Monday, April 27, 2026

The clarity you are looking for is forming, quietly, beneath the surface.

04-27-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

There is a point in growth that no one really prepares you for. It is the moment when the ways you have always handled life stop working the way they used to. The habits that once gave you stability begin to feel tight. The patterns that once made relationships easier start to feel misaligned. Even the thoughts that used to bring clarity no longer land the same way.

At first, the instinct is to double down. You lean harder on what has always worked. You try to think your way through things the same way you always have. You respond the way you were taught to respond. You reach for familiarity, hoping it will steady you again. Yet instead of relief, there is a growing sense of distance. Things feel heavier, less certain, more difficult to navigate.

That is the moment it starts to feel unsettling. You can sense that something inside you has shifted, though you cannot yet name what it is asking of you. The old way is no longer reliable, and the new way has not fully formed. It can feel like standing between two versions of yourself, without solid ground on either side.

From the inside, it can feel like something has gone wrong. It can feel like you have lost your clarity, your direction, or your ability to handle life the way you once did. The mind looks for answers and finds very few.

Yet there is another way to understand this moment.

Nothing is broken. You are not losing your way. You are outgrowing it.

I remember when I first found myself in that space. Nothing in my life had collapsed, yet the way I moved through it no longer made sense. Something deeper was shifting, even if I did not have language for it yet. It felt uncomfortable, almost like I had lost access to something that once felt natural.

What I could not see at the time was this: the discomfort was not confusion. It was awareness.

When you feel this kind of disorientation, it often means you have stopped living on autopilot. The automatic responses, the rehearsed ways of thinking and reacting, the patterns that once ran quietly in the background are no longer carrying you forward without question. You are beginning to notice. You are beginning to feel.

That changes everything.

For years, most of us learn how to move through life in ways that keep things functioning. We learn how to stay connected, avoid conflict, feel accepted, and maintain a sense of control. Over time, those ways become so familiar that they no longer feel like choices. They become default settings.

The cost of that kind of automatic living is subtle. When everything is automatic, there is very little space to ask whether something actually feels right. There is very little room to experience life as it truly is for you.

So when that automatic flow begins to break, it can feel like instability. In reality, it is the beginning of something more honest.

You are creating space. You are starting to experience your life directly, rather than simply repeating what you have always known. You are learning to listen to something deeper than habit.

That deserves more credit than most people give it.

This stage is not clean or predictable. It can feel slow, unclear, and at times frustrating. There may be moments where it seems like you should have figured it out by now. There may be a quiet fear that you have fallen behind or lost something important.

Look more closely at what this moment is asking of you.

It is asking you to stay present when answers are not immediate. It is asking you to pause instead of rushing back into what feels familiar. It is asking you to make decisions without the comfort of certainty. It is asking you to allow things to remain unfinished while something new begins to take shape.

That requires a level of presence most people never develop.

It is far easier to return to what is known. Predictable patterns offer comfort. They create the appearance of stability and control. For a long time, that can feel like strength.

There is a difference between moving easily and moving truthfully.

Moving truthfully does not always look impressive. It does not provide quick clarity or obvious progress. It often feels quieter than that, more subtle, more internal. It asks you to stay connected to yourself, even when it would be easier to disconnect.

If you are in that space right now, take a moment to recognize what you are doing.

You are pausing when you could rush. You are listening when it would be easier to ignore. You are choosing to move forward without abandoning yourself, even when the path is not fully clear.

That is not failure. That is growth.

It may not feel solid yet. It may not feel complete. It may not look the way you expected progress to look.

Still, there is something deeply right about it.

This is not you falling behind.

This is you becoming intentional in a way you have never been before.

The clarity you are looking for is forming, quietly, beneath the surface.

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Thursday, April 23, 2026

The path forward is not found by going around what is hard

 

04-23-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

Wounds are visible in ways that are hard to ignore. The weight of them can be felt in quiet moments, in the spaces where thoughts slow down just enough to notice what hurts. Even in those moments, there is something steady waiting beyond the storm. It may not be obvious at first, yet it is there, holding its place while everything else feels uncertain.

