by Brad Bollenbach

Update (Sep 4, 2010): Due to the overwhelming, and ongoing popularity of this post (over 22,000 comments and counting!), I’ve recently started working on a new tool to make tracking and sharing your progress quitting drinking a whole lot easier and more fun.

It’s called Quitfest. Please feel free to check it out!

Lonely Drunk

There are better things in life than alcohol, but alcohol makes up for not having them.

– Terry Pratchett

My maternal grandparents were both alcoholics. It’s for this reason that I can’t remember my grandpa’s funeral: I was only four. This is also why my grandma has meticulously avoided alcohol for over 20 years. If there’s anything to the rumours about alcoholism being influenced by heredity, I’m probably tagged.

My own consumption patterns change. Sometimes I’ll go through periods of several months having three or four drinks, three to five times a week. Sometimes I’ll restrict my consumption to social occasions. For about five months starting last December, in my quest to master the art of talking to strangers, my social life became two full-time jobs. I was constantly going out to social events, clubs, bars, museum parties, and everything in between. Despite temptation, I rarely drank.

Last month, I quit drinking alcohol again. I’d like to tell you that it was a struggle. I’d like to pretend that it’s almost impossible to stay sober at a social occasion where everyone else is burping bubbles. I’d like to imagine myself as more determined and disciplined than all the rest, and that’s what pulled me through.

But the truth is that I’m ruthlessly normal. And if you want to end your relationship with alcohol, right here, right now, It’s Not That Hard.

I’m guessing that most people who choose to quit drinking are not alcoholics. My intent is to offer here an action plan that anyone can apply, whether you’re nursing an addiction or just want to enjoy the benefits of uninterrupted sobriety.

Why Stop Drinking?

The long-term effects of bad habits are rarely sufficient to motivate people to change their lives. The near-term benefits of giving up alcohol are much more useful and interesting anyway. Here are the changes I experienced:

  • Productive socializing. Talking to strangers is a great way to build character, but its benefits are greatly reduced when you’re drunk. The alcohol represses much of the social anxiety, which inhibits lasting change. But the only thing more terrifyingly fun than getting drunk and meeting a bunch of new people is staying sober and meeting a bunch of new people.
  • Avoid the McPilgrimage. Clearly, there’s a conspiracy between the fast food industry and the liquor industry. Free will collapses under the weight of insobriety and convenience. With enough alcohol in your system, even the most wretched burger joint becomes an irresistible sanctuary.
  • Reclaim lost time. Let’s say you have a few drinks around the house, three times a week, and that light touch of drunkenness costs you three hours of productive thinking each time. Within one year, you’ll have shaved about one full month off your life. That’s a lot of lost CPU time that could have been put towards reading a book, writing a speech, playing a sport, or even starting a business. And this doesn’t even count the time lost waiting for your brain to resolidify the morning after a night on the town.
  • Get rich quickly. You don’t have to party that hard to spend $100-$150/week or more on alcohol and related expenses. If you quit drinking today, you could reasonably expect to convert that choice into a bankroll for backpacking around the world in about six months.
  • Become an early riser. I’m currently readjusting my sleep schedule to wake up at 5:30 AM, seven days a week. Alcohol, and the lifestyle that often accompanies it, work against this process. Alcohol makes me feel tired when I want to feel energetic and awake. Ironically, it also increases wakefulness during sleep.

You can probably think of other instantly gratifying benefits to life beyond the bottle. The important thing is to actually have a reason that is important enough to you.

Make It Priority Number One

Giving up alcohol is one of the easiest and hardest changes you can make in your life.

It’s easy once you’ve established the right rules, configured your environment to support you, and set up useful boundaries of pain and pleasure to help direct you towards your goal. The hard parts are the social implications and fighting off the One Man Army that is your ego, with its barrage of self-limiting beliefs and drink requests.

Giving up alcohol must be made priority number one in your life. A partial commitment is a commitment to failure. Even if you already don’t drink that often, it will be tempting to break your own rules when your friends call you up and invite you out. You’ve got to be willing to prioritize this decision in every situation where it’s relevant, even when that means Just Saying No to pub night.

It’s Not a Big Deal

Ever notice how some people act as though the end of their relationship is the end of the world? It’s as if there’s no point in living if they can’t be with that person any longer. Yet other people come along and date that person who left them, eventually break up with them, and see it as hardly more than a blip on the radar.

