Archive for December 23rd, 2007



Sunday, November 4, 2007

It is Sunday morning in Nairobi. The city is already up at 7 AM. I am wondering whether it is too early to call the office of Friends International House to find out what time Quaker meeting is. I went there a few years ago. It is in a complex (International Friends House) where both the silent meeting (unprogrammed) takes place and the programmed meeting, in another building on the premises. The programmed meeting is noisy with much singing and loud preaching which goes on for 2 hours. At the end everyone streams out of their respective buildings and they greet each other with the words brothers and sisters. I asked Ida to come with me this time.

Ida made my welcome in Nairobi very easy. She had arranged for a ‘meet and greet’ at the airport to complement the wheelchair KLM arranged. At my arrival a wheelchair was indeed waiting at the door of the plane with a young woman named Karen. She wheeled me into the building and there was another young woman, Theresa, with a sign with my name on it waiting at the end of the jet way. I was pushed with amazing speed through immigration; they parked me near the baggage area and one got my suitcase while the other located my driver. It was the best landing in Africa ever. I also have never been more exhausted at the end of a trip. I could not have done without all this help.

In the plane the KLM staff put an empty metal container in front of my (frontrow) seat after take off. They covered it with a bunch of pillows and provided me with ice packs at regular intervals. The only difficulty was getting in and out of the chair. It was all very comfortable. I was able to do my foot and neck exercises from time to time, and stayed fairly limber throughout the journey.

At the hotel I found a note from Ida giving me the telephone numbers of a massage therapist who makes home (hotel) calls and a physical therapist plus two small washbasins that she had left with the concierge for my foot baths. It was the first thing I did in my room. After that I took care of my communications (internet set up and cellphone card) at the business office and went to bed. I slept a long dream-ful sleep. The only part I remember is a very long glass rowing boat and my surprise to learn that glass did not mean real glass but fiberglass when I noticed it did not shatter into a thousand pieces when it bumped into the side of a building. Something about expectations, I gather, being more resilient than I thought, may be.

By the way, Tessa filled her void quickly and now has a puppy.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

All our aches and pains were overshadowed by a call from a sobbing Tessa yesterday morning. Her pet rabbit Nijntje died, suddenly. Tessa was inconsolable. Axel and I cried along with her on the phone, wishing our arms could reach all the way into London to hold her. Her pain was made worse because she couldn’t locate Steve at first and there was no one to console her or simply be with her. Tessa had poured all her love in this little creature which she got on her 18th birthday and which had been so much a part of her life after high school. And now it is no longer there. Our hearts are aching for her.

Later, after we had hung up, it occurred to me that we got a glimpse of Tessa’s reaction when the news of our crash finally reached her last July. Not that rabbits and parents are the same, but when it comes to being the object of love, maybe they are.

This sad news colored the day, which was already sad because of our imminent parting; add to that the early nightfall, the leaves falling and hurricane Noel racing up the coast to soak the Northeast. It could easily have added up to a sense of foreboding and depression. But it did not. I was excited and looking forward to the trip while Axel knew that this going out into the world was another important milestone for me on my path to recovery. My excitement was matched by a most glorious sunset over Boston as Sita and Jim drove me to the airport. Axel watched it from the cove. The sky was lit up with brilliant orange and pink streaks of clouds against a dark background. I think the storm was announcing itself in full Technicolor.

Navigating the airport was a different experience than I had expected. I travelled with my plastic boot which helped me avoid a significant part of the security line which snaked for a long distance. I could not see myself standing in line that long and asked for a short cut. A couple of Brits were standing right where I was let into the line and got upset. When I pointed at my boot they softened a bit. They asked what happened to me. When I said ‘a plane crash’ all the women in the group crossed themselves and the men asked whether I was flying on Virgin. They seemed to think that I would be a liability on their plane. I told them I wasn’t planning on crashing ever again in my life and that I was going on Northwest which therefore would be the safest choice of airline.

Later, after security I discovered the stresses of being handicapped when the line in back relentlessly pushed forward while I was still trying to collect all my belongings and put on my boot. I know that travel is stressful, even for the totally fit. Security adds more stress and it becomes hard to see other people’s needs. We’re all in our own little balloons, trying to get wherever we want to go, in one piece and with all our stuff. That’s when the truly kind people stand out, like the young man who took my handluggage and said, hey, I’ve been waiting in this line for so long, I can wait this little longer, take your time.

