Spiritual Insights
(A Collection of Spiritual Teachings)
Part 4
1. The religious man is again
one-dimensional, just as the scientist is. Albert Einstein is one-dimensional,
so is Gautama the Buddha. And because the East has become one-dimensionally
religious it has suffered much. And now the West is suffering much, and the cause
is one-dimensionality. The West is bankrupt as far as the inner world is
concerned and the East is bankrupt as far as the outer world is concerned.
The East is not accidentally poor
and starving. It has chosen to be that way. It has denied science; it has even
denied the world of objective reality. It says the world is illusory. If the
world is illusory, how can you create a science? The very first requirement is
missing. You cannot create a science out of maya, illusion. How can you create
a science out of something which is not, which does not even exist? If you deny
the world, you have denied the dimension of science altogether.
That is the reason
why the East is poor and starving. And unless the Eastern genius understands
this, we can go on importing science from the West but it will not get roots
into our beings. If our approach remains the same as it has been for five
thousand years, science will only be something foreign. That's how it is.
2. What does Buddha mean by
"desire"? Desire means your whole mind. Desire means not to be here
now. Desire means moving somewhere in the future which is not yet. Desire means
a thousand and one ways of escaping from the present. Desire is equivalent to
mind. In Buddha's terminology, desire is mind.
And desire is time
too. When I say desire is time too, I don't mean the clock time, I mean the
psychological time. How do you create future in your mind? -- by desiring. You
want to do something tomorrow, you have created the tomorrow; otherwise the
tomorrow is nowhere yet, it has not come. But you want to do something
tomorrow, and because you want to do something tomorrow you have created a
psychological tomorrow.
3. The man who lives in the future
lives a counterfeit life. He does not really live, he only pretends to live. He
hopes to live, he desires to live, but he never lives. And the tomorrow never
comes, it is always today. And whatsoever comes is always now and here, and he
does not know how to live now-here; he knows only how to escape from now-here.
The way to escape is called "desire," tanha -- that is Buddha's word
for what is an escape from the present, from the real into the unreal.
The man who desires is an
escapist.
Now, this is very strange, that mediators
are thought to be escapists. That is utter nonsense. Only the meditator is not
an escapist -- everybody else is. Meditation means getting out of desire,
getting out of thoughts, getting out of mind. Meditation means relaxing in the
moment, in the present. Meditation is the only thing in the world which is not
escapist, although it is thought to be the most escapist thing. People who
condemn meditation always condemn it with the argument that it is escape,
escaping from life. They are simply talking nonsense; they don't understand
what they are saying.
Meditation is not
escaping from life: it is escaping into life. Mind is escaping from life,
desire is escaping from life.
4. Buddha is not
for prayer, he is for meditation, because prayer is again somehow a kind of
desiring. When you pray, you desire. Prayer is always for the future; prayer
means you are asking for something. You may not be asking for money, you may be
asking for God himself, but it is the same. Ask, and you have moved away.
Meditation is a state of no asking, no questioning, and no thinking. Prayer is
still part of thinking -- a beautiful thinking, but thinking is thinking; a
beautiful prison, but a prison is still a prison.
Meditation is a
state of no-mind. Prayer is a state of religious mind, but mind is there. And
when it has the beautiful garment of religiousness around it, it becomes even
more dangerous.
5. What is meditation? It does
not mean meditating upon something; the English word is misleading. In English
there is no word adequate enough to translate Buddha's word sammasati. It has
been translated as meditation, as right mindfulness, as awareness, as
consciousness, alertness, watchfulness, witnessing -- but there is not really a
single word which has the quality of sammasati.
Sammasati means: consciousness
is, but without any content. There is no thought, no desire, nothing is stirred
in you. You are not contemplating about God or about great things...nature and
its beauty, the Bible, the Koran, the Vedas, and their immensely significant
statements. You are not contemplating! You are not concentrating on any special
object either. You are not chanting a mantra, because those are all things of
the mind, those are all contents of the mind. You are not doing anything! The
mind is utterly empty, and you are simply there in that emptiness. A kind of
presence, a pure presence, with nowhere to go -- utterly relaxed into oneself,
at rest, at home. That is the meaning of Buddha's meditation.
