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I Have to Laugh or I'll Cry
Parenting - Humor

A blog about Parenting and Family Life.
About HeatherIjames


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Heather Ijames
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Previous Posts
Get Your Fangs Out, It's Fall Ball!
Mom's Night Out
First Day Funny
It's Not a Dare
The Barcelona Chronicles - Part III
The Barcelona Chronicles - Part II
The Barcelona Chronicles - Part I
So Says Solomon
Call Yourself a Parent
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April 08
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       I had only imagined and had only speculated the joys and frustrations that make up organized youth sports.  If I’m being honest, I really only saw the frustration up until recently when my eldest son started T-Ball.  Before we had an opportunity to participate in youth sports, I only saw throngs of parents sitting in wobbly camping chairs either in the extreme heat or extreme cold, watching a practice or a game either too early or too late in the day but more often smack in the middle of a meal time.  And, sometimes I saw tired and dirty boys and girls piling into a fast food restaurant at an hour nearing bedtime with cleats still on their feet and designated jersey numbers upon their backs.

 

“Is this our future?” I had asked my husband before we had our first child. 

“Maybe.”  He replied. 

 

Well, two sons later it most certainly is our present.  And after being at our eldest son’s first t-ball game, I see the joy of the game and only found frustration in the parking situation.  For those of you who don’t see that there is a parking situation, perhaps a few rules will help you stop annoying the rest of us. 

 

       Rule Number One: Little cars should not be so bold when you have angry moms in SUV’s.  If you drive a little car, think bumblebee and rhinoceros.  Hope that helps.

 

       Rule Number Two:  Just because your car can fit there, it still doesn’t make it a parking spot.

 

       Rule Number Three:  I don’t think the architects of these parking lots have envisioned the lots, as clearly as some of you have, that there should only be one point of ingress and egress as you have clearly created by disregarding Rule #’s 1 and 2. 

 

       But, be that as it may, what I don’t do to offend as far as parking is concerned, I seemed to have more than made up for in the realm of being annoying and offensive on the field.  I videotaped nearly the entire game and have watched it almost every day this week.  And, I’ll be the first one to admit it’s hard to watch without curling my shoulders up to my ears at the sheer shrillness of my voice, screaming to my son to run, run, run and catch it, catch it, catch it! 

 

Ah, yes.  I’m quite embarrassed with myself.  I used to make fun of crazy moms like me.  Naturally, I assumed I would not be one of those psychotic sports moms.  But there’s just something about MY kid that makes me think he’s so much better than everyone else’s and I feel an overwhelming need to let all of you know that.  I kid, of course, but at the game I screamed and I screamed and I screamed.  I interfered with the dugout, overstepped the natural boundaries between observer and wanna-be coach, and probably inserted my big butt in the frame of several different snapshots trying to be taken by demure and properly sitting parents when their own child was up at bat.  Uh yeah, I got nothing except…I’m sorry. 

 

All I can say is that I have evidence through my videotaping that I may have taken it a bit overboard.  I’m going to try to tone it down a smidge before the next game and try my darndest to not get out of my seat.  Of course, my seat might be up against the fence at home base, but I promise to attempt sitting. 

 

So, some of you need to understand the rational of white painted, properly designated parking spaces, and I’ll take a muscle relaxer.  Then, we’ll all be good and we can say in unison, “Play Ball!”

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Friday, September 12, 2008 at 12:14 PM
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       Husbands have had a meal prepared for them, children have received a soft kiss good-bye, and mommas are rolling out of driveways in their SUV’s and minivan’s dressed like they just about lost their ninny minds.  What’s going on, you ask? It’s Mom’s Night Out and the ladies are loose. 

       

      Destination: Christina’s house, Northwest Bakersfield.  Event: Pajama Party and Fuzzy Slipper Game Night.  Potluck style, of course!  There’s a contest for best pajama and the trophy is a bottle of wine.  It might be needed for those up and coming cold winter nights we know are right around the corner. When daddies don’t come home until it’s dark and the children have been up since before dawn.

      

       I’m wearing a little number I like to call Before and After.  I have my regular pajamas on underneath.  Oversized T-shirt from my alma mater and baggy pants that fall to the floor.  You know…the type I could fit two of myself in.  Over that, I have my sexiest lingerie on.  It’s black and see-through with red lace stitching on the bustier.  Get it?  Before and After?  If you don’t get it, think it through some more.  If you still don’t get it, you’re not a wife and mother. 

      

       I put makeup on but smudged it up a bit to look like I slept on it.  My hair is tossed and teased in several different directions yet, I still show up with a chocolate glazed hazelnut mousse cake and it looks like a million dollars.