I am posting this entry from Amsterdam. My next post, if there is anything to tell about a whole day of travel, will come from Nairobi, incha’allah. Please hold Tessa in your thoughts and prayers. She needs them.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Today will be entirely focused on my departure. There are no therapies and nothing to cut up the day. The suitcase is open on the bed downstairs and I have been throwing things that will need to travel with me in and around it. I have checked the weather in Nairobi and Holland so I know which clothes to bring. On the Nairobi end of the trip my friend and colleague Ida is securing airport assist, plastic tubs for my daily foot soak, a massage therapist and maybe even a physical therapist. I will be wearing my plastic moonboot for protection and comfort on the way from here to there. Not surprisingly, my dreams were all about travel. They were good dreams.

Yesterday was another very low energy day. It is as if my body has known, this entire week, that it needs to save up all its energy for the trip. I was never very good at being with low energy. Some people just take a nap but that is too radical for me. Before the crash, when I felt low I could go for a walk or a bike ride and get my energy back up. Now such physical activity is out of the question and I have not yet discovered other means to change things around. I did my foot soak, which helps a bit because I can walk better afterwards, and then I made a pumpkin pie, which made things worse because I stood on my foot too long (but smell and taste were worth it).

I had my orthopedic check-up yesterday. I first saw a physician assistant for about 5 minutes. He looked at my foot and asked a few questions. When I mentioned the continuing numbness and hypersensitivity of my foot (sole/toes respectively), he suggested the nerve might have gotten squished (not his words) in the tarsal tunnel. I did not know there was such a thing in my foot. It is like the carpal tunnel in my wrist. No one had ever mentioned this. It can take as long as a year to get better, or never at all. I was really taken aback by the way he said ‘never at all.’ There was a little hint of sadism in the expression on his face, as if he was still in Haloween mode. I figured he was a butcher or Freddie with the chainsaw. These things take a few days to wear off.

Then I got to see the real doctor for a couple of minutes. He wiggled my ankle and asked about pain. Good, good he nodded, this will take time. I discovered there is a formula. I love to hear about formulas; it is something I can hold on to, count off days, stuff like that. Recovery of muscle strength and soft tissue damage takes twice as long as the period in the cast. That would be 4 months. The next time I will see him, January 3, all should be well. Let’s hope the formula applies to me. These visits to my orthopede are very short. I think I am not an interesting case, since he took over from another orthopede and never got to operate on me.

Axel went by train to Brookline for his therapy session with Paul who could not make it to Manchester this week; a big undertaking. He took advantage of his time in Boston to meet up with Phil Karber for coffee and talk about adventure travel (without capital letters), a stop at the Paper Source for his card project and then back to North Station where he joined thousands of commuters for the return trip to the North Shore. He returned in great spirits and full of energy and participated in the cooking and clean-up while I marvelled at is energy (it is usually the other way around) from the comfort of my recliner chair.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

I woke up to a glorious sunrise with brilliant pinks meeting the brilliant oranges and yellows from the trees in an explosion of color. I tried to gather evaporating dreams but they slipped through my fingers like sand. I hung on to some pieces about a community construction event, people sitting together and having a good time after hard work. This is probably another form of advertisement for the event that Diane is organizing at the Manchester Community Center on Sunday and which I will miss, unfortunately.

There was also something darker in the dream but it slipped away. This is fine. I was going to bring all the dark stuff into my EMDR session with Ruth but she just got another grandchild and the session is cancelled. I won’t be seeing her until I get back from Kenya. I’ll put all that stuff in storage for now; a closet that is already pretty full.

Yesterday we went to MGH for a consultation with a doctor who stands on the top of the health care pyramid. The orthopede from Salem hospital called him quadernary care, since tertiary has already slipped into the suburbs (Salem, Beverly, etc.). We got up early to beat the traffic and had a hard time getting out of the house in time. These things remain stressful, especially with our forgetfulness. We had to return once to retrieve a missing piece of paper. I particularly don’t do well with such stress and there were a few tears on the way. But despite the traffic, and there was much, we made it on the dot and saw the doctor for a few minutes and his assistant (intern?) for a few minutes more. He gave us some good news and some bad news. The bad news was that he considered the movement that Axel had seen last week and about which we were so excieted was pretty meaningless. The good news was that the distance that the nerve has to cover as it is reinventing itself is much shorter than we thought; the muscles that govern the extension of his wrist and fingers start fairly high up, close to the injury. He ordered another EMG in 6 weeks. If there is a positive change then the healing is progressing well and nothing needs to be done. If there is no change he will want to do an operation and help the nerve along.

