we were in Shilin, to visit the official former residence of Chiang Kai-shek and Soong Mei-ling (or Madame Chiang, as she was better known to foreigners) between roughly 1950 and 1975. The building served as the Shilin Horticultural Experimental Station during the Japanese Colonial Era, but was taken over by the Government of the Republic of China after they withdrew to Taiwan in 1949. Here, “old dictator Chiang” – as Roger Waters calls him on Amused to Death – received American president Dwight D. Eisenhower, as well as future presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.

We couldn’t take photos inside the house, but I was pleasantly surprised by the place. The rooms are more or less the same as when Chiangs lived there – 1950s style furniture, clothes, books, and some paintings by Madame Chiang. It was a chilly, rainy day in Taipei. This, the solemn atmosphere, and the fact that the house is surrounded by trees and plants, contributed to the impression that it was the type of home where a political leader could find peace for his soul at the end of another day during which his opponents and critics experienced everything but happiness and well-being.

Loving plants at the entry to the Chiang Kai-shek residence
Madame Chiang’s Cadillac limousine
Map of the Chiang residential estate
Chiang Kai-shek’s official residence
The canopy at the front door
View of the lounges, and the bedrooms on the second floor

An hour or so after we had walked through the home and gardens, we arrived in Danshui – one of the oldest districts in Taipei. The district is located where the Danshui River flows into the Taiwan Strait. This was one of the reasons why the Spaniards decided 400 years ago to build their fort there, and why first the Dutch and then the British also constructed walls in the same spot. The residence that the British had built for their consulate in 1891 is still standing. The fort next door is in the place where the Spanish built a fort in 1628, before demolishing it in 1642 to prevent the Dutch from using it. The Dutch rebuilt the fort, officials of the Qing Empire restored it in 1724, and from 1868 the British leased it. Some of the rooms in the former consulate have exhibitions, but not much to write about. The fort does have a few figures to give you an idea of the people who at one time had spent time there.

Fort San Domingo in Danshui, Taipei
A prisoner captured in clay
Another prisoner pondering the way his life worked out
Last thought before the Dutchman turned into stone: “The Spaniards forgot to destroy those stones.”
Part of the original wall of the fort
The imposing former British consulate

After we made a turn at the river, we walked up the hill towards Aletheia University. The narrow streets led past some interesting buildings, and eateries with traditional dishes such as “Ah-Gei” – a hollowed-out block of tofu stuffed with rice noodles, to Danshui Old Street with dozens of shops and stalls along the way.

Danshui River
Oxford College, founded in 1882 – now part of Aletheia University
Street that runs past the campus
Wall with an interesting story
One of the Ah-Gei eateries
Start of the road that ends up in Danshui Old Street

Dinner was enjoyed at Shilin Night Market, one metro station closer to Taipei than where we had stopped for the Old Dictator’s house. The night market was definitely different from the markets we are used to in Kaohsiung. Stalls were lined up along the busy street that runs past the market, but the rest of the market is situated in alleys that stretch across the entire neighbourhood. There were a few shops with clothes, shoes, and electronic items, but most stalls and shops sold food and drinks – everything from steamed dumplings and candied fruit to ice cream mixed with peanut butter between two hot cakes, and deep-fried octopus.

Fruit stall at Shilin night market (Photo by VOA)
Seafood at Shilin night market (Photo by Exec8)
“Stinky Tofu” at Shilin night market (Photo by Sengkang)
Peanut butter ice cream, people, and scooters (Photo by Exec8)
People start flowing into the night market by late afternoon (Photo by Ken Marshall)

The next morning, shortly after breakfast, we took the train to Ruifang – about forty minutes from Taipei. We first enjoyed some hot beverages, and by 11:00 we departed on the Pingxi Line – a 13-kilometer railway line that goes through eight former mining towns. The towns and surrounding areas are now mainly tourist attractions. Refreshments and large paper lanterns on which people write messages before sending them afloat are big business.