      

       I didn’t win the contest but defeat was accepted willingly after seeing my friend Peejay’s outfit.  The best way to describe it was Mimi from Drew Carey with rollers in her hair.  It was priceless and pleasantly shocking.  More shocking was how interested we all were when Peejay told us we could buy muumuus at Wal-Mart. 

 

       We ate, we talked, we laughed, someone spilled a red beverage on the carpet, and I told everyone about my salt on the stain trick as we put the party on hold to spot treat.  We played board games, talked, and laughed some more then lit candles on my cake and sang Happy Birthday to one of our own.  After I threw a teensy fit wanting the term “Weight Watcher Points” banned from the evening, a few women and I partook of the cake.

      

       We quieted in the dimming glimmer of the night, knowing that our evening was coming to an end.  Only one husband called during the adventure and my friend’s comment and tone pretty much summed up the joint female reaction to being bothered.  “Is that it?  Is that why you called me?  Yes, the dishwasher is clean.” 

      

       Christina’s husband and children returned home and we knew it was time to leave.  We all drove home hoping for two things.  One, fire trucks weren’t parked with their lights spinning in front of our houses, and two, not a child was still awake.  

      

       I used to find total and complete pleasure in spending every weekend moment with my family and would often shun the thought of leaving them for some girl time.  That is until I learned one very important lesson: girls need girl time, especially when they’re women.  

 

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Sunday, September 7, 2008 at 08:02 PM
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Ethan started another year of pre-school today.  But it was big boy's pre-school this time around.  The final heave-ho for my December-just-missed-the-cut-off-baby before he makes the final ascent into kindergarten.

I tried to make it abundantly clear to him that behavior was going to be big emphasis this year.  The kid can already read (are you paying attention Mr. Superintendent of schools who decides the cut-off is a hard and fast rule???) so, there's not much left to perfect except...um...behavior, I guess. 

At any rate, he's got a great teacher and she has some great rules on behavior.  She communicated them so perfectly to my son, that when I picked him up today he repeated them verbatim from the sheet she handed me in the morning.  He listed all the consequences of bad behavior up and until the final consequence of being sent to the Principal's office.

To which he than adds, "And I think I have to stay there all day and night because the teacher made it sound like a horrible place.  Right Mommy?"

"That's right, honey.  All day and all night without any food or water."  What?  I thought it'd be funny.  My boy usually knows when I'm joking so I left it at that and we moved on.

A couple of hours later, Daddy called and asked Ethan how his first day went.  Ethan proceeded to tell Daddy (on speakerphone) all about the rules and then ended, very dramatically, "And I'll be sent to the Principal's office to sit and suffer all day long without any food or water."

"Wh-wh-what?"  His Daddy asked.  "Um, honey (talking to me now), are his teachers allowed to do that?" 

Well, I have to get my entertainment somewhere. 

 

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Tuesday, September 2, 2008 at 05:28 PM
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     Here's a piece of newly found wisdom:  The manufacturer's recommend age for fun stuff like Lego's, Lincoln Logs, and Transformers (and I'm sure the same will go for girly toys) is not a dare for you to prove to the toy company that your child is smart enough to play with older kid toys. 

     No, it's a stern warning that if you are naive enough to buy it for your younger one, then you must be patient enough to put the toy together over and over and over and over again.  On account of the younger one reveling in habitually taking it apart and not being sophisticated enough to read the thirty page instructions that accompany the toy.

     I've just discovered this today as I look at the 600+ pieces of Lego's on my living room floor (which used to consist of four separate sets) while my four year old waves phone book sized manuals in my face, asking me to build up the models again which were originally recommended for eleven year olds.   

     When I told him he needs to follow the manuals himself, he just laughed at me and said, "Yeah right.  That's what you're for.  Mommy's are for reading and I'm for playing."

    Okay toy companies...lesson learned. 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Monday, August 11, 2008 at 05:23 PM
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Park Guell
 
     There is nothing like a park bench to contemplate life upon. It has seen, felt, and heard the plans of men and women, old and young. Everything from a first kiss to a lonely tear drop of a widow feeding pigeons, life occurs on a park bench. I suppose that is why I am so fond of them. Of all the tourist spots in Barcelona, none did I visit as frequently as Park Guell. 
 
     A wonderland of mosaic tile and shapes from a dream sequence which can only be appropriately designated as the result of some form of excessive intake. Be it wine or clams, a dream sequence born of excessiveness. They say, though, that Gaudi was eccentric. In that, I found a certain amount of humor in the design of the park and yet, a certain amount of charm as well. 
 