Axel went to OT in his pirate outfit: hat, patch and hook. He was the only patient who showed up in style. You’d think that a Muscularskeletal Center would take full advantage of its name at Haloween (they had a few skeletons up here and there but that is part of their normal decorations). At my PT office things were a bit more playful. My therapist was dressed up as a gypsy with lots of necklaces, bangles and scarves, making for a noisy session. The secretary greeted me with wings on her back; there was a cowboy, a Red Sox player and the most adorable little cat person (3 years old) who came by each treatment room sticking out his candy basket to us patients, lying on our backs, ill prepared for ticking treating. I had no candy to give.

We were both too pooped to go out in town and see the tricker treaters go from house to house. We finished the lobster pie and went to bed early. A trip into Boston, with all the emotions attached, was a bigger deal than we thought.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Today is Halloween. If all things would have been normal I would have gotten up very early in the morning or stayed at Ann’s house to set up the annual MSH Halloween display, a tradition that is at least 15 years old. Last year’s Haloween display at MSH included lots of hospital Johnnies. Little did I know that I would have my own hospital Johnnie a year later plus many other patient paraphernalia. We are entirely equipped to go as accident victims this year: Axel’s body brace, a neck brace, a walker, several splints, crutches and our Johnnies. If we add some bandages and fake blood we could be very real. We got the walking bit down pat. But I feel no excited about such a costume and little energy for dress up. So this will be the first year that Haloween will pass me by, alas.

My dream life was very active last night; dreams about letting a wild thing loose followed a dream about being stalked by the monster-of-having-too-much-to-do that was trying to drag me down into something that looked like quicksand; bizarre, frightening and very real. After the fist dream I woke up and quickly scribbled down what I remembered while still expecting arms to pull me into the muck. I was not able to distinguish Axel’s arms from the dream arms and pulled over to the side of the bed. I remember falling asleep again; no longer afraid but angry, about these arms. Poor Axel!

The good news from yesterday is that my cervical spine is fully aligned again. The vertebrae (C2, 3, and 4) have been coaxed back in line over the last 6 weeks or so. This does not mean the pains are gone. The muscles still need to be retrained but the tender spots are smaller now and massage calms things down easily. In fact, yesterday I woke up with my left shoulder and neck totally pain-free. It took a while to register this. Such a luxury!

The process of realignment is mysterious. The physical therapist only used very subtle movements. The exercises she gave me are hardly exercises: minute movements of my head that are easy to do and cause no pain. If there is any stretching involved I cannot feel it. I can do these exercises without anyone noticing. Before this experience I always assumed that getting vertebrae back in line required force, as one would yell at a soldier or kid who is not standing in perfect alignment with the others. Maybe this is what chiropracters do. The end result certainly shows that this subtle coaxing into position works and that my spine prefers straight over crooked.

We went for our weekly massages to Abi’s office in Gloucester this time as she could not make it to our house. This meant it took the entire morning. We emerged so relaxed that on our way back we both forget all sorts of things we had intended to take care of while in Gloucester. But we had not written things down. This forgetfulness is a little worrisome and we haven’t found a way to cope yet other than writing things down. It is when we forget to write things down that we are in trouble.

The parents of Sita’s friend Brian sent him to our house with a lobster pie which we ate last night. We are in charge of our own meals now but this was certainly a treat. Sita and Jim left for Western Massachusetts to make music with their friends and so we have the place to ourselves. Axel promptly served himself about a half inch of white wine. I protested faintly and then had an inch myself. It was the Lobster Cove Chardonnay (“Life is a Beach” says the label with a lobster in a beach chair) that Ted and his brother Gus brought back from Illinois.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

This morning, for the first time ever, I got very busy (coffee, hot pack, toast) before I started writing. We’ll see how this new routine affects the creative process (not so great).

