We attended our first meeting as part of the Tecoman congregation today.
The congo is very very welcoming and straight away we felt quite comfortable.
I had a part on the meeting which was pretty funny since we have only been here for 3 days, he he.
After the meeting we practiced the songs for the Memorial which we thought was a wonderful idea. That way the public wont think we are a bunch of freaks that cant sing our own songs.
Here is Mexico and also down in Belize they have not started using the new song book so we had to hunt down an old one for us to use today, that was like a blast from the past! The Memorial is the first time they will be using the new book making the practice sessions even more valuable.
The congo obviously loves to sing and they do so with great gusto. Its wonderful to hear. Oh and the music is awesome loud so it drowns out the bad singing quite well, but we were all pretty good, if I do say so myself!
After the meeting Jasa and I jumped on the "moto" this is what they call a four wheeler motorbike and wizzed off to do some calls. We had a great 3 hours or so inviting people to the memorial. Dave and Dustin went on the bikes so all round I think the girls had the better deal!
There are some parts of the town where you have to go super fast as you are travelling under a bunch of trees that have hundreds if not thousands of big black birds roosting in them. Now try hard to imagine this: thousands of bird all lined up with their butts aimed at any unknowing passerbyer (just made that word up), you approach at speed and they all start to shoot you with poo. This is where the speed comes into it. Hopefully you are going so fast that the birds a) dont get time to aim and b) cant hit you cos you are a blur. We of course are in the open air on either a pushbike or a moto so its even funnier, well for the birds that is! he he
Hmmm not much else happened today we were out till late and we have an early morning as there is a deep clean on the hall to get it all spick and span for the Memorial. So I must away and get some beauty sleep!
Friday, March 26, 2010
Thursday, March 25, 2010
FUNNY THINGS WE LEARN
Well today was another good day.
Dave went on a couple of studies with Dustin and they did some male bonding while Jasa and I bonded too.
They made us a wonderful dinner of pizza type bread with stuffed tomatoes on the side, mmmmmmm very nice!
Extreme Uno came out and they were taught the madness so now we have them hooked too, awesome.
Today we learnt some very important hand gestures, yes you did read that right! Lets see if I can explain.
If a car stops to let you cross the road in NZ we would raise our hand flat palm facing out and say thanks, right, well here, you raise your hand with the palm facing you and mouth thank you. Hmmmm sounds easy right, well not when you have to suddenly apply the rule. Try it and see what I mean. The trouble is that if you do it our way with the palm out then you are being very rude and basically saying you, punk why did you do that, fool! Not a good one to muck up!
In NZ to describe the height of something ie a child generally we would hold out our hand palm down to the side of us and raise it according to the height required. Not here. If you do that you are always thought to be describing the height of an animal!! hmm yes an animal. So to describe a childs height correctly you make a fist with the palm facing up and point your index finger skyward. Then place your pointing finger fist at the required height of the child. This too feels very wrong and to be honest, kinda rude. Try it and see what I mean.
So thats todays lesson for you.
I also have to say that today the toilet smell in the air has gone and all you can smell is wonderful food aromas, much better!
Dave went on a couple of studies with Dustin and they did some male bonding while Jasa and I bonded too.
They made us a wonderful dinner of pizza type bread with stuffed tomatoes on the side, mmmmmmm very nice!
Extreme Uno came out and they were taught the madness so now we have them hooked too, awesome.
Today we learnt some very important hand gestures, yes you did read that right! Lets see if I can explain.
If a car stops to let you cross the road in NZ we would raise our hand flat palm facing out and say thanks, right, well here, you raise your hand with the palm facing you and mouth thank you. Hmmmm sounds easy right, well not when you have to suddenly apply the rule. Try it and see what I mean. The trouble is that if you do it our way with the palm out then you are being very rude and basically saying you, punk why did you do that, fool! Not a good one to muck up!
In NZ to describe the height of something ie a child generally we would hold out our hand palm down to the side of us and raise it according to the height required. Not here. If you do that you are always thought to be describing the height of an animal!! hmm yes an animal. So to describe a childs height correctly you make a fist with the palm facing up and point your index finger skyward. Then place your pointing finger fist at the required height of the child. This too feels very wrong and to be honest, kinda rude. Try it and see what I mean.
So thats todays lesson for you.
