yogamindandbody
yogamindandbody
Yoga Mind and Body Yoga Club
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...for every body and mind
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yogamindandbody · 7 years ago
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Yoga Mind and Body turned 6 today!
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yogamindandbody · 7 years ago
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Happiness... brilliant
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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The Healing Power of Meditation
The Dalai Lama is such a likeable man and here he enters into conversation with some of the best neuroscientists to discuss how meditation operates to improve mental health and help us to stay happy.
Here are a few noteworthy reviews
Review
 The Mind s Own Physician is a journey of understanding, in which an integrative dialogue unfolds between the spiritual leaders of contemplative meditation and scientists at the forefront of mind-body medicine. This transformative conversation provides valuable insight into how meditative practices can balance the mind with effects on the body, as well as, potential benefits for human health. This blending of contemplative traditions with Western science opens a mindful awareness that has the empowering capacity to fully engage people in their health, and more broadly, in the well-being of our societies.  Michael R. Irwin, MD, Cousins Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
"
  The Mind s Own Physician offers us a precious portal into the seminal conversations that gave birth to the nascent field of contemplative neuroscience. The issues digested, debated, and ignited in its pages will serve as a road map and inspiration for my students and their students over the coming decades.  Amishi P. Jha, PhD, contemplative neuroscientist, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Miami
"
  If you want to see how to build bridges between the deepest wisdom of the heart and the highest standards of contemporary neuroscience, look no further. This series of meetings between His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Western scientists and meditation teachers will prove to be epoch-changing, and this book shows why. Here, you will find interior and exterior empiricism in exquisite dialogue. Drink it all in. The brilliance of the participants shines through on every page.  Mark Williams, PhD, Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford, Director, Oxford Mindfulness Centre
"
  Can meditation improve your health? This question is just the starting point for a series of innovative exchanges across different ways of knowing among first-ranked clinicians, scientists, Buddhist teachers, and the Dalai Lama. Thoughtful, rigorous, and surprising by turns, this dialogue reminds all of us who care about the effects of the mind on health just how much more thinking remains to be done.  Anne Harrington, PhD, Professor of the History of Science, Harvard University, author of The Cure Within
"
  Our thoughts can seem too real, giving our imaginings about tomorrow the power to create chronic stress and unhealthy changes in our bodies. Our sense of self can seem too fixed, creating a cage where our habitual worries can run in depressing circles. In the moment that we recognize our thoughts as thoughts and our habits as habits, new and liberating possibilities emerge for the way we live our lives. Contemplative traditions such as Buddhism have long seen the transformative power of that simple moment of recognition, and more recently, clinicians in various domains have discovered the potential that this contemplative insight offers for the treatment of chronic stress, depression, and other especially modern maladies. Yet the potential of interventions based on contemplative approaches has only begun to emerge. The full realization of that potential requires a careful, critical, and honest dialogue among contemplatives and scientists so as to allow research and clinical practices to develop effectively. This remarkable book provides a fresh and clear record of such a dialogue. Informative and highly accessible, The Mind s Own Physician is a groundbreaking moment in the development of contemplative science.  John D. Dunne, Associate Professor of Religion, Emory University
"
  A must-read for anyone interested in understanding how Buddhist contemplative traditions and Western scientific traditions can work together to uncover the complexities of the human mind. Mind and Life has done it again: engaged a group of distinguished contemplative scholars, clinicians, and scientists in a lively, productive, and inspiring dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama that furthers our understanding of meditation and its potential to heal.  Jeanne Tsai, Associate Professor of Psychology, Stanford University, Director, Stanford Culture and Emotion Laboratory
"
  This book marks a milestone in the emerging field of contemplative sciences. Within its pages, you can relive a seminal 2005 Mind and Life conference that brought together world-famous neuroscientists, clinicians, and contemplative scholars in a dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama. This groundbreaking work explores the development of scientifically based tools and programs aimed at creating more balanced and healthy lives. How does stress evolve? What does it do to our minds and bodies? How can we use ancient mindfulness and meditative practices in our everyday, modern lives and also in clinical settings to reduce stress and cultivate healthier minds? This book is a must for everyone who is interested in making this world a more human place.  Tania Singer, PhD, Director, Department of Social Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