I went to bed very early after Sita, Jim and I returned from serving a lasagna dinner with our Quaker meeting in a church in Beverly to about 70 down-on-their-luck or very low income income folks. It is usually a bit of a feeding frenzy. People come primarily to eat and they do it fast. Panera had donated various breads and pastries that would have filled a few bathtubs. Much of that went too, although we helpers also got to take some of that home. We will be in full carbo celebration for about a week I estimate.

That was about the most strenuous activity of the day. For the rest it was a very low energy day. I felt I got nothing accomplished other than checking email and sending a few out. I struggled a bit with that feeling as I counted the hours of work and non-work. It was rather lop-sided. Much of the day went into recovery work anyways.

In the morning Axel accompanied me to the surgeon in his Beverly office. We waited one hour in a small and dreadful waiting room (painted in grey – what were they thinking?) with the TV blaring at us. The surgeon explained that my abdominal fascia were probably sutured with fishline (no kidding, Axel recognized the name from his fishing years) and that the sutures from below and from above came together just about at my belly button and that was the knot with its sharp ends I was feeling. He explained about the risk of snipping these off (hernia) in the early months of healing but that the intervention was easy and that it was up to me. Later in the day he called me back. He had obtained the report from UMMC and the sutures were of the kind that gets absorbed. He counseled patience and told me that the discomfort would probably go away. Axel and I had already decided to wait it out.

Axel was dropped of by Ted for his OT and PT and picked up over an hour later by Diane and her husband Dr. Curt Prout, the oldest practicing doctor I know. I am sure Axel had another consultation from him on the drive home, a multi-purpose drive. Axel is anxious to get his driver’s license renewed and start driving again so he doesn’t have to call on people all the time for these rides. His eye sight is improving quite remarkably and not being able to drive is starting to annoy him big time. But Sita is more cautious and is not that anxious to see her dad behind the wheel.

My physical therapist took measures again of the range of motion of my foot. She does it when I feel that I am not progressing much. She proved me wrong and told me that I had made huge progress, more in some directions than others. I have held off on many of my exercises fearing a tendinitis. I don’t know whether I have been successful yet, so I continue to take it easy. The sole of my foot appears to be awakening and although it is a good sign, the discomfort has increased.

Monday, October 29, 2007

I woke up this morning from a feast. I don’t think it had anything to so with the Red Sox, although that is worth a feast too. My feast was an exquisite banquet and someone was serving me the best pieces and quickly. I can’t remember what the celebration was all about but I do remember a question I was asked, just before I woke up: “who does the translation function?” There was a figure, somewhere in the dream, who was there to translate; a woman, sitting in the corner. I did not recognize her, and I remember noticing that she did not translate all that much and that I was actually the one doing the translation; from what to what was not clear.It is 36 degrees outside and we are getting close to our first frost. It is the first time the temperature dipped under 40 and sitting in bed writing is a bit chilly now. I might change my routine and get dressed first, get the coffee and then write although I am afraid that paying attention to such mundane things first would change the quality of the writing.

We still have some harvesting to do of tomatoes and beans and there are plenty of flowers in bloom. I am not quite ready for winter. On Friday Allegra came with her tutorial of kids from the Waring School to help us with the chores that come with this time of the year. They raked leaves, piled lawn chairs under a tarp and carried the winter windows to the porch. They did all this in one hour between lunch and their next class. It must have been quite a sight and I am sorry I missed it, but I am grateful nevertheless.

Yesterday morning I went to Quaker meeting alone and in the car. Axel is still not quite ready to sit still for one hour and I am not quite ready to ride my bike one half hour each way on a road that dips up and down. I did contemplate the idea but decided, after my busy two days at Babson that this Sunday was intended to be a day of rest and took the car. On the way to Meeting I listened to an interview with Alison Krauss and Robert Plant about their new album (Raising Sand). They played her song ‘Let your loss be your lesson’ which resonated strongly with me. There have been several losses in my life that contained a gift inside them. Sometimes it has taken me a long time to find that gift; sometimes I was obvious and I found it quickly. I think the latter applies to what happened over the summer. If it would have been possible to return an experience, like one returns a piece of merchandise to a store, I don’t think I would have returned what happened to us this summer. Some people have reacted to this statement with great surprise and somewhat of a shock. But those who have seen us unpack the gifts inside it are not surprised.

