More on the subject of truth

After I wrote the last six people twelve times post, I immediately wanted to delete it.

It was incredibly hard for me to write, and also incredibly hard for me to allow others to read how I feel. How I truly, deeply feel about a subject. Especially about a subject as emotionally charged as parenthood. I am scared that when I truly share how I feel, no one will understand, and I will be alone.

I am not, nor have I ever been, a very private person. I am an open book. In person, I have no problem sharing personal anecdotes even with a stranger. I don’t take myself very seriously. I rarely get embarrassed. I have nothing to hide. I operate below the surface, meaning I don’t want to bother with small talk. I want to dig in and talk about THINGS. Too Much Information? Never. Not with me. I want to really know the people that come into my life. I want to be a safe place for them, so that they allow me in. And I am a lot of the time, and they do a lot of the time. I think it is what allows me to take the photographs I take.

A lot of people just feel safe with me.

The problem is, I don’t often give myself the same safety net of myself. I have operated most of my life perpetually worried about how I come across. How others see me. I have obsessed for hours after a party about the things I have said or not said. I have chosen not to walk on a busy street alone, for fear of the eyes on me as I cross a busy intersection, and what they may sum up about me from a split second. I have chosen not to stand up for myself or my children, at times, to different authorities (medical, educational, etc), because I want to believe in them, I want to belong, and because I doubt myself. I have put others over myself and my own opinions and thoughts more times than I can count. I have held back on my opinions on politics, religion, child rearing, family, alternative medicine, organic food, vaccinations, the list goes on. Personal anecdotes are one thing – personal opinions and feelings are something entirely different.

I have always tragically walked the line of being extremely confident in who I am, to doubting every single little thing I have ever thought. I remember going into ninth grade, and after having to wear glasses since the third grade, finally being old enough to try contacts. Back then, kids in glasses were teased or bullied. I was teased and bullied. Mercilessly, almost every day of my school education up to that point. Not just about the glasses, but they certainly didn’t help my situation. When my Mom offered the contact route, I remember saying, “No, I don’t need contacts. I like how I look in glasses. If anyone thinks I look like a dork, I don’t care.” Well, I desperately didn’t want to care, but of course I did. The only way I could gain some control was by saying “I’m choosing to wear these stupid glasses dammit! So screw you if you don’t like it!” The only way I could make myself feel better was to fake that confidence. I fully bought into the adage: Fake It Until You Make It. I just thought someday I would make it!

The tag line I chose for my business, “Just Be You”, is so much more than a tag line. It came to me in the middle of the night, many many years ago. It is a flashlight through the dark into the deepest part of my soul – it is me telling me, “It is okay Tara – just to be. Just be whoever you are. The important people won’t care about the messy bits, the ugly bits, the opinions that differ from theirs – they will love you anyway.” It is my mantra, my meditation, my mission statement. But often, it eludes me.

Here on my blog, I talk specifically about a lot in my life. Like I said, I am an open book. A lot of beautiful personal anecdotes are written here. A lot of talking about the other five people who live in my house. But not a lot of talking about me. About my personal opinions. My personal feelings. Also, here on my blog, I have always limited my focus to one thing: Happiness With A Capital H.

When I started this blog, I was being treated for depression. I started it for two reasons. One was to keep in touch and share photos of my children to our far away family and friends. The other was to help me focus on the good in my life. To try and help me realize I had a reason to live, and exactly what those reasons were. It worked. I started seeing things I hadn’t noticed before. I started writing about things I hadn’t noticed before. I started photographing things I hadn’t noticed before. And many of you reading this now were here, reading then.

It has been five and a half years since I started writing and focusing on all the good in my life. I am no longer being treated for depression. I have fought hard and won that battle. To those of you still in it, my heart goes out to you with deep empathy. My specific depression had a lot to do with the choices I made early in my adult life, and why I made them, and on the slow steady drain of mothering four small children all at once. Three years ago I decided I was done with medication and the side effects. After six plus years on and off anti-depressants, I wanted to see what my new baseline was. I slowly, sickly, painfully weaned off with the help of a chiropractor. She helped my body come off the drugs and she continues to help me stay healthy and balanced. That was enough for awhile, but soon the depression and hopelessness began creeping back in. So, I began going to therapy. And my life changed. She helped me realize the why of my depression. And how to move forward with all of the pain and knowledge that comes along with that.