I also have to say that today the toilet smell in the air has gone and all you can smell is wonderful food aromas, much better!
WHATS TECOMAN LIKE
So many of you are probably wondering what its like here. Fair enough I say so here goes an attempt at describing it.
Right now it is not hot, warm but not hot, not yet anyway. So its quite nice really.
Tecoman is flat but is surrounded by mountains (active and inactive volcanoes actually) very pretty. It is the Lemon (lime really) capitol of Mexico.
There is a strange smell that linges in your nostrils, is it onions from the street vendor or is it toilet, or maybe its both, yes thats it. Dont get me wrong its not putrid at all and not competely stinky but it does have that faint, hmmm what is that odor, about it.
The sounds surrounding our current rental are, cars with no mufflers, trucks with no mufflers, motorbikes with no mufflers. The odd dog barking, the odd siren as a emergency or police vehicle zooms by. The squeak of suspension from the cars as they bounce through the holes on the road. Music full of drums and rhythm, some loud, some soft. Roosters, yes roosters. People chatting loudly while enjoying life in the slow lane. Oh and the little green man that tells you when to cross the road, he beeps 10 times slowly and then 4 times fast when you are running out of time. (this is what you do when you are awake all night) Now imagine that all happening at once, right up to about 1am! All I will say is this rental is great, but we cant wait to get to a quieter one!
Now the roads, yes the roads.......... so far we have not seen a single dirt road! Bonus right, WRONG the roads here are paved, well sort of. Some are paved as we know it in NZ others are paved Mexican style. This means that years and years and years ago they put large and small stones on the roads and poured sand around them to hold them in place. Over the years the edges have been rubbed smooth so you wont cut your foot but it makes for an extremely bumpy ride. Not sure how this will go on a push bike but in a car, well its shakes you and the car to pieces so much so that stuff falls off them. This also makes it very hard to walk as they are so uneven. That will take a bit of getting used to I think.
About 10kms away is a massive surf beach with huge waves and a rip to go with it. Not so good for swimming they say but the surfers all come here, as it has a great reputation.
There are little street vendors everywhere, on each corner almost, the smells are amazing. You look for the one with the most locals and you know it will be safe to eat from.
The housing here is pretty rough really. The house really are right ontop of each other, they are all joined together and are that way for the whole block. I havent seen one yet that is a stand alone one. Oh I lie, out in the new area there are some massive houses being built and they do stand alone.
It is very very common to see elderly ones sitting out on the street just watching the world go by. They sit in the shade of a tree with a dog near by normally, both of them sleeping enjoying the cool breeze at this time of year (make the most of that its nearly over).
There are some strange stores which I really cant describe, you have to see them to believe them. Im going to try and get some pictures of them so you can sort of see what I mean.
The people in general are wonderful. Very friendly and kind, more than happy to talk and they love the fact that you are trying to speak their language. Very welcoming
Overall I think there are many many things that are going to take some time to get used to. But these are not break it things at all. Time and an open mind are just required.
Back out witnessing tomorrow, which will no doubt yeld some more stories for you. Meeting on Friday at 3pm as there are 5 congos that use the one hall! (mum and Robin, one of them is a sign lang congo!) We are very much looking forward to our first meeting and getting to meet the friends we just havnt met yet. Oh yeah I already have a part, whats with that! The day we got here I was given it, now thats a need!
So folks I hope that sort of gives you an idea of what the towns like, it might sound worse than it is, I havnt decided that yet! he he he
Post ya later!
Right now it is not hot, warm but not hot, not yet anyway. So its quite nice really.
Tecoman is flat but is surrounded by mountains (active and inactive volcanoes actually) very pretty. It is the Lemon (lime really) capitol of Mexico.
There is a strange smell that linges in your nostrils, is it onions from the street vendor or is it toilet, or maybe its both, yes thats it. Dont get me wrong its not putrid at all and not competely stinky but it does have that faint, hmmm what is that odor, about it.
The sounds surrounding our current rental are, cars with no mufflers, trucks with no mufflers, motorbikes with no mufflers. The odd dog barking, the odd siren as a emergency or police vehicle zooms by. The squeak of suspension from the cars as they bounce through the holes on the road. Music full of drums and rhythm, some loud, some soft. Roosters, yes roosters. People chatting loudly while enjoying life in the slow lane. Oh and the little green man that tells you when to cross the road, he beeps 10 times slowly and then 4 times fast when you are running out of time. (this is what you do when you are awake all night) Now imagine that all happening at once, right up to about 1am! All I will say is this rental is great, but we cant wait to get to a quieter one!