We were reminded of our somewhat defective short term memory by a call from the Lipkinds asking where we were. We had been invited for brunch and had forgotten to write it down. It was the second instance in as many days that something like this happened. We jumped in the car and drove to Plum Island and had a rather late brunch. The good part of our late arrival was that we got to see the late afternoon light stream into their wonderful house with its abundance of windows that look out over the dunes and the marshes that surround Plum Island. On the way back we stopped at the side of the road to relieve a farmer of several pumpkins and some freshly picked produce, possibly the last of the season.

And now I am on the final stretch before take off on Friday. It is less than a full week with lots of appointments. For starters two surgeon’s appointments: mine today to check out that sharp piece under my belly button and Axel’s on Wednesday in Boston to check out his peripheral nerve damage. I am trying not to set myself up for disappointments and frustrations by selecting my goals carefully. It will be a challenge and it is going to require a lot of intentionality or, if that fails, some policing by Sita and Axel.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

I am still waking up several times a night. I have gotten used to it and have come to accept it, as much else. I have now a much higher tolerance for discomfort and pain. For the physiical aspect I am relying on heat- and ice-packs, exercises and going to bed early as ways to manage this condition. Psychologically I can live with all of this simply because I can (and because things turned out as well as they did). I remember some years ago getting all upset about the pains in my knee and having to stop playing squash. It was the worse thing that could have happened to me, I thought at the time. Now I know better and I can smile. How little did I know then.

Although I cannot remember my dreams of the night, I did wake up at one time with words on my lips. I have come to pay attention to these as they have nearly always triggered insights or provided a key to something I needed to know or contemplate. There was ‘Track changes!’ which I believe was a command. There was ‘stacked right’ which reminded me of the importance of facing danger and threat together. But this morning the meaning is not that obvious. I am really puzzled. The words came to me in two languages and mean different things but they are both legal terms, and somewhat related as a search on google quickly proved. One was ‘ward of the state’ and the other ‘voogdes’ which is Dutch for female custodian (of a child). The google search led me to a whackie site about Indigo children and the god Wodan. I think I’ll save it for my next EMDR session.

Yesterday was the last day of our OBTS Board meeting. In the middle of the day we walked the Babson Campus to see the various buildings where the conference will take place. It turned out to be a walk that lasted 45 minutes or so and I was truly exhausted. I did not bring my cane or anything to help me walk, not realizing how long it was going to be. It was the longest (time and distance) walk since July 14 and it took the wind out of me. After lunch I sat with my heat-pack on my shoulder and a cold pack on my ankle and managed to hang in there till about 4 PM. I left before the meeting was officially over, in the middle of a series of motions from the president. I arrived home about 5 PM.

I found the flowers that had expired on the birthday chair much as I had expected. I could see how festive it had looked before. All the animals were still standing on the table, looking a bit tired and lonely. I was lonely too since everyone had gone shopping for the evening meal (tacos). I did my hot/cold water foot soak routine and collapsed in my comfy chair. Sita’s friends Brian and Tim came for dinner but not after Tim had gotten stuck on the beach at the exact place where Annette’s taxidriver had gotten stuck a couple of weeks ago. We had a lovely dinner together and discovered that when Axel eats spicy food now only the left side of his forehead sweats. The part on the right side of the scar is totally dry. This is funny because his right side feels ‘woody’ and you’d expect that part to be on fire.

Bedtime (for me) was early and sleep came quickly.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Today is Sita’s twenty-seventh birthday (and also Morsi’s) and I am about 45 miles away from her. We have a family tradition that I cannot partake in and I am counting on Axel to do the honors: the chair of the birthday girl will be decorated with flowers. I suspect it will be covered with violet asters, yellow and orange calendula, pink and dark red snap dragons, a lonely white phlox, the daisy-like feverfew and red and orange nasturtiums. At this late time in the season there is still so much in bloom in our garden. And as for the edibles, since the frost has not yet come, we are still harvesting green beans, tomatoes, tomatilloes, Swiss chard and New Zealand spinach. These would look nice on the chair as well, I think.