And nobody else
has ever reached such a beautiful expression about meditation as Buddha. Many
people have attained, but nobody has been so expressive, so capable of
conveying the message, as the Buddha.
6. Mind is confusion. Thoughts
and thoughts -- thousands of thoughts clamoring, clashing, fighting with each
other, fighting for your attention. Thousands of thoughts pulling you into
thousands of directions. It is a miracle how you go on keeping yourself
together. Somehow you manage this togetherness -- it is only somehow, it is
only a facade. Deep behind it there is a clamoring crowd, a civil war, a continuous
civil war. Thoughts fighting with each other, thoughts wanting you to fulfill
them. It is a great confusion, what you call your mind.
But if you are aware that the
mind is confusion, and you don't get identified with the mind, you will never
fall. You will become fall proof! The mind will become impotent. And because
you will be watching continuously, your energies will slowly be withdrawn, away
from the mind; it will not be nourished any more.
7. You will have to relax from
the circumference. The first step in relaxing is the body. Remember as many
times as possible to look in the body, whether you are carrying some tension in
the body somewhere -- at the neck, in the head, in the legs. Relax it consciously.
Just go to that part of the body, and persuade that part, say to it lovingly
"Relax!"
And you will be surprised that if
you approach any part of your body, it listens, it follows you -- it is your
body! With closed eyes, go inside the body from the toe to the head searching
for any place where there is a tension. And then talk to that part as you talk
to a friend; let there be a dialogue between you and your body. Tell it to
relax, and tell it, "There is nothing to fear. Don't be afraid. I am here to
take care -- you can relax." Slowly slowly, you will learn the knack of
it. Then the body becomes relaxed.
Then take another step, a little
deeper; tell the mind to relax. And if the body listens, mind also listens, but
you cannot start with the mind -- you have to start from the beginning. You
cannot start from the middle. Many people start with the mind and they fail;
they fail because they start from a wrong place. Everything should be done in
the right order.
If you become capable of relaxing
the body voluntarily, then you will be able to help your mind relax
voluntarily. Mind is a more complex phenomenon. Once you have become confident
that the body listens to you, you will have a new trust in yourself. Now even
the mind can listen to you. It will take a little longer with the mind, but it
happens.
When the mind is relaxed, then
start relaxing your heart, the world of your feelings, emotions -- which is
even more complex, more subtle. But now you will be moving with trust, with
great trust in yourself. Now you will know it is possible. If it is possible
with the body and possible with the mind, it is possible with the heart too.
And then only, when you have gone through these three steps, can you take the
fourth. Now you can go to the innermost core of your being, which is beyond
body, mind, heart: the very center of your existence. And you will be able to
relax it too.
And that relaxation certainly
brings the greatest joy possible, the ultimate in ecstasy, acceptance. You will
be full of bliss and rejoicing. Your life will have the quality of dance to it.
8. The whole of existence is
dancing, except man. The whole of existence is in a very relaxed movement;
movement there is, certainly, but it is utterly relaxed. Trees are growing and
birds are chirping and rivers are flowing, stars are moving: everything is
going in a very relaxed way. No hurry, no haste, no worry, and no waste. Except
man. Man has fallen a victim of his mind.
Man can rise above gods and fall
below animals. Man has a great spectrum. From the lowest to the highest, man is
a ladder.
And once the mind
dies, you are born as a no-mind. That birth is enlightenment. That birth brings
you for the first time to the land of peace, the lotus paradise. It brings you
to the world of bliss, benediction. Otherwise you remain in hell. Right now you
are in hell. But if you resolve, if you decide, if you choose consciousness,
right now you can take a jump, a leap from hell into heaven.
9. Your so-called religions have
made you very tense, because they have created guilt in you. My effort here is
to help you get rid of all guilt and all fear. I would like to tell you: there
is no hell and no heaven. So don't be afraid of hell and don't be greedy for
heaven.
All that exists is
this moment. You can make this moment a hell or a heaven -- that certainly is
possible -- but there is no heaven or hell somewhere else. Hell is when you are
all tense, and heaven is when you are all relaxed. Total relaxation is
paradise.