Now the roads, yes the roads.......... so far we have not seen a single dirt road! Bonus right, WRONG the roads here are paved, well sort of. Some are paved as we know it in NZ others are paved Mexican style. This means that years and years and years ago they put large and small stones on the roads and poured sand around them to hold them in place. Over the years the edges have been rubbed smooth so you wont cut your foot but it makes for an extremely bumpy ride. Not sure how this will go on a push bike but in a car, well its shakes you and the car to pieces so much so that stuff falls off them. This also makes it very hard to walk as they are so uneven. That will take a bit of getting used to I think.
About 10kms away is a massive surf beach with huge waves and a rip to go with it. Not so good for swimming they say but the surfers all come here, as it has a great reputation.
There are little street vendors everywhere, on each corner almost, the smells are amazing. You look for the one with the most locals and you know it will be safe to eat from.
The housing here is pretty rough really. The house really are right ontop of each other, they are all joined together and are that way for the whole block. I havent seen one yet that is a stand alone one. Oh I lie, out in the new area there are some massive houses being built and they do stand alone.
It is very very common to see elderly ones sitting out on the street just watching the world go by. They sit in the shade of a tree with a dog near by normally, both of them sleeping enjoying the cool breeze at this time of year (make the most of that its nearly over).
There are some strange stores which I really cant describe, you have to see them to believe them. Im going to try and get some pictures of them so you can sort of see what I mean.
The people in general are wonderful. Very friendly and kind, more than happy to talk and they love the fact that you are trying to speak their language. Very welcoming
Overall I think there are many many things that are going to take some time to get used to. But these are not break it things at all. Time and an open mind are just required.
Back out witnessing tomorrow, which will no doubt yeld some more stories for you. Meeting on Friday at 3pm as there are 5 congos that use the one hall! (mum and Robin, one of them is a sign lang congo!) We are very much looking forward to our first meeting and getting to meet the friends we just havnt met yet. Oh yeah I already have a part, whats with that! The day we got here I was given it, now thats a need!
So folks I hope that sort of gives you an idea of what the towns like, it might sound worse than it is, I havnt decided that yet! he he he
Post ya later!
FIRST DAY ON THE JOB
So today was our first full day in Tecoman. We spent most of it sleeping and trying to catch up on the 50 something hours of travel.
At 5pm we met the group and went out for the very first time!
Okay so let me explain how we do things here. First off we do door to door regardless of what language the people speak. They call this censous work. The aim is to ask each householder if there is anyone in the house or that they know of that speaks english. When you get a yes, you ask to speak to them. If you can, then you do your presentation and record all their details, ie name address etc and that is then recorded on a "map". If they are not available to speak to, then you still take their details and record them on the "map".
Next step is to return on the already censored maps and try to speak just to the english ones, the spanish are already well looked after so we dont worry about them. This basically means there might be anywhere from 2 to 6 english speaking people on a map and you only want to speak to them not everyone else as they are spanish.
So far they have only been able to censor 25% of the territory so there is a lot of work to do!
At the moment we are doing the invitation work so we are only doing the maps that have been censored. We get given a map which is not really made up of streets, its made up of addresses and names. Awesome things is that they actually have street names and numbers here!! Bad thing is that there is no rhyme or reason to the numbering system so you might go from 276 to 4 to 143 to 23 to 887 hmmm yes this makes it a little tricky, they do however keep the odds on one side and the evens on the other, thats a start.
We had a funny experience today. We went to a recorded english house and asked to speak to Juanita. They told us that she didnt actually live there and gave us hand directions on how to find her house. So we went there, nothing, so we asked the person there where she lived and they said try here, giving another address. We went there, nothing. This time we were told to go to the corner and that Juanita is the one that wears the red blouse. Okay at this point we are thinking, ooooookay does she always wear a red blouse????? So we go anyway and when we get to the corner we she a lady in a red blouse sweeping the sidewalk so we veer into the curb only to get a little closer and see that on the corner is a restaurant where all the ladies are wearing red blouses!!!!!! We all just cracked up laughing. Needless to say we never found Juanita.