"
  Jon Kabat-Zinn and Richard Davidson bring together an internationally acclaimed cast of neuroscientists and scholars for a stimulating dialogue with the Dalai Lama. They weave a rich tapestry of information on how meditation can be useful for a wide variety of conditions, ranging from depression and stress to anxiety and psoriasis. In easy-to-understand, conversational style, the experts lay out how the mind s powerful healing effects can be harnessed in ways that are becoming increasingly illuminated by scientific discoveries.  Stuart J. Eisendrath, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, Director of the UCSF Depression Center
"
  It is most befitting that this wonderful book, composed from Mind and Life dialogues with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, would appear after the tenth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 tragedy. Accompanied by greatly increasing psychophysiological stress, anxiety, and depression, the post-9/11 decade has yielded an auspicious upsurge of rigorous scientific and clinical research on mindfulness meditation and other systematic methods of mental training that may help transcend the pain and suffering caused by such harmful afflictions. The Mind s Own Physician highlights these exciting advances through a series of insightful discussions between His Holiness and a diverse group of stellar contemplative scholars, scientists, and physicians who are leaders in the field of integrative mind-body-brain medicine. Everyone who wishes to cultivate a sound body and sane, healthy mind in these turbulent times will welcome the publication of these inspiring conversations.  David E. Meyer, PhD, Clyde H. Coombs, and J. E. Keith Smith Professor of Mathematical Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Michigan
"
  The Mind s Own Physician brings you straight into the heart of a remarkable interchange between His Holiness the Dalai Lama, renowned contemplative teachers from Buddhist and Christian traditions, and world leaders in neuroscience, psychiatry, stress physiology, and clinical medicine. Jon Kabat-Zinn and Richard Davidson guide the reader through an authentic chronicle of a landmark meeting of extraordinary minds as it unfolds through a series of crystalline presentations and probing dialogues about the nature of mind, meditation, and brain function. These dialogues provide the foundation for discussion on the biological effects of chronic stress, treatment and relapse prevention in depression, and the historical and evolutionary roots of Western medicine s struggle to understand and care for the whole person. The highly accessible and rich treatment of each of these areas is fascinating to read. The constant presence of His Holiness the Dalai Lama s deeply engaged attention, teaching, and critical ear reverberates throughout. The participants common commitment to fostering the conditions necessary for human flourishing through intercultural and interdisciplinary inquiry is truly inspiring. In capturing this arc of information and intent, The Mind s Own Physician becomes an essential treatment of one of the most hopeful directions in thought alive today: the human capacity to ease our suffering through introspective insight and our growing scientific investigation into how this may occur.  Clifford Saron, PhD, Associate Research Scientist, University of California, Davis Center for Mind and Brain
"
  "The Mind's Own Physician is a journey of understanding, in which an integrative dialogue unfolds between the spiritual leaders of contemplative meditation and scientists at the forefront of mind-body medicine. This transformative conversation provides valuable insight into how meditative practices can balance the mind with effects on the body, as well as, potential benefits for human health. This blending of contemplative traditions with Western science opens a mindful awareness that has the empowering capacity to fully engage people in their health, and more broadly, in the well-being of our societies." --Michael R. Irwin, MD, Cousins Professor of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles
  "The Mind's Own Physician offers us a precious portal into the seminal conversations that gave birth to the nascent field of contemplative neuroscience. The issues digested, debated, and ignited in its pages will serve as a road map and inspiration for my students and their students over the coming decades." --Amishi P. Jha, PhD, contemplative neuroscientist, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Miami
  "If you want to see how to build bridges between the deepest wisdom of the heart and the highest standards of contemporary neuroscience, look no further. This series of meetings between His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Western scientists and meditation teachers will prove to be epoch-changing, and this book shows why. Here, you will find interior and exterior empiricism in exquisite dialogue. Drink it all in. The brilliance of the participants shines through on every page." --Mark Williams, PhD, Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford, Director, Oxford Mindfulness Centre