You may feel that it’s pretty easy to give up drinking. Or you may feel that it’s an addiction with a stranglehold on your life. Either way, there is no inherent magnitude to this task. It’s as big or as small as you make it.

No matter how much you want to tell yourself how hard it is, nobody’s ever going to claim that learned helplessness was the secret to their success. The most effective way forward is to not only make quitting drinking a top priority, but to think, talk, and act like it can be done.

Become the Impartial Spectator

Whether you view it as a spiritual separation, or merely conceptual, we all have more than one self. There’s the “Mmmmm…beeeer…” self, and the impartial spectator that can detach from and observe this desire.

Let the latter voice be your authority. You’re allowed to want a drink as much as you’re allowed to choose not to have one. There’s tremendous power in observing your thoughts as a third party. The impartial spectator can feel the heat without getting burned.

When in doubt, let it be there. No matter how bad the storm seems, it will pass.

Commit to 30 Days

If you’ve never done it before, it can be hard to think of giving up drinking forever. It’s discouraging to commit to permanent change, only to back out a few days or weeks into it. Some people will face social friction and lifestyle changes for which they’re unprepared.

But life is a laboratory. It’s an adventure that takes shape through hypothesis and experimentation, and most decisions can be reverted. When it comes to making big changes like this, live before you leap. Promise yourself that you will commit to this 100%, but only for 30 days, and see how it goes.

This is exactly what I did last month. I promised myself that November would be alcohol-free, and it was. Truth be told, I had a few drinks on day 31. But I broke the negative pattern that was creeping up on me and gained back the energy to spend on more important activities. And I’ve repeatedly proven to myself that I can give up alcohol whenever I feel like, whenever it seems like the right thing to do.

Dump Your Existing Stash

Any goal that’s important to you is important enough to start on right now. My 30-day challenge to give up alcohol started at about 3:00 AM on a Saturday morning. I had just gotten back from a post-nightclub McPilgrimage with some friends. I had a great time. I met lots of people. I even ended up dating a girl I met that night.

But I was really annoyed by how much I’d poured into me that night, at succumbing to the resulting Big Mac temptation, and at how much I was going to regret the hangover. As soon as I got home, the challenge was on. I had one last beer in my fridge, which I ceremoniously poured down the kitchen sink.

If you’re serious about doing this, get rid of your alcohol. If you’ve got $300 worth of spirits in your cabinet and you’re not yet sure if you want to empty it all down the drain, only to change your mind in 30 days, then store it at a friend’s place during your probation period. Preferably a friend that doesn’t drink.

Advertise Your Decision

I told most of my friends about what I was doing. Not only only does this add accountability to your goal, it also drops the hint that if your friends are planning on going out and getting wasted, you’re probably not interested.

Of course, you don’t have to avoid social situations where you’ll be the only one not drinking. I’ve gone out stone sober many times–even on my own–and met loads of people. Once you get used to social skydiving, you no longer need alcohol’s permission to talk to strangers and have a good time. You can get to that place by either getting hammered out of your face, or by learning to just not care what other people think. Frankly, the latter is way more fun.

Fire Your Drinking Buddies

Alcohol may be so tightly integrated into your social life that it seems almost impossible to go an entire weekend without drinking. If the only thing you have in common with your friends is that you like the same lagers, you might want to consider finding new friends.

I’ve let go of people in my social circle before and I know it’s not easy–but that doesn’t make it unnecessary. This might be the hardest thing you do in choosing a life without alcohol. The key is to remember that friends are an abundant resource. Having a strong social circle is purely a function of the effort you invest into it. That includes choosing to associate only with people who are aligned with your purpose, while avoiding the energy vampires.

This is another benefit of a 30-day commitment. Instead of permanently downsizing your social life, you can choose to be busy only for the next few weeks. Observe how it affects you when you stop spending time with your beer buddies. Join a local user group for something you’re interested in to bring yourself into contact with people with whom you share more than just a bar tab.

Bribe Yourself

I haven’t used this specific technique for giving up alcohol, but I have used it with much success in bulldozing my way through a wall of social anxiety.