She also helped me to realize that I am doing myself a disservice by only focusing on the good.

I want and need to focus on the truth of my life.

Meaning, I don’t have to change what I am doing – I just need to round it out with a good dose of reality. I need to be able to look and ponder over the good and the bad. The happy and the sad.

I do not want this blog to be a place where people come and then leave, feeling depressed over my ‘fantastic life’. Possibly thinking that I have no suffering. That I make no mistakes. That I have no bad days. That I don’t fail. That I’m not a jerk sometimes. That I look cute every day. That my family is perfect. I only recently came to realize that this could be the case. And if this sounds familiar to you, let me just say to you: I AM SORRY. I am sorry I haven’t realized that it is equally beneficial to show you both sides of my life.

All of my focusing on the good, the happy, the sunshine moments – what I did to make myself feel better – was actually a fantasy I was clinging to, and I was leading other people to believe was my only reality. The fact is, I do focus on those moments. They are truthful. I have never made anything up. I do tend to “look on the bright side”, “see the silver lining in every cloud”, and “drink from my half full cup”. But when that is all you, my reader, gets to see – you never get the full picture. And when that is all I, the person living it, choose to see, I can’t see my whole life the way it actually is. I can’t make changes or see problems. I can’t help someone like Mckenna. The day after I posted a truth like the one I am currently struggling with in regards to Mckenna, I could see that. You got a bigger picture of my life. *I* got a bigger picture of my life. A more truthful picture. We all have our unique struggles. We aren’t alone. And that was a big exhale.

I have felt a shift occurring within me for some time, of me not wanting to sit on the fence of who I am any longer. I have made a lot of changes since I started this blog. And yet, I have kept what I write here pretty static. Pretty generic. Pretty focused on the good. The Happy With A Capital H. Today I hope to give you a much more full picture of who I actually am, right now.

So – here is where I slap down some truth. I think I do have a pretty fantastic life. The life Jeff and I have made has a lot of good. And I write enough about that, that I don’t need to get specific about it now. But I also have a lot of suffering, I have a lot of bad days, I constantly make mistakes, I am totally a jerk to people sometimes, and a lot of days I don’t even shower or brush my teeth. I forget things often. I have a double chin and large pores. I get really sweaty when I am shooting. (One of the only things that actually does embarrass me about myself.) I am sixty pounds overweight. Mckenna has visually disturbing scars on 20% of her body, caused by catching on fire in 2005, and caring for them, and her, takes a lot of work. Some days I wish my kids would disappear so that my house would stay clean and I could have a break. My house is almost always messy. I don’t really have many local friends. I feel lonely a lot. But I am learning to like that loneliness, and learning what to fill it up with that is good for me. I wish I had paid more attention in all of my History classes, Geography, and Economics, because I am a dolt when it comes to those subjects. I make up for it now by being extremely curious and learning as much as I can about the past, and the history we are making today. I voted for Obama, although I don’t think he is the cure for all of our problems. In person, I curse like a sailor and have quite the naughty sense of humor. I just don’t necessarily feel that the internet is the place for me to express that. I cringe inside when I hear the name George W. Bush. I support gay marriage, and feel that the LGBT person is equal to me in every way. I am not religious. After having been kind of “half-religious” most of my life, (Episcopalian, then Christian, then Mormon), my belief system is best understood by reading this, from the American Humanist Association.

If any of those things surprise you, or make you no longer want to read my blog, I understand. And not in a glasses versus contacts way. I really and truly understand because it means you have the full picture of who I am, and you are free to make a choice. I respect your choice. I would hope that this wouldn’t change how you feel about me. But I understand if it does.