10. Start relaxing. Start from
the circumference -- that's where we are, and we can start only from where we
are. Relax the circumference of your being -- relax your body, relax your
behavior, relax your acts. Walk in a relaxed way, eat in a relaxed way, talk,
listen in a relaxed way. Slow down every process. Don't be in a hurry and don't
be in haste. Move as if all eternity is available to you -- in fact, it is
available to you. We are here from the beginning and we are going to be here to
the very end, if there is a beginning and there is an end. In fact, there is no
beginning and no end. We have always been here and we will be here always.
Forms go on changing, but not the substance; garments go on changing, but not
the soul.
11.Tension means hurry, fear,
doubt. Tension means a constant effort to protect, to be secure, to be safe.
Tension means preparing for the tomorrow now, or for the afterlife -- afraid
tomorrow you will not be able to face the reality, so be prepared. Tension
means the past that you have not lived really but only somehow bypassed; it
hangs, it is a hangover, it surrounds you.
Remember one very fundamental
thing about life: any experience that has not been lived will hang around you,
will persist: "Finish me! Live me! Complete me!" There is an
intrinsic quality in every experience that it tends and wants to be finished,
completed. Once completed, it evaporates; incomplete, it persists, it tortures you,
it haunts you, it attracts your attention. It says, "What are you going to
do about me? I am still incomplete -- fulfill me!"
Your whole past hangs around you
with nothing completed -- because nothing has been lived really, everything
somehow bypassed, partially lived, only so-so, in a lukewarm way. There has
been no intensity, no passion. You have been moving like a somnambulist, a
sleepwalker. So that past hangs, and the future creates fear. And between the
past and the future is crushed your present, the only reality.
You will have to relax from the
circumference. The first step in relaxing is the body. Remember as many times
as possible to look in the body, whether you are carrying some tension in the
body somewhere -- at the neck, in the head, in the legs. Relax it consciously.
Just go to that part of the body, and persuade that part, say to it lovingly
"Relax!"
And you will be surprised that if
you approach any part of your body, it listens, it follows you -- it is your
body! With closed eyes, go inside the body from the toe to the head searching
for any place where there is a tension. And then talk to that part as you talk
to a friend; let there be a dialogue between you and your body. Tell it to
relax, and tell it, "There is nothing to fear. Don't be afraid. I am here
to take care -- you can relax." Slowly slowly, you will learn the knack of
it. Then the body becomes relaxed.
Then take another step, a little
deeper; tell the mind to relax. And if the body listens, mind also listens, but
you cannot start with the mind -- you have to start from the beginning. You
cannot start from the middle. Many people start with the mind and they fail;
they fail because they start from a wrong place. Everything should be done in
the right order.
If you become capable of relaxing
the body voluntarily, then you will be able to help your mind relax
voluntarily. Mind is a more complex phenomenon. Once you have become confident
that the body listens to you, you will have a new trust in yourself. Now even
the mind can listen to you. It will take a little longer with the mind, but it
happens.
When the mind is relaxed, then
start relaxing your heart, the world of your feelings, emotions -- which is
even more complex, more subtle. But now you will be moving with trust, with
great trust in yourself. Now you will know it is possible. If it is possible
with the body and possible with the mind, it is possible with the heart too.
And then only, when you have gone through these three steps, can you take the
fourth. Now you can go to the innermost core of your being, which is beyond
body, mind, heart: the very center of your existence. And you will be able to
relax it too. And that relaxation certainly brings the greatest joy possible,
the ultimate in ecstasy, acceptance. You will be full of bliss and rejoicing.
Your life will have the quality of dance to it.
12.The whole of existence is
dancing, except man. The whole of existence is in a very relaxed movement;
movement there is, certainly, but it is utterly relaxed. Trees are growing and
birds are chirping and rivers are flowing, stars are moving: everything is
going in a very relaxed way. No hurry, no haste, no worry, and no waste. Except
man. Man has fallen a victim of his mind.
Man can rise above
gods and fall below animals. Man has a great spectrum. From the lowest to the
highest, man is a ladder.
