Motivation
Comments
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Spring: Welcome back and glad to hear you are doing so well!!!!!! You are so right that it is amazing how our bodies heal themselves and before you know it, you will be back to your old routines. Take care.
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Rach - Beverly aka Springtime!! You said it right, that's how I feel about coming to this site. And LOL about the cookies, they were pink, they were chocolate, I ate 'em! LOLLOL!
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Rachel,
The nurses call you weekly to check in. To remove drains, my husband was shown how to do it, and snipped a stich and easily did it last time. I also had a nurse friend and another doctor as back up in case he could not manage to do it. I've heard if something goes wrong, like a part that won't heal, they fly you back and put you up, at their expense, and deal with it. I think this is very uncommon though...
spring.
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Well Ladies,
As i was browsing through the posts I came across one about 'fitday.com' so i checked it out today. I think it's pretty helpful in terms of staying on track and being accountable for everything I eat and do. If you haven't checked it out, I recommend it. Thanks to the wonderful lady who offered that advice many posts back (sorry, i can't remember which one of you it was!)
LittleFlower
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Helloooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
How is everybody doing?????? Sorry I have been MIA...life has been a whirlwind! Don't even know where to start...moved daughter to college and missing her terribly! Son started his second year as a commuter, started my fall sessions of Zumba...still teaching 6 days a week and have 36 students in my Tuesday/Thursday classes, Arbonne has never been better and I'm helping new people get started, I've been freezing the veggies from the garden and loving having all my organic veggies to eat! Had my check-up with the onc last week...markers came back normal and they are amazed at how healthy I am! LOL Still working with Team Survivor and trying to build that. Waiting to hear if Oprah or GMA picks up our story.......blah, blah, blah!
Just living and loving life!I need to go back and catch up with all of you!!!!!!!! I'm sure you are all doing FABULOUS!!!!!
Make it a great day!!!!
Lisa
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Good to hear from our energizer bunny.We are all hanging in there,or healing but all the while still moving.Love to you all.
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Nice to hear from you Lisa!
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Wow Spring...you've been through a lot since I've been here! Just scrolling through the posts and trying to catch up! I'm glad you are doing well!!!!!!! I know you will bounce back quickly because you were taking such good care of yourself!!!!!! Sending healing vibes your way!
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Hi Lisa!
{{hug}}
Val
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OK, is there some French froggy stuff going on on this thread I missed???? Vivre (means "to live" in French), Valjean (like the hero of Les Mis), Goudon (OK I started that one).... just checkin
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Spring, nice to see you back, showers feel so good, and take so much out of you right after surgery.
Kari, hope you're feeling better. I had TE and implants, so between Spring and I you'll get a lot of options if you want to know more.
Enjoying getting out and running through these last gasps of nice weather. Hope everyone is having a good day
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Glad to see everyone has surfaced. Lisa great to see you are still going, Spring - don't push yourself too fast. Helena - I was walking upstairs to lock up the Inn last night and my shoes started squeaking. Had to think of you and started laughing. Anim - if you take the wiehgt off slow then chances of it staying off is a whole lot better. When I start to get hungry I drink a glass of water. Fills me up if nothing else. Overcast day and actually chilly. One walk in and one more to go before I go to work. Have a great day! Joy
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Lisa, so happy to see you again! I know you are missing your DD!! Glad things are going so well for you!
Feeling better today-thanks kmmd!! Stopped at Whole Foods on way home from work yesterday and bought the Vit C and the zinc, maybe that helped?! Went to bed early. Off work today and tomorrow, so after checking this thread at 7:30, i changed and hopped on my bike, rode to the Club and it was hoppin! 4 ellipticals, all busy, had to wait only 5 min. Hopped on and did an interval program that kicked my butt! My heart was pumpin!! 2 miles later I hopped off and rode home, showered and took my laxatives, so far so good! The sigmoid is at 8:50 tomorrow morning...shoot I'm hungry!! DH will be home this afternoon! So happy! Even did an hour of ironing....thought I better take advantage of being home from work and do something! But now I think I'm gonna veg out and watch taped shows all day!! heehee Took French in school, love that language!!
Joy, funny about the shoe and thinking of Helena, HI Helena!!
Spring, do you go home soon?
Make it a fabulous day! missed you Lisa!
Kindness in words creates confidence.
Kindness in thinking creates profundity.
Kindness in giving creates love.
~Lao-Tse -
OK reporting in.... DH and I walked into the French Quarter, had biegnets at Cafe Du Monde, and walked back. DH thinks ~ 4 miles. This is very slow walking! so slow, DH keeps walking ahead of me!!! Finally, I started holding his hand so he would slow down! But feels good to move.