Im sure there will be many weird and wonderful experiences along the way, which I will do my best to tell you about. So keep reading, you dont want to miss out on anything!
At 5pm we met the group and went out for the very first time!
Okay so let me explain how we do things here. First off we do door to door regardless of what language the people speak. They call this censous work. The aim is to ask each householder if there is anyone in the house or that they know of that speaks english. When you get a yes, you ask to speak to them. If you can, then you do your presentation and record all their details, ie name address etc and that is then recorded on a "map". If they are not available to speak to, then you still take their details and record them on the "map".
Next step is to return on the already censored maps and try to speak just to the english ones, the spanish are already well looked after so we dont worry about them. This basically means there might be anywhere from 2 to 6 english speaking people on a map and you only want to speak to them not everyone else as they are spanish.
So far they have only been able to censor 25% of the territory so there is a lot of work to do!
At the moment we are doing the invitation work so we are only doing the maps that have been censored. We get given a map which is not really made up of streets, its made up of addresses and names. Awesome things is that they actually have street names and numbers here!! Bad thing is that there is no rhyme or reason to the numbering system so you might go from 276 to 4 to 143 to 23 to 887 hmmm yes this makes it a little tricky, they do however keep the odds on one side and the evens on the other, thats a start.
We had a funny experience today. We went to a recorded english house and asked to speak to Juanita. They told us that she didnt actually live there and gave us hand directions on how to find her house. So we went there, nothing, so we asked the person there where she lived and they said try here, giving another address. We went there, nothing. This time we were told to go to the corner and that Juanita is the one that wears the red blouse. Okay at this point we are thinking, ooooookay does she always wear a red blouse????? So we go anyway and when we get to the corner we she a lady in a red blouse sweeping the sidewalk so we veer into the curb only to get a little closer and see that on the corner is a restaurant where all the ladies are wearing red blouses!!!!!! We all just cracked up laughing. Needless to say we never found Juanita.
Im sure there will be many weird and wonderful experiences along the way, which I will do my best to tell you about. So keep reading, you dont want to miss out on anything!
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
MEXICO BABY!!!!
You'll never guess where we are at the moment, well okay maybe you will.
We are in a little place called Tecoman. Its a small town on the West coast of Mexico.
After more than 50 hours of travel we arrived today (23 march) safe and sound. We flew first to LA and then on to Mexico City and from there we caught a bus to Colima and the Irbys (new additions to the family) met us there and drove us to Tecoman.
Now your probably wondering why the bus???? Well yes good question especially when I tell you that the bus trip alone was 10 hours long. The buses in Mexico are awesome. This one only has 24 seats on it and they fully recline so you can lay down, TV monitors, your own closet space, bathrooms etc. It was very quiet apart from the man that keep sleep talking loudly in Spanish, that was funny!! You also get drinks and food on the bus. Cheap too, the whole trip, 10 hours for two people cost less than $200 nzd!!!
Harold and Susan then took us for breakfast where we had our first sit down meal in Mexico. It was okay, not great though. They also took us on a little tour of Colima (40mins from Tecoman) and to Sams Club (department/supermarket store), lets just say we wont starve here, no no no. The food variety was soooooo much more than in Belize and the price, man sooooo cheap.
On arriving in Tecoman we were taken to our apartment. This belongs to another brother and his wife who have kindly offered it too us until we can find our own place. It is normally used by the CO or by visitors when they come. It has everything we need and more in it.
Now lets be honest here, when we were told from the street, this is where you will be staying, I thought, oh man your kidding, this coud be interesting. But when we went upstairs and inside we were very pleasently surprised. It is very very nice and just the perfect size. I wish we could stay here but Im sure there is something similar waiting for us.
I tried to get some sleep in the afternoon and then we met Jasa and Dustin. These guys have also been extremely helpful in our planning stages so it was fantastic to met them in person. The four of us went to dinner and had Tortas con pollo y todos los ingredientes basically a huge chicken sandwich with everything in it. Very very good!! This I think was $3.90 and I had a rice water drink which was a first but was yummy, kinda cinnamon tasting for $1!!!! yes that was an entire dinner for $5.
So why Tecoman? Short story is we met the Irbys at the Mexico International Convention and when they found out that we were heading back to NZ and were looking for somewhere else to go they grabbed the bull by the horns and said well come to Tecoman.