13.The body
is very limited; it has a simple polarity: food and sex. It moves like a
pendulum between these two, food and sex; it has nothing more to it. But if you
are identified with the mind, then mind has many dimensions. You can be
interested in philosophy, you can be interested in science, you can be
interested in religion -- you can be interested in as many things as you can imagine.
If you are identified with the heart, then your desires will be of a still
higher nature, higher than the mind. You will become more aesthetic, more
sensitive, and more alert, more loving. The mind is aggressive, the heart is receptive.
The mind is male, the heart is female.The mind is logic, the heart is love.
So it depends where you are
stuck: at the body, at the mind, at the heart. These are the three most
important places from which one can function. But there is also the fourth in you;
in the East it is called TURIYA. Turiya simply means the fourth, the
transcendental.
If you are aware of your
transcendentalness, then all desires disappear. Then one simply IS with no
desire at all, with nothing to be asked, to be fulfilled. There is no future
and no past. Then one lives just in the moment, utterly contented, fulfilled.
In the fourth, your one-thousand-petaled lotus opens up; you become divine.
14. Inquire, look for the
exact place where you are. As far as I am concerned, all desire is a sheer
wastage, all wanting is wrong. But if you are identified with the body I cannot
say that to you because that will
be too far away from you. If you are identified with the body I will say: move a little
towards higher desires, the desires of the mind, and then a little higher, the desires of the
heart, and then ultimately to the state of desirelessness. No desire can ever be fulfilled.
This is the difference between the scientific approach and the religious
approach. Science tries to fulfill your desires and of course science has succeeded in doing many
things, but man remains in the same misery. Religion tries to wake you up to that great
understanding from where you can see that all desires are intrinsically unfulfillable.
One has to go beyond all
desires; only then is there contentment. Contentment is not at
the end of a desire,
contentment is not by fulfilling the desire, because the desire cannot be fulfilled. By the time you
come to the fulfillment of your desire, you will find a thousand and one other
desires have arisen. Each desire branches out into many new
desires. And again and again
it will happen, and your whole life will be wasted.
Those who have known, those
who have seen -- the buddhas, the awakened ones -- have
all agreed on one point. It
is not a philosophical thing, it is factual, the fact of the inner world: that contentment is
when all desires have been dropped. It is with the absence of the desires that contentment
arises within you -- in the absence. In fact, the very absence of desires IS
contentment, IS fulfillment, fruition, flowering.
15. Move from lower desires
to higher desires, from gross desires to more subtle
Desires, then to the
subtlest, because from the subtlest the jump into no-desire, into
desirelessness, is easy.
Desirelessness is NIRVANA.
Nirvana has two meanings. It
is one of the most beautiful words; any language can be
proud of this word. It has
two meanings, but those two meanings are like two sides of the same coin. One
meaning is cessation of the ego, and the other meaning is cessation of all desires.
It happens simultaneously. The ego and the desires are intrinsically together,
they are inseparably together. The moment ego dies, desires disappear, or vice
versa: the moment desires are transcended, ego is transcended. And to be desireless,
to be egoless,is to know the ultimate bliss, is to know the eternal ecstasy.
And that's what sannyas is all about: the quest for the eternal ecstasy that
begins but never ends.
16. To accept the challenge
of the unknown in spite of all fears, is courage. The fears are there, but if
you go on accepting the challenge again and again, slowly slowly those fears
disappear. The experience of the joy that the unknown brings, the great ecstasy
that starts happening with the unknown, makes you strong enough, gives you a
certain integrity,makes your intelligence sharp. For the first time you start
feeling that life is not just a boredom but an adventure. Then slowly slowly
fears disappear; then you are always seeking and searching for some adventure.
But basically courage is
risking the known for the unknown, the familiar for the
unfamiliar, the comfortable
for the uncomfortable arduous pilgrimage to some unknown
destination. One never knows
whether one will be able to make it or not. It is gambling,
but only the gamblers know
what life is.
17. All desires are insane!
The only sanity is to be
desireless.
The only sanity is to be
herenow.
This moment is more than
enough.