     The park bench on the upper tier of the park seemed to run for at least two to three hundred yards. It weaved around the edge of the upper tier letting those who attempted to find respite in it, overlook Gaudi’s barrage of columns below and catch a bird’s eye view of everyone perusing the top tier.
 
     You could always find several vendors up there. The ice cream vendors were a given, the woman in black selling silk scarves, a treat. Her lips wrinkled inward, her ankles pudgy and stuffed into uncomfortable, but practical, shoes. There was nothing spectacular about her except the way she displayed her scarves. I can not think of too many occasions were a scarf is necessary in the Mediterranean, even if it is silk. But she had a way of waving them just so, it was truly captivating. Held out with her right hand and then flicked upwards to catch the breeze. The breeze pulled it out and splayed it in the sun. The sun caught the gold and silver threads and flashed brilliance. The brilliance was such that an old and plain woman made her wares the most drop dead sexy and titillating accessory known to anyone with a pulse. I own a few of her scarves. 
 
     But, back to the bench. I always liked to consider Gaudi’s tiled bench the epitome of narcissistic art. It really is a beautiful bench and quite comfortable for being made out of cement and plaster. You feel overpowered to just sit for hours. And yet, as time ticks on, you really start to think that passersby’s are looking at you, not the bench. Hence, the narcissism. 
 
     Artists would paint from the bench, writers would write from the bench, and musicians would compose from the bench. All art forms were represented. I was attempting to write the great American novel from this bench. The writing was rubbish, the memories were fond. 
 
     I was stuck on a paragraph about love one afternoon when I heard a commotion below me on the bottom level. I leaned over and saw a wedding party. A sun kissed Spanish bride with soft brown hair. Both hair and skin accentuated by the high afternoon sun and a white woven and beaded silk gown. Princess style, of course. The browns of her eyes held a fervor only a perfectionist bride could know. Something had gone wrong. She was upset at her photographer. Her groom stood a foot away with his hands in his pockets. 
 
     She saw me staring down at her and smiled at me as if she was a goddess of light and beauty; she shouted to me in Spanish, “Take my picture!” I had not even realized I held my camera in my hand as it dangled over the terrace. I did. She then turned to the photographer, “See, that’s what I want. Go up there and take my picture.” She and her groom played peek-a-boo with the roman columns, racing between shadows and light, and the photographer took several pictures. She was happy and I finished my paragraph about love. How it was fleeting and imperfect, darting between shadows and light. 
    
     Even now, the memory makes me yearn for a park bench. To see life again from a bird’s eye. To sit down while the world goes by, contemplating the perfect moment to get back up and rejoin the masses. Or, I could just go play with my scarves. 

 

 

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Saturday, August 9, 2008 at 04:20 PM
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 Apartment in the Ghetto

 
     I found the place online and the price was right. Too right. The pictures showed a clean and quaint little studio apartment. The price could mean only one of two things. Either the landlords, in a cooperative effort with some fair housing for poor students initiative, kept the rent at a below average rate or, it was a clean and quaint apartment in a crummy area. I decided to take it anyway. How bad could the area be? Surely Barcelona could not have its Compton comparable area. I was sure I had seen worse in a line at Magic Mountain than anything I could find in Barcelona.
 
     My new landlord insisted he pick me up at the airport; and although my suitcase was bigger than his car, I was grateful for the ride. The first time I caught a glimpse that something was afoul was when my landlord had wild and darting eyes once he told me we were only a block away from the apartment. For a fifty-five year old man, I was plumb shocked at how quickly he managed to unload my bags and lock us inside the apartment for my tour. 
 
     He gave me the run down of the apartment. “Bed here, fresh sheets there, TV doesn’t work but you wouldn’t understand it anyway, bathroom, kitchen, and this is your washer/dryer/dishwasher.”
 
     It was a small machine that only looked like a washing machine. “No!” I said in disbelief.
     “Yes.” He reiterated.
     “No.” 
     “Yes.”
     “Nah….” Still in disbelief.
     “Yes, okay.” He said firmly.
 
     I still don’t know if it actually did all three. I was not going to try. I washed my clothes in it, hung them dry and did my dishes by hand. 
 
     He stood by the doorway and prepared himself to leave. “There is one more thing. Ah, first…thank you for paying in full up front. I really appreciate that. Ah, second, try not to go out after sunset. It’s a bad area and bad things could happen to you. So vulnerable, so young, so alone. I would feel horrible if something happened to you. Ah, so make sure you have lots of fun in Barcelona but make sure you are home before dusk. And if you are out after dark, then make sure you don’t walk home. Take a taxi. Most won’t come out here, but take one anyway. Thank you, good-bye.”
 
