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The perks of being a pirate

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    Often when I'm out in public,
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    a child will stare at me.
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    And if the child is particularly brave,
    they'll approach me and ask:
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    "Are you a pirate?"
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    (Laughter)
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    To which I then need to respond,
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    once again,
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    "Yes."
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    (Laughter)
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    I mean, let's be honest:
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    I've got two hooks, prosthetic legs
    and a penchant for hard liquor.
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    (Laughter)
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    All I need is an eye-patch and a parrot,
    and I'm basically there.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I like being a pirate.
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    I find many advantages
    to having a disability,
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    and I'm not just talking about
    the money I save on gloves ...
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    (Laughter)
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    or the fantastically legitimate excuse
    for never having to master chopsticks.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm talking about real advantages
    I feel I've gained,
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    having gone through physical adversity.
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    When I was 19, I contracted a disease
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    that resulted in the loss
    of both my arms at the elbows,
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    both my legs below the knee,
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    and left enough scars on my face
    to elicit jealousy in Freddy Krueger.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, I may never be able
    to communicate in sign language,
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    but my increased resilience
    and general ability to problem-solve
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    has been heightened
    by being forced to think laterally
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    to overcome problems
    that most people aren't faced with.
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    One of the first lessons that I learned
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    immediately followed
    the painful and arduous task
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    of learning how to walk again,
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    but it went on to pay dividends
    for the rest of my life.
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    It happened when I attempted
    to step up a curb.
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    Now as rudimentary as this action
    sounds to most of you,
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    stepping up a curb
    is somewhat of a challenge
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    for those of us without ankle movement.
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    So I tried stepping up the curb
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    the way I'd always known how, front on,
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    for days on end,
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    with no success,
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    until it became obvious
    that the time and effort
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    I was investing into this endeavor
    was clearly disproportionate
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    to the benefit of its outcome.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, I decided to inspect the problem
    from a different angle.
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    If I couldn't use an ankle joint
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    to achieve the range of motion
    that I required to mount the curb,
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    I would have to use a different joint,
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    like my hip.
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    So I turned my body
    perpendicular to the curb
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    and placed my foot up sideways,
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    and I was able to step up immediately.
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    Within five minutes,
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    no staircase was safe from my advances.
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    (Laughter)
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    That very day, I climbed
    a staircase of three flights,
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    which I was quite impressed with as well,
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    except I realized that I didn't know
    how to get back down again.
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    (Laughter)
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    That was a long weekend.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, in my past life
    as an able-bodied person,
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    I'd been a guitarist.
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    I was alright as a player,
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    but I'd never really taken it further.
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    I'd never really started a band
    or played live all that much.
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    Nonetheless, music
    was a great passion of mine,
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    and when I lost my arms,
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    the idea that it may no longer
    be a part of my life
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    critically challenged
    my will to keep living.
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    However, the thought that emerged
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    immediately after being
    discharged from hospital was:
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    "If Ray Charles can play the piano
    while blind as a bat,
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    let's get to work on a solution
    for this guitar problem."
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    So, consulting with an engineer,
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    I designed a slide system
    that would hook into my left hook,
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    and I devised another pick-holder system
    that would clip into my right hook.
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    Now, if this worked,
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    I would be able to play the guitar
    open tuned on my lap, like a slide.
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    So after weeks of testing and alterations,
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    I finally had the accessories back
    to play the guitar again,
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    and I was right back where I was
    before losing my hands --
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    being issued with noise complaints
    from my neighbors, obviously.
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    (Laughter)
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    But this time, I took it further.
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    I started a band with my friends.
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    We wrote songs and recorded them.
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    We even played gigs to real people.
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    Not as many as this.
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    (Laughter)
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    But even though it was a just a tiny step,
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    it was a giant leap from what I'd achieved
    when I was all in one piece.