I once read that to heal, you need (1) sleep, (2) good food, and (3) to move around.
spring.
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Wonderful that you get to hang out in NOLA! Beignets at Cafe Du Monde... I can almost still lick the powdered sugar from my lips... (and see the fat on my hips!
) Have some Oysters!!!! I am guessing you can't have alcohol, now that's rough in NOLA....!!!!
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Spring, you are doing it girl! You are a healing machine!!!! Pretty soon Richard will be holding your hand to slow you down!! LOL!! enjoy!
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Just saying hello and wishing everyone well. Spring you are nothing short of amazing.
Mandy
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Hi, Lisa! Glad to hear from you and to know for sure it's just been busy-ness keeping you away. Hope your daughter is adjusting well to college.
And Spring, you truly are amazing! I think I was barely walking from my bedroom to the kitchen this far out from surgery. I can hardly fathom that you walked 4 miles, even slowly! That's insane!!!
Good luck tomorrow, Kari! I'll be thinking about you!
Rachel ~ Love the nod to things French. I've also got some strong French connections, although never mentioned here -- like a brother who teaches at the American University in Paris, and a French SIL. Does your Dad live there?
Has anyone else noticed how much earlier it gets dark now? I tried walking last night, but it got dark way sooner than I'd anticipated -- so dark that I had to turn around and come home. And this a.m., I had to cut my walk short to go and get some bloodwork. I'm interested to see if all this exercise has made a dent in the bad numbers I was racking up after chemo & rads. Will let you know. Deanna
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Sobx - thinking of me and laughing - my wish come true...LOL
So great to read all of your posts. The daylight is increasing over here .. it is finally spring here and I even got up for a walk this morning at 5.45am. I only run every 2nd day and even surprised myself by this effort. Thanx team BCO.
Kari - I know this is the point of your quotes but gees they sure do hit the mark - they make my heart move. thank you.
big hugs
Helena
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Well it is Sept. 11th again. That day of days. As all the pain and heartbreak of that day comes flooding back to us (my heart is racing and that pit is back in my stomach) we must look to the heroes of that day for our inspiration and motivation. We must remember those brave firefighters and policemen who ran INTO those burning buildings and we must remember those brave Americans on flight 93 who were not going down without a fight. We are all survivors here and as survivors we know how precious life is. So as we remember what we lost in 2001 and the battle we have all fought with this disease, we should go out today and remember to celebrate life. Today, more than any day, we need to just thank God for this beautiful world and vow to make the most of every minute we are blessed to live in it. Time for me to get out the Beamer and take a long ride. In the words of Todd Beamer- "Let's Roll!"
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Vivre--well said. I have been thinking about it this morning also--especially Rachel as I know you are 'at the scene' being in NYC. Hug your loved ones today and I know we all appreciate that we are still here.
Spring--don't push it lady! That's really far to walk. Enjoy NOLA though--loved the image of Cafe du Monde and the beignets!!!
DH and I are off to the Best Buddies event at Hearst Castle. Such a great event--a benefit bike ride to support the global organization which pairs people (like Big Brother/Sister relationship) with intellectually challenged people. The premise is to get challenged people out in the world as friends, co-workers, etc. Will be sad for Maria and Anthony Shriver, who run the event, with the recent loss of their mom who did so much with Special Olympics. But it's such an inspiring and fun event. http://www.bestbuddieschallenge.org/
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I made it thru the procedure and no signs of 'c'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Big sigh of relief I must admit. Hopefully the issues I am having will resolve themselves. He said in his opinion I will beat this!! YAY!!!!! so happy!
Deanna, the same thing has happened to me out on walks in the evening, its getting darker earlier!! But as its bad for us its great for Helena! YAY for Spring for you girl! Keep us posted on your blood counts, I will be interested in the numbers. Neat about your brother teaching in Paris and your french SIL!! Have you ever been to Paris?
Vivre, well said. DH and I turned on the TV today and watched all the live remembrances, so sad. I hope nobody ever forgets. I thought of you yesterday, we turned on Oprah, her season opener (I don't think you like her very much!), anyway, they had closed down the streets of Chicago and were doing a live show and they had the biggest mob audience doing a choreographed dance to the Black Eyed Peas. I LOVE the Black Eyed Peas! Always get up and shake it to them! Used to dance with my DD's all the time, and I miss that.
Allie, that event sounds wonderful, enjoy!!
Spring is flying home today, safe travels our dear sister!
Helena, look at you all motivated getting up at 5:45 and walking!! YEAH!!!! I love the quotes too! heehee they make me think.