Life has a way of bringing you face to face with experiences that are uncomfortable, confusing, and at times overwhelming. Pain is rarely simple. It often carries disappointment, fear, and the weight of choices that did not turn out as expected. It can feel easier to stop, to sit with what is broken, and to wish things had unfolded differently. There is a natural pull toward staying in that space, especially when moving forward feels unclear.

Growth asks for something more active. It asks you to move through what hurts instead of avoiding it. Stillness has its place, yet healing does not come from remaining stuck in the moment of impact. It comes from allowing yourself to experience what is real and continuing forward, even when each step feels small.

There are times when circumstances leave you feeling powerless. In those moments, perspective becomes important. What feels like an ending may also be part of something larger that is still unfolding. It is not always possible to control what happens, yet it is always possible to decide how you respond to it.

Every emotion that surfaces carries information. Feeling them fully does not weaken you. It strengthens your understanding of yourself and your capacity to move forward. Questions may come without clear answers. That uncertainty can be frustrating, yet it often creates space for a deeper awareness to develop over time.

Life is not defined only by the wounds you carry. It is shaped by how you move through them. When attention remains fixed only on what hurts, it becomes easy to miss the growth that is taking place alongside the pain. Strength, clarity, and resilience are often built quietly, in the middle of moments that feel difficult to endure.

Moving forward is an intentional choice. It is choosing to take a step when staying still feels easier. It is deciding to engage with life again, even when confidence has been shaken. Healing does not require perfection or immediate resolution. It unfolds gradually, through small acts of understanding, patience, and willingness to continue.

Each time you choose to keep going, you reinforce something important within yourself. You demonstrate that you are capable of facing what is difficult without losing your sense of direction. That is where resilience is built, not in avoiding hardship, but in walking through it with awareness and purpose.

The path forward is not found by going around what is hard. It is found by moving through it. Through the uncertainty, through the weight, and through the questions that do not yet have answers. On the other side, there is often a quieter strength, a clearer perspective, and a deeper understanding of what it means to continue.

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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Choosing kindness is not passive. It is intentional.

 

04-21-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

One of the quietest forms of kindness is also one of the rarest. It does not draw attention to itself or ask for recognition. It shows up in simple moments, often unnoticed, in the choice to let someone be who they are without trying to reshape them.

There is a natural impulse to correct, to guide, to adjust what feels unfamiliar. It can look like encouragement on the surface, yet it often carries an unspoken expectation that someone should be different to make more sense or to feel easier to understand. Real kindness asks for something more difficult. It asks you to pause and resist the urge to refine another person into a version that feels comfortable to you.

It is easy to forget how constant advice and judgment have become. Opinions are shared quickly, often without a full understanding of the life behind the person being observed. Every individual carries a history that shaped how they speak, how they respond, how they move through the world. Much of that history is invisible, yet it influences everything.

People are not meant to move through life in the same way. Some express themselves openly while others hold things quietly. Some move with urgency while others take a slower, more measured path. These differences are not flaws to correct. They are reflections of experiences that deserve to be respected rather than reshaped.

Allowing someone to be who they are is not a lack of care. It is a deeper form of respect. It is the decision to make space for another person without placing conditions on how they should exist. That kind of space creates something powerful. It allows honesty to surface and gives people the freedom to grow in their own time and in their own way.

There is strength in choosing not to turn people into projects. Human beings are not problems to solve. They are stories still unfolding. When that is understood, the need to constantly evaluate and adjust others begins to fade.

Offering someone room to exist without pressure is one of the most meaningful things you can give. It creates an environment where people do not feel the need to perform or defend who they are. In that space, growth happens naturally, without force, and often in ways that are more genuine than anything that could be shaped from the outside.

Choosing this kind of kindness is not passive. It is intentional. It is the quiet decision to honor the complexity of another person and to trust that who they are becoming does not need to be managed.