     I spent my first evening double latching the front door, pushing the armoire in front of the porch door and curling up reconnecting my communication line with God. My landlord was right though, no taxi would come that way. For fear of being robbed. The few times I stayed out after dark, I was dropped off at the barrier of the ghetto by my taxi driver and was forced to make the one mile trek to my front door alone. One time, I even resorted to barking while walking. I was willing to try anything. But, for the most part, I did all my sightseeing in the daylight and rediscovered why it is important to be comfortable with oneself when all one has until dawn is…oneself. 
 
     The potential for a mugging in that neighborhood was no joke. I, luckily, survived unscathed. Although, as alluded to earlier, I could not even count on one hand the times I was walking home after dusk. A fellow student in my building, however, was not so lucky. Despite the fact I warned my building co-occupier we should forego the end of the Sangria party to arrive home in safety, he told me that I should lighten up and enjoy myself. The next morning when I came knocking on his door to walk to the subway together, he finally opened the door with a swollen and red face, wearing the same clothes he had on the night prior. His left back pocket was ripped off and dangled by a few threads from his pants. He had been jumped, mugged, and punched by seven men when he finally came home at three in the morning. They had taken his wallet and, regrettably, his sense of security. He moved out the next day. 
 
     The next chapter is Park Guell. A world famous park designed by Barcelona’s beloved artist, Antonio Gaudi. A place where I habitually watched the world go by. 
 
 
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posted by HeatherIjames on Wednesday, August 6, 2008 at 11:21 PM
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The Barcelona Chronicles
Part I
 
      I am at the point in my life where I neither feel young nor old. I know have opponents in the field who say I should still very much consider myself young.  But enough whipper snappers have referred to me as ma’am, and thus, I have accepted my fate as being older than the young even if I’m not older than the old. At any rate, it recently occurred to me my mind feels quite like a rubber band. Sometimes it stretches to great lengths, and other times it contracts and I ask complete strangers what the date is several times over in the course of a single day. Today it is stretching. Stretching back to a time which seems so very long ago, yet it has not even been ten years. However, it was before marriage and before children. So as you can see, it was a very, very long time ago. 
     I was preparing to sign up for the summer semester following my second year of law school when I had come across a flyer in the library. It advertised a semester abroad in one of several countries over the summer break. My attention was truly peaked because I had already done a semester abroad in Florence, Italy during my sophomore year in college. Oh, to go to Europe again. I had to at least make an inquiry. It turned out that taking two summer classes at the University of San Diego during the summer would cost double the amount of taking three summer classes abroad. That cost included my tuition, renting an apartment, the flight over there, spending money, and still paying the rent on my apartment in La Jolla since I did not want to lose it for the next school year. Half the cost and an experience of a lifetime? It was a fortuitous thing I already had a passport. 
     I chose Barcelona, Spain for reasons I am still not sure of. I suppose I cannot escape the fact that the Mediterranean calls out for me…it is in my bloodline. I remember telling my father, both while I was there and once I arrived back home, I did not care for Barcelona. My reasons were juvenile. I suppose I wanted to see something quaint, a picture which had manifested itself from a young girl’s expectations. Barcelona was big, bustling, and dirty. That is what I told him. 
     But now I can see that those opinions were formed in the journey, not the destination. The journey from my apartment to the cathedral was dismal but I adored the cathedral. The journey from the university to the park was frightening but I adored the park. Maybe it is collective blocking, but I hardly remember the journeying anymore. I simply see the destinations. And oh, what destinations they were.
     To feel the pulse of Barcelona is to taste it with your eyes. I can hardly envision standing on the gold and course sand of the Costa Brava without tasting the salty air of the Mediterranean in my mouth. I can’t remember an outdoor café without tasting olive oil and freshly crushed tomatoes making a natural symphony of flavor in my mouth. And sangria, sangria is the heart of the city. Every time I make it in the comfort of my own home I remember the dark pit of a tavern where my lips where first introduced to its amazing flavor; how I still taste the wet wood my hand carved goblet was made from as it held the dark and sweet substance I am still so fond of. 
     Humor me as I retell my experiences of Barcelona in these chronicles. Part one was my introduction. Part two will be my apartment in the ghetto. 
 
 
 
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posted by HeatherIjames on Monday, August 4, 2008 at 12:43 AM
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Every now and then I start to wonder about life.  Not so much about mine, not so much about yours, but about life as it is general.  I was driving home around half past noon.  The same way, the same way always.  But, at high noon, in the middle of summer, some things look crisper, some things look duller.

An old house, small on a big lot full of dry grass, looked crisper.  It is quite old.  Its lack of size dates it to a time when big things did not matter; the chipped white paint and a shutter hanging by only a single brace also dates it to time’s past.