  "Can meditation improve your health? This question is just the starting point for a series of innovative exchanges across different ways of knowing among first-ranked clinicians, scientists, Buddhist teachers, and the Dalai Lama. Thoughtful, rigorous, and surprising by turns, this dialogue reminds all of us who care about the effects of the mind on health just how much more thinking remains to be done." --Anne Harrington, PhD, Professor of the History of Science, Harvard University, author of The Cure Within
  "Our thoughts can seem too real, giving our imaginings about tomorrow the power to create chronic stress and unhealthy changes in our bodies. Our sense of self can seem too fixed, creating a cage where our habitual worries can run in depressing circles. In the moment that we recognize our thoughts as thoughts and our habits as habits, new and liberating possibilities emerge for the way we live our lives. Contemplative traditions such as Buddhism have long seen the transformative power of that simple moment of recognition, and more recently, clinicians in various domains have discovered the potential that this contemplative insight offers for the treatment of chronic stress, depression, and other especially modern maladies. Yet the potential of interventions based on contemplative approaches has only begun to emerge. The full realization of that potential requires a careful, critical, and honest dialogue among contemplatives and scientists so as to allow research and clinical practices to develop effectively. This remarkable book provides a fresh and clear record of such a dialogue. Informative and highly accessible, The Mind's Own Physician is a groundbreaking moment in the development of contemplative science." --John D. Dunne, Associate Professor of Religion, Emory University
  "A must-read for anyone interested in understanding how Buddhist contemplative traditions and Western scientific traditions can work together to uncover the complexities of the human mind. Mind and Life has done it again: engaged a group of distinguished contemplative scholars, clinicians, and scientists in a lively, productive, and inspiring dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama that furthers our understanding of meditation and its potential to heal." --Jeanne Tsai, Associate Professor of Psychology, Stanford University, Director, Stanford Culture and Emotion Laboratory
  "This book marks a milestone in the emerging field of contemplative sciences. Within its pages, you can relive a seminal 2005 Mind and Life conference that brought together world-famous neuroscientists, clinicians, and contemplative scholars in a dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama. This groundbreaking work explores the development of scientifically based tools and programs aimed at creating more balanced and healthy lives. How does stress evolve? What does it do to our minds and bodies? How can we use ancient mindfulness and meditative practices in our everyday, modern lives and also in clinical settings to reduce stress and cultivate healthier minds? This book is a must for everyone who is interested in making this world a more human place." --Tania Singer, PhD, Director, Department of Social Neuroscience, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany
  "Jon Kabat-Zinn and Richard Davidson bring together an internationally acclaimed cast of neuroscientists and scholars for a stimulating dialogue with the Dalai Lama. They weave a rich tapestry of information on how meditation can be useful for a wide variety of conditions, ranging from depression and stress to anxiety and psoriasis. In easy-to-understand, conversational style, the experts lay out how the mind's powerful healing effects can be harnessed in ways that are becoming increasingly illuminated by scientific discoveries." --Stuart J. Eisendrath, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco, Director of the UCSF Depression Center
  "It is most befitting that this wonderful book, composed from Mind and Life dialogues with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, would appear after the tenth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 tragedy. Accompanied by greatly increasing psychophysiological stress, anxiety, and depression, the post-9/11 decade has yielded an auspicious upsurge of rigorous scientific and clinical research on mindfulness meditation and other systematic methods of mental training that may help transcend the pain and suffering caused by such harmful afflictions. The Mind's Own Physician highlights these exciting advances through a series of insightful discussions between His Holiness and a diverse group of stellar contemplative scholars, scientists, and physicians who are leaders in the field of integrative mind-body-brain medicine. Everyone who wishes to cultivate a sound body and sane, healthy mind in these turbulent times will welcome the publication of these inspiring conversations." --David E. Meyer, PhD, Clyde H. Coombs, and J. E. Keith Smith Professor of Mathematical Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Michigan