And something I didn’t go into on that last post. I didn’t get specific enough about what I was dealing with. My daughter Mckenna has an undiagnosed neurological disorder that causes her to have major agitation over simple household noise, major issues transitioning from one thing to another, (even something as simple as getting out of the car), and obsessive compulsive tendencies. She is unpredictable in when she will melt down, but melt down she does. And often. In a meltdown she screams, she will try to take off her clothes, she will lay down on the ground. Often in public, right where people have to walk around her. She will stop everything she is doing, like a stubborn horse you can’t get to move an inch. You pull and yank on the reigns and plead and beg and they just dig in their heels. So does she. She will yell curse words. This started in middle school – she doesn’t know when not to curse like the rest of the kids. (Around teachers and parents.) She has zero social or safety awareness. She has no idea people like their space, and will walk up to someone and touch them inappropriately as she says ‘hello’, or ‘hi, dude!’ She has no idea that she could get hit by a car in a parking lot. In 2006 she left our house unannounced twice, and took off on foot. One time before 6am, when everyone else was asleep, the other time when the kids were playing outside and I was upstairs folding laundry and didn’t realize she had left. Both times we were frantic to find her, and were lucky we did. After her second attempt, we purchased a $300 personal GPS system that she had to wear for months. If she got more than 10 feet away from the base, her bracelet would ring an alarm. A lot of the time, her safety is out of my control, and I live in fear of what may happen to her next. She is intellectually disabled with some autistic like symptoms. We don’t know why and we probably never will. It isn’t for a lack of trying. She is fourteen years old and we have taken her to the doctor to try and figure her out countless times.

One of my friends emailed me something that I thought was so poignant, and I want to share what she said here:

“I think what I love most about this post is that it rips away the curtain.  This fancy curtain that is put up for everyone to see how perfect and beautiful it is on the outside, but if you push back the curtain you get to see what’s real, what’s raw.  You get to see the truth.  And guess what…the truth isn’t all that and a bag of chips sometimes.  And I think it is in these moments of complete honesty that humans can truly relate to one another.  Perfection is an illusion….And the sooner we as parents push back the curtain, the better off we’ll all be.  Because there is comfort in knowing that we are not alone in this situation, that people can relate in some fashion.”

I am so ready to rip away the curtain, and in doing so my hope is that I find even more people that I can relate to, as well as that can relate to me.

Just be.

xo

Tara

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522 Comments

  1. Often when I read blogs, the blogs with a rose colored “curtain” over them, I wonder what’s wrong with my family, with my kids. We certainly aren’t perfect and the illusion of perfection bleeds through blogs and get’s into our minds, it feeds that irrational illusion that some of us seem to seek. It is so refreshing to see someone be real and truthful with themselves and others(as you chose). I have been reading your blog for some time and it is today, after pulling back your curtain, that I can relate, not as a photographer but as a mother, wife and human being trying to make it in this world. Thank you for opening yourself up, in this way, to mostly complete strangers :)

  2. You are amazing and brave. I would venture to say that most of us feel this way about our lives- I certainly do. I wish I lived in CA, because we would be buds. Thanks for this post.

  3. Tara, don’t apologize to your readers. you can write whatever you want in your blog and you will always be honest & real.. because that is what you are … even if you put a blackout as a curtain, we will see through lol…the lovely thing is what you said, that you are accepting your reality and your truth, and loving yourself more doing that ..you are on the right path.. and thank you for sharing .. I also seem to have a perfect life but I am struggling internally (although thanks to therapy I am doing SO MUCH BETTER) so I can relate :) .. this is going to sound dumb & simple but get those guitar lessons going ..and another crazy idea: why don’t you try surfing too, or boogie board like me? I am starting to go with my husband and as you know the ocean is pretty powerful .. aloha spirit!

  4. Tara I love you…it’s an honor to be your brother (in-law). I loved reading your post. I miss hanging out with you all and having real “just be” conversations all day. See ya soon

  5. Hi,
    There is something I learned when I was young, so bare with me if this sounds a little long winded.

    When I was at secondary school (like high school over there) I was terribly jealous of a girl in my class she had everything that I thought I’d ever wanted.
    She was tall and slender, had beautiful natural blond hair it a fashionable cut, was always sun kissed or tanned, she always looked good, wore all the latest trends, was very popular, pretty, intelligent, and never had to worry about her weight.
    She was like those popular cheerleaders you see in high school films oh and she wasn’t a bitch, she was really nice.
    I on the other hand, fat, wore glasses, had old style cloths, long lank red hair with stay out of the sun or burn very pale skin, was bullied by almost the entire school, not at all popular, average looking and only had to look at a cream cake to put weight on

    So almost opposites, I always thought her life was so much better than mine & that she was so much happier! And if someone had asked me if I wanted to swap with her I would have done it at the drop of a hat!
    Then one day when we were in maths class the head teacher (like principle) came in and called her out of class. We were then told that her mother had just died! In a car crash!
    I later found out that her father was an abusive alcoholic who had died quite horribly a few years before and her mother had been depressed since it happened & she had been caring for her.