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Monday, April 20, 2026

Falling is not the end of anything

04-20-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

The heart stumbles, yet it still finds a way forward. It is a quiet truth, one that does not demand attention, yet it has a way of holding everything together on the days that feel heavier than expected. There are moments when even simple things feel like effort, when the weight of everything settles in at once. In those moments, it becomes easy to mistake struggle for failure. Over time, a different understanding begins to take shape. Falling is not the end of anything. It is often a sign that something mattered enough to give it real effort, real care, and real presence.

The heart does not move with perfect certainty. It hesitates. It loses rhythm. It questions paths that once felt clear. That does not mean it has lost its direction. It means it is responding to something real. Growth rarely feels steady in the moment. It feels uncertain, uneven, and sometimes overwhelming. Even so, there is a quiet persistence underneath it all that continues to move forward, even when clarity is not fully there.

There is something the heart carries that the mind often overlooks. The mind looks for logic, for control, for answers that fit neatly into place. The heart remembers meaning. It remembers connection, purpose, and the reasons something mattered in the first place. When everything feels uncertain, that deeper sense of knowing does not disappear. It simply asks to be trusted, even when it cannot fully explain itself.

Strength is not found in never stumbling. It is found in continuing to move, even when the path feels unclear. There is resilience in that quiet forward motion, in choosing to keep going without needing everything to be perfectly understood.

The heart may falter at times, yet it does not stop. It adjusts, it learns, and it continues. That is what carries you through the heavier days and reminds you that there is still a way forward, even when it feels difficult to see.

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Friday, April 17, 2026

A grounded life is not built on constant pursuit

 

04-15-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ

There is something in human nature that leans toward the chase. Reaching for what is next feels active, productive, even exciting. Staying present with what is already here can feel slower, almost uncomfortable at first. Desire keeps the mind moving. Appreciation asks the mind to pause, and that is where many people begin to struggle.

Appreciation requires stillness. It asks you to be fully present, to give your attention to what is in front of you without immediately searching for something more. In a world that rewards speed, ambition, and constant movement, that kind of presence can feel unfamiliar. Sitting with what already exists may even feel like you are falling behind, when in reality you are learning how to see more clearly.

Loving what you already have is not about forcing gratitude or checking off a list of things you should feel thankful for. It is about attention. It is about looking at something long enough to remember why it mattered before it became part of your everyday life. It is choosing to stay with the moment instead of rushing past it in search of something better.

There is a quiet shift that happens when you begin to look again with intention. Ordinary moments start to carry weight. Familiar things begin to feel meaningful again. This is not about pretending everything is perfect. It is about allowing your focus to rest on what is real instead of what is missing.

A grounded life is not built on constant pursuit. It is built on the ability to recognize value in what is already present. When you learn to give your attention fully, you begin to experience more without needing more.

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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Life is not a single moment of arrival

 

04-15-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
There is a quiet truth that becomes clearer over time. No one is found once and then finished with the work of becoming. No single breakthrough removes every weight or answers every question. Life does not move in a straight line toward completion. It moves in cycles, where clarity comes and goes, and identity continues to unfold.

There are moments when it feels like everything finally makes sense, like you have arrived at some steady version of yourself. Then something shifts. Circumstances change, priorities evolve, and the person you were no longer fits the life in front of you. That is not failure. That is movement. That is growth asking you to step forward again.

This process of losing and finding is not something to resist. It is part of the design. Each season asks you to release something that once felt certain, whether it is an old belief, a past version of yourself, or a direction that no longer aligns. Letting go can feel uncomfortable, even disorienting, yet it creates space for something more honest to take shape.

Growth is not about holding on tighter. It is about knowing when to loosen your grip. Every time you allow yourself to outgrow what no longer serves you, you move closer to something that does. That applies to what you seek externally as well as what you are discovering internally. Both are connected, and both require a willingness to evolve.

There is a kind of strength in accepting that this is ongoing. Life is not a single moment of arrival. It is a continuous unfolding, a rhythm of releasing and receiving, learning and unlearning. The more you embrace that rhythm, the less you fight it, and the more grounded you become within it.

Keep going. Keep growing. Trust that every version of yourself you leave behind is making room for one that is more aligned, more aware, and more capable of stepping into what comes next.