On the heels of Vivre's post:
Let him who would enjoy a good future waste none of his present.
~Roger Babson -
yes, indeed, at the scene. I was with the FDNY today, as I am on every 9/11, and lucky to be there. I wanted to much to get home to tell you about it, and I was over on the Hair thread because we're working on some hair stuff and I was on Bottle O Tamoxifen because that is where i pretty much live on BCO, but I thought motivation was the right place to post about today, and sure enough, here you are posting about 9/11.
So I hope I remember all I meant to tell you.
I work with the firefighters and the troops since 2002 with the FDNY firefighters and with the troops since 2003 when we invaded Iraq. What I do is a combination of letting them know people didn't forget them then or now, and making a connection between the firefighters and the troops. I was selling t shirts for the FDNY firefighters when there was a fire in my own home, I have been dispossessed since 2003. I had a bunch of t shirt stock in the house, and the t shirts got soot on them from the fire- so I couldn't sell them as "new". Who would want these washed t shirts? The troops. So I found some troops in "the sandbox" (which is a bit of a feat in itself, because they don't exactly share that information) but there were of course hundreds of thousands of troops and I had only a couple hundred t shirts. So how many to send? How awful if someone wanted a t shirt and didn't get one, how could I say no? And how could I possibly send 200thousand t shirts? Then it became obvious, I should send 343, the same number of firefighters we lost. So I called up the firehouse and ordered the remaining shirts to make it 343. When I went to pick up the shirts, the firefighters had also collected their own shirts, from their own backs and handed them to me in big bags to send to the troops. That's the firefighters.
So then the t shirts make it to the troops, and I told the troops that whenever they doubted the support at home they should hold on to one of these t shirts and remember there are 8000 FDNY firefighters who support them every second of every day. I got back from the troops many things for the firefighters, like pictures of 343 troops assembled in formation at Baghdad Airport in uniform, and then pictures of them all stripping to reveal their FDNY t shirts underneath, and then standing again in formation in those blue shirts on the tarmac at Baghdad Airport... That's the troops
And so it went, back and forth, so many stories, of the troops and the firefighters exchanging t shirts, and then troops coming home and visiting NYC and coming to the firehouses, and of course MANY firefighters who ARE troops as well... and 8 years later the guys know me at the firehouses, I'm "The T shirt lady". Over the years I had to switch from tshirts to popcorn, due to bureaucracy and bullshit... can't sell without a sales license, can't buy the FDNY logo due to copyright issues, can't sell the funny firehouse t shirts because someone complained about them being politically incorrect... and I am currently in a bind because I decided to send Cookies for Kids Cancer instead of popcorn this year, but the CFKC gal is a little too busy to work on my shipment because she has a 5 year old undergoing chemo and RADS...
And lots and lots of firefighters having cancer. 9/11 is another "gift that keeps on giving", like SFBC.
I guess what made this year different for me is that as a cancer patient, I could relate to the firefighters on a whole new level. One of the guys having a stent put in for his kidney was going for nuclear medicine and I told him what it was like for BC lumpectomy and about the blue pee and we were all laughing and the guys were telling those kind of medical stories and we were all laughing the way we do here so much that when someone called me away the guy telling the story actually said no, let her stay I want her to hear this...
And I was telling one of my closest firefighter friends (he's leaving at 4am tomorrow to escort a steel beam from the WTC to Fort Benning GA with a team of 9/11 first responders) about the adventures in chemo hair and about the experience of lbrewer and chelev, how hard it is to even walk in the door of a salon for hair care and he stated it plainly- as firefighters do- that people just don't care enough to help cancer patients. He's got several family members with different cancers and he himself has a stomach and skin cancer. He was one of the first to step up when I told my closest friends and family about my BC. That was when he revealed that he also had cancers, and since it was so new to me I asked him how he knew the cancer was gone. He didn't answer me then and of course now I know why. So we were talking about all of that... and laughing like we do here about it. I refuse to give cancer any credit for anything good, but I will admit that it does give me entree into areas with people who had great suffering where I can now speak to them on a more human level, I can actually be helpful now where before I could only babble.
And there is my regret that because of SFBC I can't do as much as I used to for the troops and the firefighters. I have been MIA from them both for the first 6 months of this year since DX, surgery, RADS blah blah blah.. that other thing we all have to deal with, having to cut back on our commitments. SFBC.
It is not a bad thing to be in such fine company and be able to relate to them more on their level.