    So I realised that although parts of my life were s**t there were a lot of things about my life that were great and I wouldn’t want to swap my life for her’s for all the tea in china.

    So I never think people are perfect and that they don’t have their own troubles even if they don’t talk about them.

    “Don’t judge a person till you’ve walked a mile in their shoes”

    Is very apt.

    I always visit your blog just to see the wonderful & inspiring photos the extra chat is just a bonus like a cherry on the top!

    Seeya Hugya *G*

  6. I love Tara Whitney, past, present, future, raw, and real. Period. I will also quickly add that I still obsess over things I have said/done as far back as 1st grade. They nag me more often than not. How comforting to know I am not alone.

  7. I have read your blog for over 4 years now. I have always loved reading it and will continue to do so because to me, you seem like a fun, interesting,slightly off-kilter (in a good way) person (just like me). Be yourself and have fun everyday!

  8. I can’t say anything here that hasn’t already been said or touched upon but I have to say – “thank you!” I feel less alone and more comforted by your honesty and emotional unveiling than you’ll ever know.

  9. Tara, thank you. It was almost like you were writing about me, even till the sweating part during shoots!(hate that too!) and I get it, totally. Thank you again for sharing it makes me feel less alone in my world with my special needs child and everything that comes with it.

    corinnexxx

  10. Thanks Tara for your post. Glad to see we all are works in progress. I have always read you as a free spirit & that comes in with your description of you. Peace

  11. I can’t thank you enough for this. I have a little ole blog that’s titled “just me” and it is separate from my family blog for that reason…its just me and only me. My man friend says no one reads it or comments on it because I am so negative :(. I can see where he is coming from but that’s my life and I don’t want to hide who I am just so I can have billion of readers and a plethora of comments.

    Its nice to know I’m not alone when true life hits and I want to write about it. THANK YOU for your honesty and not being a “Polly perfect” with a perfect life and all things perfect and wonderful around you. You are an inspiration and a true example of what I want to be, much love!

  12. Tara, I like you more in your authentic imperfection. And, I know what your life feels like – Nathaniel “eloped” several times and twice we needed the police to help us find him. I have been glared at, lectured, called names and lectured by a police woman who thought I was blowing her off – all in response to his behavior. I haven’t been able to own this for myself yet, but I firmly believe that I am a good mother and my son’s situation is simply an impossible fit for the world I inhabit…and, that is neither my fault or his. The world is wrong. That there was no support between nothing and the group home is wrong. That people couldn’t look at us with more love and grace is wrong. I am grateful that we have a situation right now that is working for everyone in our family – but I know that can change. I’m sending you all my hopes and prayers – for all of us. Susan

  13. Tara, I’ve been following your blog for about a year now and I’m always very impressed with all the wonderful photos you take, not because they are perfect, but because you do an amazing job at capturing the moment. I normally don’t read much of your blog, but have read the last couple of posts and wanted to tell you that I appreciate your honesty! I’m a young Mom and don’t have as much experience as you, but I have found in my 4 years of motherhood that if I try to only show the “perfect” side of my life that I’m not as happy. Being open and honest and real is hard to do in a world that judges so harshly, but I know it brings me a lot of peace when I do. I find that as I work on being less of a perfectionist and learn to breathe more and live in the moment that I’m a much happier person and a much better mother. So thank you for your thoughts even though it’s hard to share sometimes. I truly and sincerely appreciate your honesty and will continue to follow your story because I find it very refreshing. Thank you, thank you, thank you for just being you!

    Sincerely, Amy

  14. Dear Tara,

    I adore you, I always have.
    and after this, I adore you even more.
    I just want to hug you right now!
    I am glad you are who you are, and who
    you were meant to be…..just be you.
    I love how real you are….thank you.
    tara pp

  15. Thank you. Thank you for the post. Thank you for being honest. Your post makes me like you more because now I can relate to you more – and you’re more beautiful to me. Your post also makes me feel better about my life. You’re right – we all hide behind a perfect curtain so we each feel inadequate when comparing ourselves to others. We should all just let it drop and be happy with the truth. Thank you Tara! How brave of you to write this.