18. While you are listening
to a joke, if you can logically conclude what is going to happen,and if it
actually happens the way you concluded, then there will be no laughter because
there will be no build up of tension in the first place; and secondly, there will
be no sudden change. These two things are needed: a building up of tension so
you become more and more narrowed, more and more tense, and then suddenly an
unexpected turn --the punch line. It triggers a new process; the whole logic
falls flat. All jokes are illogical,and because they are illogical they bring
great laughter to you.
19. All perfectionists are neurotic. The very
effort to become perfect is obsessive -- it creates neurosis, it creates a sort
of madness. Then you will never be sane. The only sanity there is, is to accept
yourself as you are. Don't condemn, and don't judge. Don't make standards to
judge and don't make criteria to judge. Suddenly you see that you have started
moving, that the river is flowing. And the river reaches to the ocean of its
own accord; nobody needs to force it. The more you try to change yourself, the
more you will be in a vicious circle. And then guilt is created; and when you
feel guilty, you feel condemned, and when you feel condemned, in that
condemnation life becomes a hell. The hell does not exist somewhere; it exists
in a wrong attitude. Then you live in hell, and then your whole being is
surrounded by a nightmare.
20. Drop that nightmare. Start living and flowing
-- a deep let-go, acceptance. And wherever you move, don't be worried, because
God is everywhere. Wherever you reach, don't be worried: he is everywhere. You
cannot miss him. How can you miss him? That is impossible. You can go on
forgetting him, but you cannot miss him -- he is in you, he is everywhere; only
he is. But when you create the idea of guilt, for whatsoever reason, then you create
a gap; then you are surrounded by your own darkness. Drop that word guilt, and
always remember that words are very potential and powerful.
21. I am cutting the root of the disease itself. I
am not here to sell any medicine to you, but just to tell you how to cut the
very root of the disease. So remember, each stage is right, each stage is
necessary. Pass through each, and don't try to jump ahead.
22. And to be in trust is to be in ecstasy; to be
in trust is to be in God; to be in trust is to be fulfilled.
23. I say experiment with meditation. From another
angle try to understand it. Doubt means thinking. The more you doubt, the more
you can think. All great thinkers are skeptical -- have to be. Skepticism
creates thinking. When you say no, then thinking arises; if you say yes,
finished -- there is no need to think. When you say no, then you have to think.
Thinking is negative. Doubt is a basic necessity for thinking. People, who
cannot doubt, cannot think; they cannot become great thinkers. So, more doubt means
more thinking, more thinking means more doubt. Meditation is a way to come out
of thinking. Once the clouds of thoughts are not there, and the process of
thinking ceases, even for a single moment, you have a glimpse of your being.
24. One of the greatest thinkers in the West,
Descartes, has said, "I think, therefore I am." COGITO ERGO SUM. And
Descartes is the father of modern Western philosophy.'I think, therefore I
am.'Just the opposite has been the experience in the East. Buddha, Nagarjuna,
Sankara, Lao Tzu, Chuang Tzu, they will laugh, they will laugh tremendously
when they hear Descartes' dictum,'I think, therefore I am'; because they say,
"I don't think, therefore I am."
Because when thinking ceases, only then does one
know who one is. In a non-thinking state of consciousness one realizes one's
being, not by thinking, but by non-thinking. Meditation is non-thinking; it is
an effort to create a state of no-mind. Doubt is mind. In fact, to say
'doubting mind' is wrong; it is repetitive -- mind is doubt; doubt is mind.
When doubt ceases, mind ceases; or when mind ceases, doubt ceases. And then
self-evident truth arises within, a pinnacle of light, eternity, timelessness;
and then there is trust.
25. The whole world is full of pseudo-religious
people: churches, temples, gurudwaras, mosques, full of religious people. And
can't you see the world is absolutely irreligious? With so many religious
people, and the world is so irreligious, how is this miracle happening?
Everybody is religious, and the total is irreligiousness. The religion is
false. People have cultivated trust. Trust has become a belief, not an
experience. They have been taught to believe; they have not been taught to know
-- that's where humanity has missed. Never believe. If you cannot trust, it is
better to doubt, because through doubt, some day or other, the possibility will
arise; because you cannot live with doubt eternally. Doubt is disease; it is an
illness. In doubt you can never feel fulfilled; in doubt you will always
tremble, in doubt you will always remain in anguish and divided and indecisive.