I got some walking in, because the two firehouses I visited are about a half mile apart. I started at one (missed the "first bell" when the first plane hit the first tower but made it for the second bell, when the second plane hit, and then back again for the 3rd bell, when the first tower fell) then walked to the other for the next bell, then back again for the 3rd bell and then over to Mass nearby, then back to both houses and home after Mass, so that's about 3 miles I think if you cobble them together.
I was thinking about you folks here on BCO and all my SFBC friends often, during Mass, looking around the room etc... and you know it's raining... and as I was walking through the church the wet rubber on my shoes was squeaking on the floor... and I thought of Helena
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To be remembered on such a day and amongst such esteemed company just makes me all emotional Rach. And talk about motivation .. most of us are fighting the fight to keep us healthy and sane and you are out there doing so much for others as well. Bless you.
big hugs
Helena
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QOTD- o/ Rubber Duckie You're the One, When I am with you I have so much fun, Rubber Duckie I'm awfully fond of you.....
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Rachel ~ You are quite a gal with all that you do. Please remind the FDNY that even people in a small town in MI remember them & those who perished that fateful day. I will never forget.
And, as for the troops, I am a Navybrat; I am forever grateful for each & every soldier & I thank them for their service (I have even said so to soldiers that I don't even know as I have passed them in a store.) I have been overseas & I remember how hard it is to be away from family.
As for my username, Valjean, my name is Valerie Jean & so I often use Valjean. Vivre told me right after I joined BCO about the charactor in Les Mis & the story, but I still have yet to read the book. I am just starting the final book in the Harry Potter series & then plan to read the Twilight series & will then get Les Mis.
Kari ~ Wonderful news on your sigmoid! My last colonoscopy was polyp free, such a relief!
{{hugs}}
Valerie Jean
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Rachel: What a beautiful person you are to care so much and to do so much. Your post about your 9/11 experience brought tears to my eyes. I think most of us wish we could do more for the troops and the firefighters. But you are actually doing something.
Hugs to all.
Mandy
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Rachel, Thankyou ThankyouThankyou! I really needed to hear that. I was feeling particularly blue yesterday because I thougt people forgot what the day meant. It was business as usual around here. I know it is impossible for NewYorkers to forget, but none of us can ever forget. I know there are many in other parts of the country who have just gone on with life, but Sept 11th still hits me hard. Though I was a thousand miles away from ground zero and I did not lose anyone personally that day, it hit me hard because I knew that America would never be the same again. I went into an downward emotional spiral in 2001 that I believe contributed to my cancer. If I live to be 100 I will never be able to get though this day without a good cry. As I said, I was so upset yesterday, because the media seemed to be pretending it was just another day. When the president declared it a day of service I was furious. Yes, it is always great to serve and you have done that Rachel, but why not make another day, a day of service. Sept 11th should always be a day of memorials, period!
I wish I had been with you to walk between those firehouses. I am so proud to be the mother of a fireman. The firemen who ran into those buildings, the firemen who worked tirelessly at ground zero, at the peril of their own health, and those brave Americans who would not allow a bunch of terrorists to take over their plane and fought to the end are the kind of heroes that we must remember. We must continue to tell their stories. We must continue to listen to what their actions can tell us. AND we need to hear stories like yours Rachel. We need to hear all of this on Sept 11th, and we need to remember how we all came together on that day 8 years ago with a will to rebuild America. Because it seems to me the politicians have forgotten. It is a travesty that those towers have not been rebuilt! It is a travesty that millions and millions have been sent to New Orleans and it is still not cleaned up. Where is all this money going? Why do they continue to spend our money without asking us?
We need true leadership in this country. We need someone to listen to us and do the right thing for this country, not change it into something we no longer recognize. We need to get rid of all the bureaucrats and special interests in Washington who are there for themselves and get our country back to a place where we all still can dream the America dream. This is not about one party or one president. It is about the future of one Nation. Today, thousands will march on Washington to try to take our country back. Will anyone listen? Will anyone take the people seriously? Will the politcians finally wake up and do what is right for the people? If they do not, the terrorists will have beaten us, just as they said they would. They know they cannot beat the US military, but they can beat us from within. They are winning this fight. We can never forget what happened on Sept. 11th. We must honor the brave Americans who gave their lives on that day for others, and who continue to fight for us, by fighting for them, and remembering them, just as Rachel has done. We all must fight to reunite this country, even as our politicians and our media seek to tear us apart. We are true survivors here. We know how to fight for our lives, and we need to fight for our children and grandchildren too, before America is lost forever. I hope that you all do not think I am being melodramatic but yesterday was a hard day for me to endure. I get furious that people want to forget and move on. We must NEVER EVER forget! Hooray for you Rachel for honoring our firefighters and our sevicemen and women. The next time you see one of those guys, please tell them I said thanks. If any of you have a loved one in the military, please tell them I said thanks. And I hope everyone will get out today, go to one of the rallies around this country and fight for our country, in the name of all the Americans who have fought to make us, and the rest of the world, a land of the free.