  16. Wow… I’m breathless. That is the most REAL post I’ve ever read. It touched me to my core and that’s exactly why I come back here hungry for more every day.
    You are beautiful, just how you are, and after I read your “mantra” (3 years ago) ‘Just BE’ I posted it HUGE on my desk at work, It makes me take a deep breath… and relax. I have never read anything more honest and amazing.
    Thank you for being inspiring, by just being yourself!
    hugs from Seattle,
    Abby

  17. Thank you. I’ve often been envious of you and your family. So perfect in digital form. We live in the snow belt. My step-kids and toddler spend time at the lake, but have never seen the ocean. And there you are, able to go play on the beach anytime you want. You work with fabulous people doing something you love. Your children are charming and darling and gorgeous. Of course so are mine. ;) But I was overlooking the fact that your life is also real. And so much harder than an outsider could ever understand. I admire you now, even more than before, because you’ve let us see another piece of who you really are, and the strength and courage it takes to be “that woman who gets to go to the beach with her kids anytime she wants.”

  18. I have been a reader for a long time now. I started reading because I loved your work. Then I continued reading because you live in the OC and I grew up there (made me feel like I was visiting home). I read almost everyday, because I love you and your thoughts. I will continue reading because I think you are amazing. I knew it before your “truth” posts and I know it after. Don’t ever change. You make a difference!!!

  19. I wish we lived in proximity to each other because I was sharing a coffee with friends yesterday and had THIS conversation with them. We talked about how WE have convictions for OUR life but that life is gray and our convictions aren’t necessarily OTHERS convictions and we refuse to sit in judgment of others. I love that you can be accepting of others when they don’t share your convictions.

    I also had a client email me this week that she and her husband are divorcing. It made me wonder if the “Happy with a capital H” on my blog and people’s FB updates have led her to believe that everyone’s marriages are SUPER Happy and Easy all the time. It convicted me about keeping my online presence more real. More representative of what’s true.

    Really. I wish we could have coffee. :)

  20. Thank you! Your photograghs inspire me and excite me everyday to take photos. Inspiration is priceless so thank you! Your blog always makes me feel like I am connecting with a old friend, you are very open and comfortable. I have some of the same issues you write about and it helps to know that I am not alone. I try to pull back my curtain and let friends see the good and the bad but it tends to back fire for me. Some of my friends don’t want to hear the bad because they have there own problems and don’t have time or the energy to deal with someone elses. I feel sometimes that they think “oh she is broke and I don’t want to be bothered with that.” I have personally found that helping friends with either “baggage” helps me deal with mine.

  21. I have tears in my eyes. Not because I am sad but because I am so moved. I read your blog every day, not just because of the amazing photographs but also because of your amazing spirit. {{virtual hug}}

  22. Tara – I’ve always had a girl-crush on you – and this just makes it bigger and better! Kudos to you for being real – I love the happy, bright and fun stuff you post, but revealing all takes a lot of courage – is it silly of me to be proud of you when I don’t even know you?? Someday we’ll meet in real life and I’ll give you a big hug!! xoxo jen :)

  23. So, I’m not really sure how this happened, but my comment re: this post ended up being under your last post :-( In case you don’t have time to read that one, the short version is thank you for your authenticity and sharing yourself. I am extremely grateful.

  24. Tara, I have been a follower of your work and blog for the past couple of years. I have to say I love you even more now. While I disagree with you on some of your opinions that makes me like you even more because you share them. It’s just not right for all of us to go around acting like our lives are perfect. In our DNA we need others and we need to know them. There is absolutely nothing to gain from being fake or only sharing the part of you that you think won’t scare people away. We are all attracted to people who are just real! So, thank you so much for sharing.

    I am also a mother of 4. I know the messy house, the wishing you could have a day of clean and serenity. I only know depression from having it post partum. It was enough to make me want to lay in my bed and cry a lot and wonder if I will ever be myself again. My go to book for all of my “issues” is the Bible. I have been a believer in the Bible my entire life, but as an adult it has really shaped my life.

    I would love to hear more about your spiritual life and how you went from so many religions to where you are today. Have you ever read Rick Warren’s book, The Purpose Driven Life? I so encourage you to read it, if you have not already. You won’t know if you agree with it or not until you read it.