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    Now while relearning every action
    that one has ever cultivated
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    might seem like
    a significant undertaking --
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    and believe me, it very much was,
    in the short term --
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    it was nonetheless
    having a positive effect
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    on the way that I approached
    everything else in my life.
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    Not only did it transform
    my ability to problem-solve,
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    but I also felt I became more pragmatic,
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    less sensitive to hindrances,
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    in some cases, more patient,
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    and magically transformed
    people's abilities
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    to offer me their seats
    on public transport.
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    (Laughter)
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    Trivial setbacks began
    to pale in comparison
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    to challenges I'd previously overcome,
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    and this allowed me to take a calm
    and measured approach to these challenges,
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    keeping them in perspective
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    and often even finding new
    and improved ways to overcome them.
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    The benefit of not dwelling
    on the negative
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    and just getting on with the task at hand
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    became self-evident.
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    It even encouraged me to pursue
    some more fulfilling career paths
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    that may otherwise have been inadvisable.
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    And who would have thought
    that an appropriate job for me
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    might involve the meticulous operation
    of electronic equipment
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    to curate dance music to people
    in inaccessible places
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    under the influence of alcohol.
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    (Laughter)
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    Not I.
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    So in a competitive industry where DJs
    have been relentlessly honing their craft,
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    desperate to attain gigs,
    sending demos to clubs,
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    my best friend and I
    took a different approach,
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    and we started our own club night,
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    and we employed ourselves as the DJs.
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    (Laughter)
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    Suddenly, we had a headline slot.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, when we started
    that club night, I could not DJ.
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    The first time I ever got behind the decks
    was on our opening night,
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    in front of hundreds of people.
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    I'd only just learned
    where the play button was.
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    (Laughter)
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    But, being previously faced
    with so many ultimatums,
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    one's forced to be astute
    in adapting to new situations.
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    That club night went on to become
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    the longest-running
    weekly club night in Sydney,
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    and we as DJs went on to play
    Australia's biggest music festivals.
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    So eventually, I either learned quickly,
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    or the standards of clubs
    have gone really downhill.
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    (Laughter)
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    Coming close to death
    can be an educational experience.
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    It's certainly true that one's priorities
    receive somewhat of a realignment
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    immediately afterwards.
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    And it's also true
    that some of those priorities
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    are met with an increased
    sense of urgency.
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    But another, more salient realization
    that comes to light
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    is the triviality of our own
    self-importance and self-consciousness.
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    To truly understand the extent
    to which your self-consciousness
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    prohibits you from engaging
    in opportunities
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    should lead everyone to take risks
    they otherwise wouldn't.
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    We're merely a blip on the time line
    of the universe, right?
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    Act accordingly.
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    Now the ideas that I'm presenting today
    were imbued upon me
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    through some otherwise
    unfortunate circumstances, granted,
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    but they're lying dormant in the lives
    of anyone who's willing to exploit them.
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    If we all understand
    that we all have unique weaknesses,
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    and if we're honest about what they are,
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    we can learn how to best
    take advantage of them,
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    whether they be mounting a curb
    or fear of presenting sales reports
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    or the inability to sufficiently
    manage one's finances --
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    looking at that guy --
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    (Laughter)
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    there lies the ability to learn, to adapt,
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    and even the ability to rewire
    one's instinctual response to challenges.
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    Adversity is good,
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    and it has the potential
    to make you stronger.
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    And, at the very least,
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    you can scare the hell out of kids
    if you look like a pirate.
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause and cheers)
Title:
The perks of being a pirate
Speaker:
Tom Nash
Description:

In this deeply charming and humorous talk, DJ and self-professed pirate Tom Nash meditates on how facing adversity due to disability invited patience, ambition and pragmatism into his life in enlightening, unexpected ways. "We all have unique weaknesses," he says. "If we're honest about what they are, we can learn how to best take advantage of them."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
08:55
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Brian Greene edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Erin Gregory approved English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Erin Gregory edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Krystian Aparta accepted English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate
Joseph Geni edited English subtitles for The perks of being a pirate

English subtitles

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