Hot refreshments in Ruifang
Pingxi Line map
Platform at Shifen station
Train tracks at Shifen station
Tourists enjoy snacks next to the tracks
Suspension bridge at Shifen
Nature and mining
Waterfall at Shifen
River in Pingxi
Ice cream with peanut shavings
“The station is that way …”
Train station in Pingxi

Shortly after we returned to Ruifang we found ourselves on a bus speeding up a mountain pass on the way to Jiufen – as if the driver wanted to get away from the impending fog that would soon hamper our view of the Pacific Ocean.

Winding road to Jiufen
View of the Pacific Ocean

Dense fog also made it harder to find our next sleeping spot. Jiufen was once known for its gold mine. Decades after all the gold had been mined out, the sleepy village was once again stirred from its slumber when it was used as the location for an award-winning movie in the late eighties. We had booked a room on Airbnb, and to find the place, I even printed a map. In reality, the streets meander through the mist, and the building we had to find was not even on one of the streets on the map. I eventually had to pull out my computer to read the PDF with instructions on how to find the place.

Map of Jiufen – without any fog

At Jiufen Old Street with our luggage…

Down the narrow street full of Japanese and Korean tourists, around a few corners, until we reached a traditional wine shop. Next to the shop an exit, with a set of stairs descending into the fog …

More steps, a garden, a footpath …

… and finally, our cosy room.

For the rest of the afternoon and evening we walked through the narrow alleys, had dinner, drank tea, enjoyed sweets, and took more pictures of the people and the alleys and the fog.

Taken in the area where the movie, City of Sadness was filmed in 1989
A calligraphy workshop
The film location is popular with tourists
Hotel in the fog at a precipice

The next morning I woke up shortly after six. The fog had lifted in the meantime, so I went for a walk, and took pictures of the hillsides and the Pacific Ocean just a few miles away. Got some hot coffee and bananas at the Family Mart, took a few more photos, and returned to our room.

View before sunrise
Panorama of our “neighbourhood”
Kozy Stone House’s front door
Temple with a view
The garden near our B&B
Stairs at the film location – this time without the tourists
Houses on the mountain slope
International stickers
How far we are from the rest of the world (1)
How far we are from the rest of the world (2)

By 08:30 we were at the bus stop to return to Ruifang, to catch a train to Yilan, a city of about half a million people on Taiwan’s east coast. The railway line runs along the coast for about fifty kilometres, and includes a view of the distant volcanic Turtle Island (which, according to one source, can only be visited with a permit, and timely arrangements with a boat owner).

Turtle Island (Photo by Lien-yuan Lee)
Train station in Yilan
Map of Yilan
Building from the Japanese Colonial Era – now an official historic attraction
Building from the Japanese Colonial Era – now a teahouse
The teahouse from another angle

Yilan is the gateway to Taipingshan Forest Recreation Area, and there are some popular hot springs in the vicinity, but since our time was limited, we only visited some of the few places of interest in the city itself. Less than two hours after stopping in Yilan, we departed again – this time for Hualien, about 100 kilometres further south. Shortly after we found our Airbnb, we hit the road to the Hualien Railway Culture Park – a restored 1932 train depot with a handy model of a large part of the city, in case you had no more than an afternoon and an evening to spend in the city. Dinner was enjoyed at the Dongdamen Night Market. (Hualien is most famous for Taroko National Park – which we visited in November 2013.)

Model of Hualien (1)
Model of Hualien (2)
Model of Hualien (3)
Dongdamen night market in Hualien (Photo by Sinchen Lin)

I was up again early in the morning, this time to look for two attractions we didn’t have time for the previous day. Both places were still closed, but I could see what I was missing. The first one was an old Japanese-era military facility, where some Kamikaze pilots, according to tradition, had gulped down their last cups of rice wine before flying into the nearest American ships. The other was the Manor House, the official residence of a major military figure during the Japanese colonial era.

The Pine Garden in Hualien
One of the old houses in the military village

Back at our lodgings we made sure the room was decent, then we walked to the closest McDonald’s for breakfast. With thirty minutes to spare, we pitched up at Hualien train station for our five-hour journey back to Kaohsiung – down the east coast, and through the mountains that form the backbone of this beautiful island.

Destination boards at Hualien station
View of the east coast of Taiwan from the train
The east coast of Taiwan (Photo by Lg316hksyu)

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