  "The Mind's Own Physician brings you straight into the heart of a remarkable interchange between His Holiness the Dalai Lama, renowned contemplative teachers from Buddhist and Christian traditions, and world leaders in neuroscience, psychiatry, stress physiology, and clinical medicine. Jon Kabat-Zinn and Richard Davidson guide the reader through an authentic chronicle of a landmark meeting of extraordinary minds as it unfolds through a series of crystalline presentations and probing dialogues about the nature of mind, meditation, and brain function. These dialogues provide the foundation for discussion on the biological effects of chronic stress, treatment and relapse prevention in depression, and the historical and evolutionary roots of Western medicine's struggle to understand and care for the whole person. The highly accessible and rich treatment of each of these areas is fascinating to read. The constant presence of His Holiness the Dalai Lama's deeply engaged attention, teaching, and critical ear reverberates throughout. The participants' common commitment to fostering the conditions necessary for human flourishing through intercultural and interdisciplinary inquiry is truly inspiring. In capturing this arc of information and intent, The Mind's Own Physician becomes an essential treatment of one of the most hopeful directions in thought alive today: the human capacity to ease our suffering through introspective insight and our growing scientific investigation into how this may occur." --Clifford Saron, PhD, Associate Research Scientist, University of California, Davis Center for Mind and Brain
 Book Description
The science behind how mindfulness meditation can heal the human mind.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Let's talk about Chakras
During your yoga career, it’s almost inevitable that you will hear mention of Chakra’s. They are the name of the mystical energy centres through which the ancient yogic sages believed our “life-force” (Prana) is distributed to the body. Prana, as they saw it, is the energy (or life-force) we absorb through our breathing, diet, and senses. It is more than just, for example, the oxygen in the air that we breath!
The value of Chakras today is not just symbolic. They provide a valuable focal point for the physical practice of yoga: and during, or as a precursor to, meditation. Moreover, there are reassuring parallels with the vital organs in human physiology which illustrate that, as in so many things, the yogis were not far from the truth.
Science does not have all the answers and can have a high opinion of itself. The elephant in the room is not what we can prove by science, but what we can’t. I say that with total respect for science has done much to improve our lives. Conversely, in my view, a healthy scepticism of all things, including yoga and science, is not only a good thing but good yoga too!
Anyone familiar with my teaching will know that I always try and describe yogic ideas in plain English; in a way which respects both what we know, through scientific method, and that which we don’t. One should always respect the wisdom, dignity, and integrity of ancient yoga. We have much to thank yoga for. Conversely, we must be prepared to be open to new ideas, facts, and evidence.  I find it inconceivable that the yoga sages would not have done so!
There are seven commonly known chakras distributed vertically along the mid-line of the body, adjacent to the spine, from the pelvic floor to the brain: with a final, more spiritual chakra, floating above the head; that being the one through which we can connect with our true self, (our Atma).
In the coming weeks YogaPedia will be going into more detail on each of these Chakras: for now, here is a list of the seven we will be researching in later articles:
The Root Chakra (Muladhara) located in the pelvic floor
The Sacral Chakra (Svadisthana) located near the naval
The Solar Plexus Chakra (Manipura) located just beneath the ribcage
The Throat Chakra (Vishudda) located towards the bottom frontal area of the neck
The Heart Chakra (Anahata) located in the heart, which is slightly off-centre to the right of, and behind the sternum
The Third Eye Chakra (Ajna) located in line with the nose, above the eyebrow line, and towards the central base of the brain
The Crown Chakra (Sahaswara) located just above the head
The best way to visualise Chakras are as a spinning vortex of energy: each with their individual characteristics and functions. In Sanskrit, the name Chakra can be translated as wheel. So, these are not static concepts: they are constantly churning pranic energy into the body.
This is where they are most valuable. Visualising and thinking about the body’s energy being channelled in this way allows us to metaphysically interact the mind with the body, whilst we are practising yoga.
If you find this of interest then please keep watching for further short articles on the Chakras and other similar yogic concepts in YogaPedia.
Thank you, and namaste, Johnston
Founder Yoga Mind and Body
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Enrol now for a FREE Session and go from there. Read what our students say about us. Get a taste of what we're about. Or just come along and meet... Yoga should be fun! Get off your bum and just do it. It's exactly cool for young people coping with parents, bad feelings, other not very nice people, worried about life, and your body. Health body - healthy mind and vice-versa.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Yogi Bear
It's always important to have a sense of humour with yoga. Here you see a picture of the real yogi bear strutting his stuff and enjoying his life. It's obvious he's one of Yoga Mind and Body's alumni.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Make Making Love Make Yoga
Yoga Makes Making Love Better
There are few things as precious and good for us as making love. But often as not people get sheepish about how yoga helps us to prolong and enjoy our intimate moments.