Let's Roll!!!
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:::putting on my Troop Shirts hat for a moment::::
Valjean- I have had the privilege during these 8 years to speak to those who serve from all over the country (and sometimes from all over the world, with the coalition forces in the "sandbox"), from little towns in states that have no "air time" (there's an industry joke about what to call the space between NY and LA... the answer is "the audience") who answered the call and serve their country in the name of 9/11- for us. Sometimes they tell me how "some day" they'd like to visit NYC. It blows my mind continually how these people would care so much about us in NYC,leaving their safe homes for the dangers in the deserts and elsewhere, without even the promise of ever being able to come here and enjoy the city. And it drives me crazy that they have the impression that New Yorkers don't care about them. (this also from the media) So I make sure that whenever the troops are coming in, I take them around to the sights, into the firehouses. The troops have to know that they can walk into any firehouse in NYC and be given a hero's welcome. Yesterday there was a group of Special Forces at the Mass. I went to them to thank them and welcome them. Turns out one of their unit is the son of a firefighter who died at the WTC on 9/11. Know that all service members can cut the line for the Statue of Liberty (and lemme tell ya its a freakin loooong line) the don't have to pay to go to the top of the Empire State Building, and oh, here's a letter that sums it up from Fleet Week in 2007:
May 30, 2007 -- On behalf of the 600 Marines and 3,000 sailors who have been in New York for Fleet Week, thank you ("Welcome to the Fleet," Editorial, May 26).
The outpouring of hospitality, generosity and well-wishes has been overwhelming.
The Marines and sailors have unanimously reported that New Yorkers treated them to more food and drinks than they could consume and felt welcomed and appreciated in the Big Apple.
When calculating their travel time in the city, the Marines and sailors found themselves accounting for all the people who would stop them to shake their hands, pat them on the back and say, "Thank you."
This reception particularly means a lot to the Marines, who have just returned from Iraq and Guantanamo Bay.
Now we are on our way home, where we will continue our training for the missions that lie ahead.
This has been a great break for us all.
As we say, "Bravo Zulu" - New Yorkers are "good to go." No city rolls out the red carpet like New York.
*Col. Peter Petronzio*
USMC
Commanding Officer
24th Marine Expeditionary Unit
*Capt. Michael Hawley*
USN
Captain, USS Wasp
So I say to you what i say to the troops- You are Us and We are You and we love you
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:::still wearing Troop Shirts hat:::
Mandy- that was one of the many horrors of 9/11, not being able to do anything to help. I was 1 mile from the WTC, as I am right now. I went directly to the hospital across the street to donate blood- and found a crowd there with the same idea, being barred from the entrance by 3 cops. First thought was to rush the doors past the cops, in a mob mentality, but then we all sort of group-realized there was no point, the cops would not be stopping us if there was a need. But there were no patients, no survivors. They did not need our blood. Doctors and nurses were lined up outside the hospitals to volunteer, but there was nothing they could do, no one to treat. They needed ironworkers, skills sets I don't have. We also had no communications set up, so like when I found out they had needed saline solution to wash the dust out of their eyes and socks for the search dogs' feet, it was already too late. I HAD THOSE THINGS. I COULD HAVE GIVEN THEM. I tried to volunteer at a firehouse, to cook, maybe- but the greatest chefs from the city were already there to cook. I know people from New Jersey who found ways to sneak into our city under siege and then faked their credentials to get down to Ground Zero to help digging, carry bags, whatever they could do.
And when it comes to the troops, i am always trying to explain to them that civilians have no way to demonstrate support. If you want to protest, there's always a ready sign and a free breakfast and plenty of TV cameras, but where does one go to demonstrate support? You couldn't even send a package "to any soldier" for this war because of the possibility of sabotage. But I am really sneaky... I used my talents and my access to do whatever I could, and I can finally say after 8 years that yeah, maybe I did help a couple firefighters and a couple troops, and that feels incredibly good. I feel incredibly fortunate for having the opportunity to do something. It will always pale in comparison to those who run into burning buildings or sacrifice their safety to protect mine, but selfishly, it helps me to do what little I can.
And more than that, knowing that you feel this way helps me, and helps the troops and the firefighters, and you can be sure I will let them know. I will print these posts and bring them to the firehouses and the troops- and let them know that everyone still cares, and everyone remembers.
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