Associate massive pain to backing out. To create that pain, visit your nearest bank machine. Withdraw an amount of money that you’d feel uncomfortable losing. Give it to a friend you trust. Tell them that you get your money back if, and only if, you don’t have a drop of alcohol until your 30 days are up. You’ll be surprised at how even the most difficult tasks become doable when you associate massive pain to breaking your own rules. Money can be a great way to make it hurt. If you can think of an even better form of self-bribery, go for it.

The stronger you feel that alcohol is a part of your life, the more of these techniques you may want to apply. My most recent alcohol-free challenge didn’t require bribery or letting go of any friends. But I did find it extremely useful to limit the challenge to 30 days, to give myself permission to live the lifestyle before leaping to a permanent decision.

I also think that making this a top priority is key, no matter what your current consumption habits. It’s so easy to let yourself slip for just one night, and then feel guilty about breaching your own contract later on.



Comments
  1. Richard says:

    Interesting article on msn.com. I was worried the author would mention this site, but didn’t.

    http://lifestyle.msn.com/your-life/just-dreaming/articlees.aspx?cp-documentid=23563178&gt1=32001

    Key I am so happy for you. You have really struggled and now through perseverance – 3 weeks. Great job!

    I haven’t had a chance to read back, but I am looking forward to catching up.
    Shout out to Johan, MJ, RR, Pep, Scout, Carol, Gypsy, Cricket, Grayson (hang in there), Ernesto, Booboo, Faith, Lighthouse, Apologies to those I missed, and all the new islanders.

    Viva La Isla

  2. mj says:

    You start believing your own press and you feel you can step out (again). Would love to hear from some of the old guard from 30zzz – you can comment and let us know what’s happening, abstinence, moderating, or otherwise.

    scout:: very nice post on the relationship equation. Really hit home hard (in a nice way).

    Rrr:: thanks for the update and best to you and yours working through it.

    johan:: hoping to hear more on the home front… always very interesting stuff. Gawd, spring is around the corner, isn’t it?

    Jeanne:: your updates always ring so true. The wine thing over our way (too) is always in your face.

    Peppermint: thanks again for sticking around well after you’ve gone deep on the ‘days’.

    key:: awesome on the ‘personal best’. Drive on!

    Nj, earl, George, kiki, PatriciaAnn61, TW (welcome back):: great to have you all here (and hear your words).

    Richard:: nice to see ya around.

  3. Richard says:

    MJ- glad to see you here, holding down the huts.

    After going 7 months sober I started to dabble here and there with a few. I would say that it has become almost a nightly ritual again; however, I am so aware where that can lead and stay on guard.

    I have not gotten drunk or binged since moderating nor do I feel the desire too. I don’t drink because of problems or stress or because I have to. I still sleep well. I feel like I’m still sober, I just have a glass or a beer. Believe me; it takes all the effort and knowledge I acquired here to stay within limits.

    (I do not recommend moderation for anyone here.)

    I do know that I will do another 30 – 60 – 90 soon. It feels so good.

    Viva La Isla

  4. Johan says:

    Richard – nice to know you are still checking in. Interesting article, and definately hit home in the description of 30.

    mj – things are good here. Electrical inspector just passed my shop after about 5 minutes of poking around. It’s obvious it’s done right but makes me wonder why it cost me 170 bucks. Welcome to Canada, the ultimate taxation destination. The building inspector basically told me the only thing wrong with my shop was that it wasn’t on his property…
    Spent the weekend ice fishing, out 10km from shore in all directions. Kind of intimidating considering is was 10C and you had to wear sunscreen. There were mini cities out there on the ice, with trucks, cars, atvs, planes, snow machines, and even helicopters. Thousands of people all fishing and socializing. Quite a site! the ice was good but I suspect will start to get hairy the next little while. Other than that just trying to get through the no smoking thing, not finding it that easy but getting through it. What’s happening in your neck of the woods?

  5. Peppermint says:

    mj-Thanks friend.

    Richard-So glad to hear from you. I look forward to hearing from you again.

    Johan-I like your comment, “Working on being the
    best that I can be.” It is nice to know that we are in control and not super charging the arguments with our loved ones these days with lethal alcohol. It is also easier to just walk away and let it settle. Women are from Venus and Men are from Mars is so true. We don’t think the same. Us drinkers are also so tender hearted, which is why we took it up with such gusto, and our feelings are hurt easily. Especially at first. The last thing that we need to feel is like we are outcasts; but in a way we are in a our little circle of life. I covered several subjects in this paragraph but it is just free flowing today.