The congo is an english one, with only 20 pubs. They have a huge huge territory to cover but cant get around it so there are massive areas that havnt been touched. In the 25% they have done there is so much interest they cant keep up with it, thus another reason for not being able to get to the rest of the territory.
Right now it is 12:30am and there is no traffic noise like during the day but there is loud music and drums being played near by, actually it sounds like one of those marching bands only theres no marching.......and there is a guy on a skateboard outside too. There are still some cars going by but not many. I think it will be quite hard to find somewhere that is quiet so that will be interesting. There are also church bells in different churches that chime all the time.
Unlike Mexico City, Tecoman does not stink, well not yet anyway so thats a bonus for sure! There are food smells around from street vendors etc. We have seen stray dogs and cats but not on the Belizan scale which is nice too. Also looks like we might not have too much of a problem with bugs but that might just depend on where you live, will keep you posted on that one.
Next time I will describe Tecoman for you and I will see if I can put a couple of photos up for ya too. Then you can really imagine where we are.
Dont worry about our safety, we are in one of the safest towns around and in the safest state in Mexico too. All good things. If you hang with the drug lords and do dope then you are a dope and will be in danger so we will just have to stop that habit!!!! Its all about being sensible, staying with the right people and keeping your wits about you, just like anywhere.
Please please please keep in touch we would really love to hear from you all. This we hope is a permanent move so we would benefit greatly from your emails and comments on the blogs. My email address is tymccall@gmail.com so please keep in touch!!
We have a very busy time ahead of us, trying to find a house, doing the invitation work and coping with the language are just the tip of the iceberg. But we wont let it sink us, chin up and face to the wind!
We are in a little place called Tecoman. Its a small town on the West coast of Mexico.
After more than 50 hours of travel we arrived today (23 march) safe and sound. We flew first to LA and then on to Mexico City and from there we caught a bus to Colima and the Irbys (new additions to the family) met us there and drove us to Tecoman.
Now your probably wondering why the bus???? Well yes good question especially when I tell you that the bus trip alone was 10 hours long. The buses in Mexico are awesome. This one only has 24 seats on it and they fully recline so you can lay down, TV monitors, your own closet space, bathrooms etc. It was very quiet apart from the man that keep sleep talking loudly in Spanish, that was funny!! You also get drinks and food on the bus. Cheap too, the whole trip, 10 hours for two people cost less than $200 nzd!!!
Harold and Susan then took us for breakfast where we had our first sit down meal in Mexico. It was okay, not great though. They also took us on a little tour of Colima (40mins from Tecoman) and to Sams Club (department/supermarket store), lets just say we wont starve here, no no no. The food variety was soooooo much more than in Belize and the price, man sooooo cheap.
On arriving in Tecoman we were taken to our apartment. This belongs to another brother and his wife who have kindly offered it too us until we can find our own place. It is normally used by the CO or by visitors when they come. It has everything we need and more in it.
Now lets be honest here, when we were told from the street, this is where you will be staying, I thought, oh man your kidding, this coud be interesting. But when we went upstairs and inside we were very pleasently surprised. It is very very nice and just the perfect size. I wish we could stay here but Im sure there is something similar waiting for us.
I tried to get some sleep in the afternoon and then we met Jasa and Dustin. These guys have also been extremely helpful in our planning stages so it was fantastic to met them in person. The four of us went to dinner and had Tortas con pollo y todos los ingredientes basically a huge chicken sandwich with everything in it. Very very good!! This I think was $3.90 and I had a rice water drink which was a first but was yummy, kinda cinnamon tasting for $1!!!! yes that was an entire dinner for $5.
So why Tecoman? Short story is we met the Irbys at the Mexico International Convention and when they found out that we were heading back to NZ and were looking for somewhere else to go they grabbed the bull by the horns and said well come to Tecoman.
The congo is an english one, with only 20 pubs. They have a huge huge territory to cover but cant get around it so there are massive areas that havnt been touched. In the 25% they have done there is so much interest they cant keep up with it, thus another reason for not being able to get to the rest of the territory.
Right now it is 12:30am and there is no traffic noise like during the day but there is loud music and drums being played near by, actually it sounds like one of those marching bands only theres no marching.......and there is a guy on a skateboard outside too. There are still some cars going by but not many. I think it will be quite hard to find somewhere that is quiet so that will be interesting. There are also church bells in different churches that chime all the time.