In my thoughts I am up in the wet garden with my shears; and then inside, armed with the scotch tape, trying to attach the reluctant wet flowers to the wooden spindles of the chair. This part of the tradition came from my childhood. The other part developed somewhere along the way when the girls were still little: a collection of little animal tchochkes are collected from everywhere in the house and arranged around the breakfast plate, all looking in the direction of the birthday girl and sitting on and around the presents laid out on the table.

I am sad to miss this because next year I am sure she will be in her own house or apartment some ways off. On the other hand, given the time she usually gets up, the flowers might all be dead by the time she shows up, having lost their stamina, blooming inside scotchtape since 6 AM.

The imagination is a wonderful thing, and just writing this and seeing the scene in my mind makes me feel good and part of the event this morning. This is how we can be in many places at once.

Yesterday was wonderful and exhausting (again). We met from 8:30 till 6:00 with a few short breaks. We slugged through a long agenda; some very exciting, some tedious. At times I tuned out when the talk was about things that relate too much to the US world of academic management education. But most is very relevant to what we do out in the developing world. I wish I could get some of our partners that are academic institutions in Kenya and Tanzania hooked into this network of wonderful people and terrific resources. I have tried but not been very successful. I have new energy that is partially fueled by my roommate Maria who is from New Zealand and whose life is dedicated to re-balance the way native people are considered in the decision making processes of the dominant populations.

I have moved a good length out of my cocoon yesterday and will be out there for another full day. It has been easy because everyone is so very caring, careful, concerned and solicitous. I did OK, even though we were all sitting on a non-ergonomically designed chairs. I held a heat pack to my shoulder, sometimes wound it around my foot and alternated the heat now and then with an icepack that I will probably forget tonight and leave in the freezer of the kitchenette adjacent to our meeting room. At one point I squeezed myself down on the floor between occupied and unoccupied chairs with a rolled-up blanket under my spine, as directed by our masseuse/yoga teacher Abi. It was very effective. I should do this more often.

At the end of our day of deliberations we walked back to our sleeping quarters; I chose to join the walkers rather than being driven; but now I walk slowly, at the end of the pack instead of in my usual forerunner position. Maria hobbles a bit too. She also broke her foot some time ago. Later, we drove to a wonderful restaurant in Natick (Naked Fish) for a delicious dinner and great conversation that covered the entire range of human experience. I had myself driven in my own car. It is nice when there are drivers around. Like two old ladies, Maria and I have swollen feet by the time we get back to our rooms.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Today is the 1st day that I have woken up without Sylvia beside me. Very odd and unsettling. Not from the point of feeling helpless or any of the earlier things associated with rehabilitation but with wondering how she’s going to do in the bigger world where rehab rules don’t play so well, where timeliness is an assumption, speed necessary, exhaustion isn’t condoned and full mobility is expected.

She’s gone to a 3 day meeting of the Organizational Behaviour Teaching Conference (OBTC) at Babson College in Wellesley. It’s a group of people who she loves to be with and with whom she hits some of her highest creative peaks. The group has always been concerned with addressing one of the most basic of humanistic questions – how do you use education to lead people to be more inquiring and to think more fully about advocacy. In the OBTC case this takes place in schools of management – business schools – where inquiry and advocacy are perhaps more important – and arguably in less supply – because of the centrality of commerce in shaping the direction of our nation. And, did I say that getting to inquiry and advocacy is often incredibly fun with this group? Makes going back to school – or teaching in one – seem a great idea.

My energy level seems to be getting better as I’m getting better at attacking the really stiff muscles and restrengthening my legs and back. I can’t say enough for the complementary effects of massage – and Abi Axelrod – to physical therapy and exercise. I’m feeling more whole. Having people talk about and manipulate one body part as if the rest were non-existent isn’t much to make you feel whole.

Where’s the energy going?

Into therapy, mental and physical and spiritual; lots into conversations with good friends, and walking. And I’ve been producing a set of greeting cards for Chuck and Anzie and lacking good business sense, I’ve been modifying them, revising things I did at the outset of my graphic design program and trying some new things. The focus is great – and welcome and unusual – but the speed of delivery is probably not what it ought to be. Well, another instance of the rehab world colliding with th real world. I hope Sylvia is having a soft collision.

And Sita’s birthday is tomorrow and Tessa is climbing further into the graphic design world in Canada. We are so blessed.


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