    Scout- That was a very nice post to RR. I, too, miss the romance of the wine and I sometimes feel deprived, and so does my husband. There are no options for me and so I must be selfish.

    kiki-You are right-the alcohol won’t help you on your job search. Hope you stay.

    earl-It will get better. Don’t give up.

    Love,
    Peppermint

  6. Peppermint says:

    Grayson?

  7. Peppermint says:

    Us drinkers..Just laughing at my English..I guess that is the way we articulate in my little part of the world..

  8. martha says:

    Hi Everyone,

    It’s great to read of everyone’s successes and determination, no matter what stage of the challenge.

    I just wanted to check in and say hi and post a little about what has been working for me. Let me preface my post by saying that I’m not advocating moderation.

    Almost a year ago I completed the 30 day challenge (actually 40 plus days). I became really worked up toward the end of the challenge about where I would go from there. I didn’t think moderation was the answer, but lifetime sobriety seemed overwhelming. It had been so easy to psyche myself up for the 30 day challenge, but I didn’t have anything in place to help me with the possible new challenge of lifetime sobriety. I did not think AA was for me. Anyway, I fell back into my habit of a bottle of wine a night most nights of the week. I then stopped and started the 30 day challenge several times, becoming more frustrated each time I would fail. Those false starts caused me a lot of worry and stress. I really beat myself up about it.

    About three months ago, I got into the swing of an exercise routine and started Weight Watchers. The drinking just naturally took a back seat. Losing my desire for an evening drink may have been because I started running much later in the day and felt a “natural high” all the way through the evening….who knows. An alcoholic drink just sounded kind of gross after all that exercise. In addition to that natural, effortless distancing from alcohol, it then occurred to me in a Weight Watcher’s meeting that I really had several areas of my life that needed reining in. I began to recognize a pattern in my consumption of food, exercise, alcohol, reading of parenting/self help books, gardening, volunteering, etc. I don’t eat a slice of great bread, I have the loaf (ok, not all the time), I don’t plant a few varieties of tomatoes, I plant 18, I don’t read one or two parenting books, I get everything that sounds remotely helpful and half-ass my way through them all. Anyway, my point is that I realized that sobriety would be a pipe dream if I didn’t address my overarching behavior. Now I’m focusing on just enjoying, really enjoying, that one slice of bread, that one motivating book, etc.

    I’d like to think I’ll never drink again. But I know that for myself, that’s not going to happen until I get a firm grip on that part of my personality that overdoes just about everything. Slowly, I feel that happening. I’ve never been very patient but can see that a slow progression to new, better habits is what’s going to get me where I need to be.

    I’m much happier and hopeful now. I hope this post speaks to anyone out there who has completed the 30 day challenge, has had some slips, and is trying to find their way to lifetime sobriety.

    Love,

    Martha

  9. ACH says:

    Day 6 almost done… still feel good:) I’m nervous because my first test will be bowling on Thursday. I’m in a league (thank goodness it’s almost over) and I usually have at least a pitcher of beer. Wish me luck!!!

  10. ACH says:

    KiKi,

    I feel your pain…. I’m also looking for employment (a car accident and layoffs). I talked to a counselor and he said I associate my self worth with my career. Needless to say my worth was and still is pretty low. It made it so easy to drink my sorrows away. I think if I had a job it would still be difficult but I wouldn’t constantly be thinking about wanting to drink.

    I now am starting to feel better already and just taking it day by day… moment by moment if needed.

    Hang in there!!

  11. kiki says:

    thank you ach feeling much better!

  12. Aries Mom says:

    Hi all, surprise, I’ve not disappeared entirely… it’s been a very very long time since I have posted. I think the week after super bowl if I remember correctly? So I have officially slipped, but have not crashed entirely which is the bright spot. I have had a glass of wine maybe every other week since then, about which I am not sure how I feel… I think the 30+ day sobriety changed my body chemistry so much that I just don’t crave it anymore, even after I have a glass at a dinner party. I did have several beers at a big neighborhood bash last weekend which I regret (the beer part – the party was great) so I attribute that to further understanding my limits. I haven’t posted in such a long time because I honestly wasn’t sure how I would be received, as I am sort of figuring out whether extreme moderation and control can work for me (keeping in the back of my mind all the wise words from those of you who have tried the “I can now control it” route and eventually fell back into the same old destructive patterns). I am thrilled that my mindset has not changed significantly – I do not wish to get drunk and I have not done so at all since December 29, 2009. I came pretty close at the party last weekend but it was a very mild time compared to others in recent memory prior to 12/29. If I choose to keep on the path I am now, which is to have a glass at very special occasions, will it not be the right fit for me to keep posting? I’d love to hear from you guys. I hope you are all well – I have missed you!!