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Monday, April 13, 2026

When I stopped demanding certainty

04-11-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
There have been moments when I have wondered if my life is just a loop of starting over. Not the kind of starting over that leads somewhere clear, but the kind where you keep trying, keep rebuilding, and still feel like all you have to show for it is that you made it through.

I used to believe that one day something would shift. That I would wake up and finally become the version of myself that made sense to other people. Someone consistent, someone steady, someone who had it figured out. Looking back, I can see that what I was really searching for was not transformation. It was permission to be where I was without feeling like I was falling behind.

On harder days, I still picture myself as something unfinished. Like a house that keeps getting repainted. Each attempt feels like a new beginning, a promise that this time will be different. From a distance, everything looks fine, even put together. Up close, the cracks are still there. Old layers show through in ways I cannot fully hide.

For a long time, I saw that as failure.

I struggled with the way past versions of me kept showing up. The way fear could still surface in moments when I wanted to feel confident. The way effort did not always erase what came before. It felt like I was doing something wrong, like I was not progressing the way I should.

Now I am beginning to see it differently.

What if that is not failure. What if that is simply history that does not disappear, but instead becomes part of who you are. Beginning again does not have to mean tearing everything down. It can mean learning how to live within something that is imperfect without constantly trying to rebuild it from scratch.

Something shifted for me when I stopped demanding certainty.

When I stopped treating every low energy day, every moment of doubt, every step back as proof that I had failed. I started to notice what it felt like to exist without constantly bracing for what might go wrong next. There were small moments of ease, of laughter, of connection that did not need to be analyzed or protected.

That part felt unfamiliar.

There is a quiet fear that comes with feeling okay after you have spent so long just getting through. Peace can feel uncertain, like something temporary, like something you have not earned. It can feel easier to stay guarded than to trust that a moment of calm is allowed to exist.

Even so, I stayed.

I kept breathing. I kept moving forward, even without a clear ending, even without a plan that made perfect sense. That, more than anything, feels like what beginning again looks like now. Not a clean slate or a dramatic change, but a steady choice to remain present in a life that is still unfolding.

I have started to let go of the idea that I need to prove that I am trying.

Some days, the only evidence I have is that I am still here. That my body keeps going, that my breath continues without asking for permission, that something in me has decided to stay even when my mind feels uncertain. That may not look impressive from the outside, though it is real.

There is a quiet strength in that kind of persistence.

In recognizing that even in the moments when you feel disconnected, when the things you once loved feel distant, when you retreat into yourself just to find space, something deeper is still holding you together.

For me, release does not look like a breakthrough.

It does not look like everything suddenly making sense or falling into place. It is softer than that. It is the moment you stop gripping so tightly. The moment you allow yourself to set things down, even briefly, and trust that you do not have to carry everything all at once.

That is enough.

That is where something steadier begins.

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Friday, April 10, 2026

You will figure it out

 

04-10-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
You will figure it out, the way you always have, even if it does not feel like it right now.

There are days when everything that once felt clear starts to blur. Plans feel fragile, direction feels uncertain, and a quiet question keeps circling in your mind about whether you are doing enough or falling behind. It is easy to look around and believe everyone else is moving faster, while you are still trying to make sense of where you stand.

That pressure can be heavy, though clarity rarely comes from forcing answers. It often begins when you shift your focus from what you need to accomplish to what you are willing to explore. Taking one small step, even when it feels insignificant, still counts. Getting through the day, completing one task, or simply continuing to show up is progress, even when it does not look impressive.

There will be moments when everything feels messy and uncertain, when you question your direction and wonder if you are getting anything right. Those moments are not failures. They are part of the process of becoming. Growth does not always feel like movement. Sometimes it feels like standing still while something deeper is quietly taking shape.

When everything feels overwhelming, bringing your attention back to the present can steady you. A breath, a pause, a moment to notice where you are right now can create space for clarity to return. You do not need to solve everything at once. You only need to stay present long enough to take the next step.