As if the perfectly centered sun in the sky illuminated only the house itself, I took a good long look at it.  There were four vehicles lining the dirt driveway.  All, too, were from a different time than the one I find myself in the throws of.  One word came to me, one word for the house, the land, and the vehicles.  Neglect. 

Judging by the design of the vehicles, such material treasures would have been popular in the late seventies, early eighties at the latest.  Coupled with the house, the era made sense.  Only after this time did size start to matter so much.  Only after this time was it inconceivable to not have separate rooms for each child and their toys. 

What was the property like, then, in the late seventies?  Full of energy, vibrancy, meaning?  And if so, what had happened in the interim?  Some could say life happened.  Some could say it was simply time.  I, myself, did not stop to ponder as much.  As with a great many things in this world, I inevitably come to the point where I ask, “Will this happen to me?”

Will my home succumb to just passing one day to another for the next thirty years?  Will such be a reflection of my life and attitudes?  Another word came to me.  Complacency.  It usually predicates neglect, does it not?  And a step further in that direction is pride.  

My imagination, overactive to be sure, started to put together a story behind the little old house and the vehicles so untouched their windows were caked with dry dust from year after year of fall breezes. 

A family.  Father works hard, mother raises children.  Most did in those times.  There was always enough money.  Enough for the cars, enough for the food, enough for the heat in the dead of winter, and a little extra for a brand new pair of roller skates at Christmas.  But faith was misplaced.  It was put in the now, the have to haves, and of course, their youth. 

And yes, life happened.  Time happened.  Pride, then complacency, then neglect.  And finally, the warning.  Best transcribed by Solomon for his closing remarks in Ecclesiastes:

“Remember now your Creator in the days of your youth,
  Before the difficult days come,
  And the years draw near when you say,
  I have no pleasure in them”

           * * *
  "Then the dust will return to the earth as it was,
  And the spirit will return to God who gave it.
   “Vanity of vanities,” says the Preacher,
   “All is vanity.”

         * * *

"Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter:

 Fear God and keep His commandments,
 For this is man’s all.
 For God will bring every work into judgment,
 Including every secret thing,
 Whether good or evil.”

  Ecclesiastes 12:1, 7-8, 13-14

 

 

 

 

 

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Wednesday, July 23, 2008 at 05:24 PM
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When you know the difference between plagiocephaly and craniosynostosis before your baby is six months old, you've earned it.

When you know three different ways to cure diaper rash, you've earned it.

When you take the time to draw a happy face out of ketchup for a corn dog, you've earned it.

When you know the only option of carpet color is anything dark, you've earned it.

When you sacrifice clean for clean enough, you've earned it.

When you can bite your tongue when a window gets broken, you've earned it.

When you designate one thermometer in the house to be the rectal thermometer, you've earned it.

When someone in your household misappropriates the rectal thermometer and uses it to take their temperature orally, they've earned it. 

Go ahead, call yourself a parent, you've earned it!

 

 

 

 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Sunday, July 20, 2008 at 03:42 PM
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Just felt in the mood to lay out some highlights of my life.  In historical order, of course.

- Birth (obviously)
- Childhood and adolescence (this is between me and my therapist, thank you.)
- Twelve years old, I accepted Jesus into my life.  Now that's something I can bank on!
- College (Me make brain grow!)
- Second year of college I studied abroad in Florence, Italy.  (Ah...sweet memories and way too much pasta.  That stereotype is NO joke over there.  They eat a LOT of pasta.)
- Law School (Can I just say how much I still adore San Diego?)
- Second year of law school I studied abroad in Barcelona, Spain.  (Retirement plan - move to the Costa Brava on Spain's Mediterranean Riviera)
- Third year of law school some guy kept following me around everywhere I went trying to find reasons to talk to me.  Married him that summer.
- More school, advanced tax law program.  Finally graduate and NO MORE SCHOOL.  I'm 25 years  old and have two bachelor's degrees, a master's and a doctorate.  (But I still don't know how to program a VCR and spend hours concocting a grocery list which I leave on the kitchen counter.)
- Have first child at 28.  Held him in my arms and said, "Lord, You can come back now, I'm ready to go!"
- Moved to Bakersfield, bought first house and husband broke the sprinklers for the first time.
- Had second child at 32. Another son.  Seriously, Lord, You can come back now.  Before they tell me to drop them off three blocks from school.  Please, come back??  Have You seen gas prices?  Come on back.
- Finished my first novel.  Hope to add another highlight soon. 

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posted by HeatherIjames on Thursday, July 17, 2008 at 10:55 PM
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