  13. earl says:

    couldnt make it through the day i truely hate myself im sad and disgusted 3- 40 oz beers and a liter of captian morgans why do all the posts i read sound so easy

  14. earl says:

    sorry self pitty you are all doing so great i wish u the best

  15. key says:

    Earl–welcome. It hasn’t been easy for anybody! Read back and continue to read forward and you will see that nobody is having it easy. My recent posts for the past 21 days have sounded like I’m having an easy time, but if you go all the way back to June of last year you will see that I had a horrible summer and several bad times all the way up to the day I finally quit, Ash Wednesday. I re-started almost once per week since June. I managed 18 days in October and that’s the longest I made in since June. I have 21 days now…3 weeks and it feels like a lifetime because I drank so much, but it’s really not long in the grand view. You just have to try. Start the next time you wake up and post 3 times per day. We’ll all right here.

  16. earl says:

    about my self hereditary disease or learned behavier who knows i took my first steps chasing a beer can by age 3 was stealing cans to drink then in the 80’s was passin joints(for cousins)and sniffin the smoke to get high by age 12 was smoking weed everyday 15 gave up weed itterfered with my alcohal buzz age 16 started having children aand drinking more age 32 3 children with woman who hated me age 33 divorced 33 she passes away im trying to fight the good fight i have 3 wonderful reasons to do so but as you all know its not easy

  17. Lee says:

    earl: Visiting and posting on this site is a great step towards lasting change. Don’t give up the fight.

    It hasn’t been easy for me either, as many on here know. I stop for 3-4 days, then drink a few days, then stop again…lather, rinse, repeat (as key says).

    I’m back on Day 2, but in all of my starts and stops, I have cut down on my drinking significantly. I only drank one day last week. That is a HUGE improvement for me.

    I refuse to give up trying. I WILL complete 30 days.

    Peace,
    Lee

  18. Jeanne1 says:

    Earl welcome…. your not alone with your struggles. Perhaps set a date to quit and then cut down on your way to the quit date.
    Key way to go. I’m back to day one. …….
    Good show on the shop johan….. You must be great at every thing you do…..
    Annie nice to hear from you, Richard too….
    well short time this morning. Back later.
    Peppermint thanks to wit all your awesome words and strenght.
    j

  19. TW says:

    Good Morning everyone,

    Start of day 7, how exciting. When I make it thru today it will be one whole week…woo hoo. That is a big accomplishment for me. Now if I could stop eating. I am afraid I going to substitute one bad thing for another. Food is not as bad as alcohol tho. I have walked for lunch the last couple of day, hope to keep up with that. Supposed to rain rest of week, but spring is on the horizon.

    Will post later,
    TW

  20. scout says:

    Martha,

    Thank you for posting – there are all kinds of relationships with alcohol out there and we each need to figure out what ours is, what makes it tick, and be responsible about it, it seems. Some of us struggle mightily to get this sorted out – I know I not only struggled, I just plain avoided the terror that such a reckoning would cause me. It wasn’t until I humiliated myself totally on Christmas eve of 2008 that I knew it would be less terrifying to meet the O)(*#$(* problem head on that it was to keep avoiding it.

    It seems that figuring out what’s going on that allows us to follow the path we really desire is really at the root. Or, actually maybe it’s easier to figure out what keeps us from that path than it is to learn how to successfully follow it.

    Either way, really stepping back and observing one’s self as a diver-inner – one who takes on everything with a vengeance…seems to be the important thing. I know others here and I include myself there, would identify as a “diver-inners” and It is something I’ve only really observed (and not articulately) in the past year – though I’ve had the habit for a long long time. So, your efforts to find balance….this is an interesting place to focus. I wish you all the best, Martha, it sounds like you are doing just the right thing for yourself.