Delays and detours can feel frustrating, yet they are rarely empty. Even when you cannot see it, something is being built. You are learning patience, strengthening resilience, and becoming someone who can carry what comes next. Progress is not always about speed. It is about staying with it.

Through all of this, how you treat yourself matters. You do not need to prove your worth by moving faster or having everything figured out. You are allowed to rest, to pause, and to be where you are without judgment. Your value is not waiting at the end of the journey. It is already here.

You kept trying, you kept hoping, and you kept showing up, even when you did not know where the road would lead. That is how you figure it out, step by step, in your own time, just like you always do.

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Thursday, April 9, 2026

Love will change you.

04-09-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
Love has a way of teaching you without asking first.

It does not arrive with instructions or warnings. It moves into your life quietly and begins to reshape things before you even realize what is happening. It softens the parts of you that once felt guarded. It invites you into someone else’s rhythm, into a shared space where your thoughts, your time, and your energy begin to intertwine with another person.

For a while, that feels like expansion.

You open. You give. You learn how to care in ways that stretch you beyond who you used to be. You begin to see the world through something larger than yourself, and in that process, love feels like growth, like connection, like meaning.

At the same time, it begins to reveal something more delicate.

It shows you what is fragile within you. The parts of yourself that you slowly set aside without noticing. The compromises that feel small in the moment, yet accumulate over time. The quiet effort it takes to hold onto something that no longer feels as steady as it once did.

There is a kind of exhaustion that comes with loving deeply when something begins to shift.

You feel it before you can name it. A subtle distance. A change in tone. A hesitation where there used to be ease. You find yourself trying a little harder, paying closer attention, holding on more tightly, hoping that effort alone can restore what feels like it is slipping.

This is the part no one teaches you.

You grow up hearing about different kinds of love. You learn the language for it, the categories, the definitions. You are told what it should look like, how it should feel, what it is supposed to mean. None of that prepares you for what happens when love begins to change.

Because it does change.

Sometimes it deepens. Sometimes it evolves. Sometimes it fades so quietly that you do not recognize it until you are already standing in the absence of what used to be there.

That moment can feel disorienting.

Someone you once felt close to begins to feel distant. Conversations shift. Familiarity turns into something uncertain. The space you shared, the one that once felt full and alive, begins to feel hollow in a way you cannot quite explain.

You start searching for answers.

You replay moments. You question what changed. You wonder if there was something you missed, something you could have done differently, something you could still do to bring it back. That search can pull you into a cycle of holding on, even when you can feel that the connection is no longer the same.

Here is where something important begins to emerge.

Love is not only about connection. It is also about awareness.

It teaches you where you have given too much of yourself. It shows you where you have tried to sustain something that required two people to hold it together. It reveals the difference between loving someone and losing yourself in the process.

That realization is not easy.

It asks you to face the truth of what is happening, not what you hoped would continue. It asks you to recognize that not every love is meant to last in the form it began. It asks you to let go of the idea that effort alone can preserve something that is no longer mutual.

There is strength in that recognition.

You begin to understand that your value does not decrease when someone drifts away. You begin to see that love is not measured by how long you can hold onto it, but by how honestly you can experience it and how courageously you can release it when it changes.

The space that feels empty is not the end of your story.

It is a transition.

It is where you begin to return to yourself, to gather the pieces you may have set aside, to reconnect with your own rhythm after moving in sync with someone else. It is where you learn that love does not only live in what you shared with another person. It also lives in your ability to care, to grow, and to begin again.

Love will change you.

It will open you, stretch you, and at times, break something open within you. That is not failure. That is part of what it means to experience it fully.

You are not defined by what faded.

You are defined by what you learned, what you gave, and how you choose to move forward with a deeper understanding of yourself.

That is where your power returns.

Not in holding on to what was, but in trusting that you can continue, still capable of love, still whole, and still becoming.

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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

You were meant to be fully yourself

 

04-08-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
There comes a point, especially if you have spent years trying to be everything for everyone, when a difficult truth begins to settle in. No matter how much you give, it will never be enough for the wrong people.