    Also, a friend of mine has an autistic daughter. She had many of the very same issues that McKenna has. If you have not already looked into the Son-Rise Program, check it out. http://www.autismtreatmentcenter.org. She is still overcoming her issues with noise, but her improvement is absolutely amazing!

    Thanks again for sharing your life, Tara! I love it!

  25. Tara,
    Your last post really had me thinking about parenthood and what decisions we need to make to be there for all of our children, not just the ones that seem to need us the most. Then I read this post. Wow! Thank you for being so honest and setting the example that it’s okay not be to perfect…and for others to know that.

    -Sandy

  26. Tara, here, here for your bravery to rip back the curtain in such a public way! People do need to get a reality check on all the picture perfect blogs they follow. Life isn’t allows a bowl of cherries. Finding meaningful friendships that you can be open and honest about yourself and your life is difficult, but necessary. I no longer have the patience to listen to friends go on and on about things that truly don’t matter. Be real with me and I will be real with you – is my new motto! I’ve been an avid reader of your blog for years and look forward to reading about the new you. Maybe some day our paths will cross, I would love to meet you in person some day!

  27. You haven’t lost me one bit – in fact you just engage me more. Thank you for just being. Thank you for letting me breathe and consider just being too.

    I wish I lived near so I could scoop you up for a coffee break – then again, I am too damned shy and nervous to meet people because they might not like me and see past my own personal curtain to know that I am not worth knowing, that I am a bitch somtimes, that I am not smart as I pretend to be, that I am a chicken shit, etc.. :)

    So I raise my cup ‘o’ joe to the monitor instead. Cheers to you.

  28. I am also reading your blog for some years now and never left a comment. I love your work, I love your “stories” – now I feel really connected and not only cause I like your “glasses” a lot and share your opinion (in all points you expressed in this post) ;-) … Big hug from Germany (sorry for any mistakes in my English)

  29. you are so brave. Being honest is a hard thing for me. Not in the sense that I lie, but dishonest in that I don’t show or acknowledge the bad things in my life. I’m too busy reaching for the good, which is exhausting and ultimately impossible to accomplish 100 percent of the time. Thanks so much for reminding me at that and for be so generous with your life.

  30. Tara…I know I have always felt connected to your journey for years after I got to know you through Shannon S. I feel like so much of our journeys mirror each other in many ways and yet they are so different. I appreciate exactly who you are, just the way you are. It will all come down to self love and happiness for you and your journey…however long and whatever path you take to get there. It’s time to think about healing, health and wellness instead of trying to fix all the symptoms. I just know that we are going to meet in person someday, and it will be exactly when it is suppose to happen;) Try to be your bestfriend. Try to talk to yourself as if I just bared my soul as you have and you have all the healing advice in the world to give to me. Be gentle on yourself and if you take the babiest of baby steps, just start changing those broken records in your head that are skipping and playing continuously. Just be…(just another reason we are soul sisters…my mantra for years;)

  31. You are such a courageous person Tara – I have always felt that and feel it even more now. A little while back, you posted about choosing to find the magic (loved that post). And I can see now how that was part of what you are writing about right now. So much of your post resonates with me and my own struggles, trying to find as much shiny happiness as I possibly can because that’s what I want to celebrate. But what the heck do i do with this other stuff lol. Your posts are such a gift. Thank you for sharing yourself – your feelings, flaws, beauties, dreams – your family, your photography. . . Thank you for sharing you.

  32. Tara-Thank you for being you. This post is just what I needed to read today. Thank you for being brave and honest and real. Thank you-Thank you-Thank you!! Sending you a big ((((hug))))!!

  33. I love your mantra. And your courage. And your spirit. This is an amazingly raw and honest post… much appreciated. I think you are an amazing mother and person… please keep the curtain pulled back… “they (we) will love you anyway”!

  34. we would so get along. passage after passage in this i’m reading and thinking “YES!!”

    i’ve been reading your blog for years. the good, the bad, and the ugly included ~ your spirit & reflections are incredible.

  35. whew…

    whew to … not knowing you are talking about

    whew to ….knowing and feeling exactly every ounce of what you are talking about

    whew to ….feeling everything to the depth of my soul

    and whew to feeling like…I am really not alone in this.

    thank you

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