    It was good to hear from you dear heart.
    Scout

  21. key says:

    Earl how did your ex – wife die?

  22. key says:

    Earl–how did your ex wife die?

  23. ACH says:

    Day 7 …… I’m struggling today:( I just saw one of those dumb beer commercials and craving a beer. It’s a nice day and I’m frustrated with this stupid economy and the lack of jobs….. I just wanna go get some beer and sit on my back porch and drink…. I’m going to the gym instead ugh :(

  24. key says:

    Hang in there ACH. You don’t want to loose all your days and have to start over on a Friday….almost impossible. Just think how proud you will be come Monday when you are past a week, past a weekend, and into double digits!

  25. Gypsie says:

    Hi ACH I am getting laid off soon-not sure of the calendar date but the BigGuns have been out and given the warning -anyway, I think your post is very inspirational to me that you are going to work out instead of chosing to sit and consume adult beverages- I hope something comes your way real soon and am glad you are taking care of yourself. I am giving it my best to do the same, it is very challenging.

  26. key says:

    I’m bummed out today. PMS and my son broke an important rule yesterday. It’s depressing. Not driving me to drink or anything, just a bummer. Did not smoke (yet) today. We’ll see how the rest of the day goes. I’ve trained myself not to consider drinking an option though. It doesn’t help and makes things much worse actually and I’ve finally realized that.

  27. Peppermint says:

    Key-
    My adult children can at times be a big source of frustration. This frustration causes me to want to seek a calm place that could often times be found in a bottle. It takes training, which you are doing, to not allow this to be an option. It is very admirable that you are able to recognize and control this desire. Hang in there-
    Love,
    Peppermint

  28. ACH says:

    Well……. I made it:) Went to the gym and took all of my frustrations out on a treadmill! A dumb beer commercial came on while I was jogging and all it did was made me more angry!! I just can’t believe how much this has/had control of me and how difficult it is not to drink. I think I had myself convinced that I had it all under control. Not even close….

    And Key sorry you’re having a depressing day hang in there. I do want to tell you that your encouragement helped send me to the gym instead of the back porch:) Thanks!!

    Thanks Gypsie I’m gonna keep on applying and searching…. as we all say keep on keeping on… one day or moment at a time… sober….

  29. Jeanne1 says:

    Richard the thanks for the web site.. hit home for me… perhaps that’s why I have not gotten past dayy 11…..
    My business has taken off this last couple of weeks. I am very tired mentally and physically. It is health related, i’m an np, acupunturist with a long background in research for molecular biology, and I do massage. I don’t really like just western, eastern medicine. I combine everything. I love it.
    I am having panic attacks because I am not living what I teach. Makes me feel like a looser. Also I have noticed I take on the energy of my patients… need to care for me. I drank today. A whole day wasted, I planned on doing spring cleaning and just could not muster up the energy, and now I feel depressed. I managed to exercise and walk… making dinner without wine.
    help… I just ordered herb for alcohol desire, now I need to find someone to help me….. not my type around here. That’s why it took so long for it to take off.
    Don’t get me wrong I am really greatful to be busy.
    I’m ranting.
    j
    way to go key……I love to see your numbers climb..I’ve watched you and you sound awesome.
    Peppermint you too……I remember your struggles and now I see such wonderful energy.
    tw weird how hungry one gets….. way to go.
    Richard hang in there, and stay close. I didn’t drink for over 7 years and it sneaks up on you….
    Not that it will you…but
    kiki, ach welcome….
    Johan just cant muster up the trust on ice to drive on it….. Lot’s of ice fishing here too.
    no helicopters though….raining today. Sun has been shining for days. About ready to make a fire in the fire pit….bay still frozen over. Weird on morning after a storm all the Ice is just gone. It’s so beautiful. Looks like a battle field with the sand and ice pushed up in odd formations now. Mother Nature sure is a power…
    what are you fishing for????…
    well enough for now. not a good year for perch here.

  30. Gypsie says:

    Well, got my date! April 6th is the layoff- did not work-out today because that little one pictured> brought mouse in this morning and I spent all my time catching it and releasing it back into the yard-nice huh? still, managed to make it to work on time just the same. so tonight I am just over everything and don’t feel like working out even though it may help me -rather just veg. 4 weeks of employment left. I’ll try to stay. it will be a challenge.

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