That realization does not arrive gently. It often comes after you have bent yourself into shapes that do not feel like you. You learn to adjust, to soften, to give more, hoping it will finally lead to acceptance. Yet something still feels off, and you begin to wonder what you are really chasing.

You were never meant to be liked by everyone. That idea can feel like rejection at first, yet it is simply reality. You do not connect with everyone either. Connection has always been selective, and no amount of effort can force it where it does not naturally exist.

When someone does not respond the way you hoped, it is easy to turn inward and question yourself. You wonder if you are too much or not enough. You begin to reshape yourself to fit what you think they need. In that process, you risk losing who you actually are.

Not everyone will understand you, and not everyone will see you clearly. Some people will interpret you through their own experiences, and that lens may not reflect your truth. That does not reduce your worth. It simply reveals their limitation.

Instead of asking how to be more acceptable, you can begin asking where your energy belongs. Notice who meets you with ease, who understands you without constant explanation, and who values you without requiring you to perform. Those are the connections that matter.

Your heart is not meant to be opened by everyone. It is meant to be recognized by the right people. When that happens, it feels steady and honest. It does not require you to prove yourself or become someone else.

Standing in your values is part of this process. There will be moments when others disagree or misunderstand you. That tension can be uncomfortable, yet it also brings clarity. You can remain kind without abandoning what you believe.

The world does not need you to be universally liked. It needs you to be real. It needs you to show up as yourself, not as a version shaped by expectations that were never yours.

There is freedom in letting go of the need to be liked by everyone. It creates space, restores energy, and allows you to move with clarity. You begin to see that you were never meant to be for everyone.

You were meant to be fully yourself, and to trust that the right people will meet you there. That is more than enough.

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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Growth can feel like disruption before it feels like direction.

04-02-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
There is a kind of chaos that rarely gets acknowledged.

It is not loud or destructive. It does not announce itself with obvious disruption. It lives quietly in your thoughts, weaving through your days in a way that is easy to overlook and difficult to explain.

It shows up as too many ideas arriving at once. Too many directions pulling at your attention. Too many possibilities asking to be considered. Your mind begins to expand, and with that expansion comes a flood of questions that do not have immediate answers.

You feel the tension of possibility.

Everything seems available to you, yet nothing feels fully clear. You take a step toward something, then pause. You reconsider. You question whether that step was aligned or premature. You begin again, then circle back, not because you are incapable, but because you are trying to get it right.

From the outside, it can look like hesitation.

From the inside, it feels like movement without resolution.

This is where it becomes easy to mislabel what is happening. You may tell yourself that you are stuck, that you lack direction, that you should have more certainty by now. You may interpret the noise in your mind as a sign that something is wrong.

That interpretation misses something important.

This is not confusion born from being lost.

This is the friction that comes with expansion.

Your thinking is evolving faster than your current structure can hold. Your awareness is stretching beyond the path you have been walking, and your mind is trying to reconcile where you have been with where you could go next.

That space between clarity and possibility can feel disorienting.

It can feel like chaos.

In reality, it is growth in motion.

You are not starting and stopping because you are incapable. You are recalibrating. You are testing direction. You are refining your sense of alignment in real time. Each reconsideration is not a failure to decide. It is a deeper level of awareness asking for a more intentional choice.

This process is uncomfortable because it asks for patience.

It asks you to remain steady in the middle of uncertainty. It asks you to trust that clarity is forming, even when you cannot yet see the full picture. It asks you to keep moving without the guarantee of immediate confirmation.

That is where strength develops.

You begin to learn how to hold multiple possibilities without rushing to resolve them. You begin to trust your ability to choose, even if the first choice is not perfect. You begin to understand that clarity is not something you find instantly. It is something you build through engagement, reflection, and continued action.

The noise in your mind is not evidence that you are off track.

It is evidence that you are no longer confined to a single way of thinking.

Growth often feels like disruption before it feels like direction.

Stay with it.

The clarity you are looking for is not absent. It is forming beneath the surface of that noise, waiting for you to give it time, space, and consistent forward movement.

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