Unlike Mexico City, Tecoman does not stink, well not yet anyway so thats a bonus for sure! There are food smells around from street vendors etc. We have seen stray dogs and cats but not on the Belizan scale which is nice too. Also looks like we might not have too much of a problem with bugs but that might just depend on where you live, will keep you posted on that one.
Next time I will describe Tecoman for you and I will see if I can put a couple of photos up for ya too. Then you can really imagine where we are.
Dont worry about our safety, we are in one of the safest towns around and in the safest state in Mexico too. All good things. If you hang with the drug lords and do dope then you are a dope and will be in danger so we will just have to stop that habit!!!! Its all about being sensible, staying with the right people and keeping your wits about you, just like anywhere.
Please please please keep in touch we would really love to hear from you all. This we hope is a permanent move so we would benefit greatly from your emails and comments on the blogs. My email address is tymccall@gmail.com so please keep in touch!!
We have a very busy time ahead of us, trying to find a house, doing the invitation work and coping with the language are just the tip of the iceberg. But we wont let it sink us, chin up and face to the wind!
ON THE MOVE AGAIN
Hi to everyone.
Well here I am again. Lots has happened since the last blog so heres the short version.
We came home from Belize and went to my mums house in Oamaru for a few weeks where we had time to catch up and to generally spend time together. It was great to be home and to have a real live hug from my mummy again. Imagening them is just not the same! There were many late nights and long talks had, oh the raspberries, mmmmm. Dave found a new favourtite food at Riverstone cafe, a highlight for him all round.
From there we drove back up to Hamilton, stopping for a couple of days with Daves mum and neice and a night with Rob and Judy Walker in Rotorua.
On arrival in Hamilton we stayed with Jonny and Amber Motley. Their hospitality was outstanding and we throughly enjoyed our time with them too.
While in Hams we were able to see old friends and get back into our congregation in Nawton. It was wonderful to see everyone again and to see the progress particularly of the young ones. They are all doing so well making the truth their own. Keep it guys!
Hamilton served as a base for us so we were able to go up and see family in Whangarei which was awesome and to see Daves Grandparents in Point Chev Auckland. Tina and Troy meet us for dinner and coffee a few times and we even went on a tour of the farm they are on. That was very cool. Got to meet all Troys family too, its so good to be able to put faces to names now and I can image the things they talk about now easily, very cool.
Time went very fast and before we knew it life was to take us on another adventure. Some of you may have heard, but for those that have not, we are off to Mexico to serve where the need is, exciting and scary, yes it is!
I will fill you in next time with how we came to that decision and where we will be going.
Until then, take care and keep up the fight for the faith wherever you are!!
Well here I am again. Lots has happened since the last blog so heres the short version.
We came home from Belize and went to my mums house in Oamaru for a few weeks where we had time to catch up and to generally spend time together. It was great to be home and to have a real live hug from my mummy again. Imagening them is just not the same! There were many late nights and long talks had, oh the raspberries, mmmmm. Dave found a new favourtite food at Riverstone cafe, a highlight for him all round.
From there we drove back up to Hamilton, stopping for a couple of days with Daves mum and neice and a night with Rob and Judy Walker in Rotorua.
On arrival in Hamilton we stayed with Jonny and Amber Motley. Their hospitality was outstanding and we throughly enjoyed our time with them too.
While in Hams we were able to see old friends and get back into our congregation in Nawton. It was wonderful to see everyone again and to see the progress particularly of the young ones. They are all doing so well making the truth their own. Keep it guys!
Hamilton served as a base for us so we were able to go up and see family in Whangarei which was awesome and to see Daves Grandparents in Point Chev Auckland. Tina and Troy meet us for dinner and coffee a few times and we even went on a tour of the farm they are on. That was very cool. Got to meet all Troys family too, its so good to be able to put faces to names now and I can image the things they talk about now easily, very cool.
Time went very fast and before we knew it life was to take us on another adventure. Some of you may have heard, but for those that have not, we are off to Mexico to serve where the need is, exciting and scary, yes it is!
I will fill you in next time with how we came to that decision and where we will be going.
Until then, take care and keep up the fight for the faith wherever you are!!
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