But think seriously about this. Yoga improves your sensitivity and sensuality because physically and mentally you're getting control and able to give, and receive more.
Nobody is suggesting that yoga is about sex: it's about so much more than that! But few people can disagree that yoga is about love.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Woman's Hour "Yoga Feature
Interesting BBC 'Womans Hour' on Yoga for Asylum Seekers and the problems particular to women with migraine and menstruation
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Yoga that's not just the few but for the many
      Hi!
It would be great if yoga could be seen as something which is not just for those of us fortunate to have lithe bodies and who look good in lycra. Not that there's anything wrong with that - I'm envious!
But the images one sees in magazines, and I concede, on my website, do set peoples' perception, and put them off trying. Some men,  are most definitely fearful of entering a class full of women. I try telling them that the women really don't give a fig, and I'm pleased to report that more men are coming to my classes. That may be due to my being a man? I hope not!
I tend to say to those with such concerns, that these images are an aspiration, but most of all, they're just not what yoga's about. It's much more about what you put into it, the attitude you bring, and self-acceptance.
There is another angle to this. How often do we find there's someone in the class who shows off. I used to do that when I was a less mature, egocentric yogi. I'm properly embarrassed for the way I used to behave. Apology to Gregory Angell and Sue Woodd who tolerated more than they should ever have had to! Thank you guys for being such excellent teachers.
Anyway: that's my bit for now.
Namaste, Johnston
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Yoga that's not just for the few but for the many
Hi
It would be great if yoga could be seen as something which is not just for those of us fortunate to have lithe bodies and who look good in lycra. Not that there's anything wrong with that - I;m envious!
But the images one sees in magazines, and I concede, on my website, do set peoples' perception, and put them off trying. Some men,  are most definitely fearful of entering a class full of women. I try telling them that the women really don't give a fig, and I'm pleased to report that more men are coming to my classes. That may be due to my being a man? I hope not!
I tend to say to those with such concerns, that these images are an aspiration, but most of all, they're just not what yoga's about. It's much more about what you put into it, the attitude you bring, and self-acceptance.
There is another angle to this. How often do we find there's someone in the class who shows off. I used to do that when I was a less mature, egocentric yogi. I'm properly embarrassed for the way I used to behave. Apology to Gregory Angell and Sue Woodd who tolerated more than they should ever have had to! Thank you guys for being such excellent teachers.
Anyway: that's my bit for now.
Namaste, Johnston
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Love – and summer sunshine Being used as the playlist for this weeks yoga classes. The Fab Four. This music is just so good and full of sunshine.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Mindfulness is Yoga – learn more Link Follow this link to learn more about Mindfulness. Meditation is Mindfulness. But yoga's been around a lot longer and offers more. Get smart - do yoga! Namaste, Jonsi 🙂
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Five Points - Four Paths
Five Points – Four Paths
http://www.sivananda.org/teachings/
A great link from Sivananda Yoga explaining the principles of yoga. The only caveat I would add is that one does not have to be a vegetarian to be a good yogi! Nether do you have to be religious – just your self!
Namaste, Jonsi
View On WordPress
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Pink Floyd Yoga Went to see, and hear, the Pink Floyd exhibition at the Victoria and Albert museum in London. Absolutely brilliant - probably the best exhibition I've ever been too. Go see if you possibly can! Namaste, Johnston
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Bank Holiday Yoga Hi Just a quickie to let you know that there are no yoga classes this weekend. We start again next Wednesday 31st May 18:30 in Hook Community Centre. Hope you have a great weekend. Namaste, Jonsi
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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Soul Music …yoga for the mind Waterloo Sunset Great programme on the BBC this morning about this iconic song. Click on the link to listen.
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yogamindandbody · 8 years ago
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What a moving experience Spending 3 days with the Special Yoga Foundation in London learning how to help people with special needs through yoga. Absolutely fabulous what can be achieved.
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