In doubt you will remain in a nightmare; so one day or other you will start
seeking how to go beyond it. So I say it is good to be an atheist rather than a
theist, a pseudo-theist.
26. Conditioned to believe: believe in God,
believe in soul, believe in this and believe in that. Now that belief has
entered into your bones and your blood, but it remains a belief: you have not
known. And unless you know, you cannot be liberated. Knowledge liberates; only
knowing liberates. All beliefs are borrowed; others have given them to you.
They are not your flowerings. And how can a borrowed thing lead you towards the
real, the absolutely real? Drop all that you have taken from others. It is
better to be a beggar than to be rich; rich not by your own earning, but rich
through stolen goods, rich through borrowed things, rich through tradition,
rich through heritage. No, it is better to be a beggar, but to be on one's own.
That poverty has a richness in it because it is true, and your richness of
belief is very poor. Those beliefs can never go very deep; they remain
skin-deep at the most. Scratch a little, and the disbelief comes out.
You believe in God. Then your business fails, and
suddenly, the disbelief is there. You say, "I don't believe, I cannot
believe in God." You believe in God, and your beloved dies, and the
disbelief comes up. You believe in God, and just by the death of your beloved
the belief is destroyed? It is not worth much. Trust can never be destroyed --
once it is there, nothing can destroy it; nothing, absolutely nothing can
destroy it.
So remember, there is a great difference between
trust and belief. Trust is personal; belief is social. Trust you have to grow
in; belief you can remain in, whatsoever you are, and belief can be imposed on
you. Drop beliefs. The fear will be there; because if you drop belief, doubt
arises. Each belief is forcing doubt somewhere, repressing doubt. Don't be
worried about it; let the doubt come. Everybody has to pass through a dark
night before he reaches the sunrise. Everybody has to pass through doubt. Long
is the journey, dark is the night. But when after the long journey and the dark
night the morning arises, then you know it was all worthwhile. Trust cannot be
cultivated. And never try to cultivate it -- that is what has been done by the
whole of humanity. Cultivated trust becomes belief. Discover it within
yourself, don't cultivate it. Go deeper into your being, to the very source of
your being, and discover it.
27. It happened that when Alexander came to India
he met a sannyasin, a great sage. The sage's name was Dandamis; that is how
Greek historians have pronounced it. Alexander asked him, "Do you believe
in God?" The sage remained silent. Alexander said, "I cannot see, so
how can I believe? How do you believe without seeing him?" The naked sage
laughed. He took Alexander by his hand towards the marketplace. Alexander
followed -- maybe he was taking him somewhere where he could show him God. A
small boy was flying a kite, and the kite had gone so far away that it was
impossible to see it. The sage stopped there, and asked that boy, "Where
is the kite? Because we cannot see it, and without seeing how can we believe?
Where is the kite? How do you still believe that the kite exists?" The boy
said, "I can feel the pull of it." And the sage said to Alexander,
"I can also feel the pull of it."
28. Trust is nothing but the feel of the pull. You
don't see -- one has never seen God; only the pull is felt. But that is enough,
that is more than enough. But then you have to be in a certain state where the
pull can be felt. It cannot be learned from scriptures; it is not a doctrine.
Nobody can explain it: you have to feel the pull.
The old sage laughed. Alexander also realized that
it had been a revelation. But the sage said, "Wait; no need to believe in
me. You take the thread in your hand and feel the pull, because who knows? This
boy may be deceiving. Never believe. Feel the pull." If Alexander had gone
away just listening to the boy, it would have been a belief But he felt the
pull: the kite was there on the other end, the pull was here on this end. He
could feel the force. He thanked the old sage.
29. If you are frustrated in the first and don't
become hopeless, you then enter the second. If you are frustrated in the first,
get so much caught in the frustration, and become hopeless, you never enter the
second. Then you remain a body; you never come to know that you are also a
mind. In the second, if you are frustrated, as you will be -- it has to be so,
because the second is not the goal, not the end -- if you are frustrated and
you become hopeless, then you are caught in the second. But if you are
frustrated and don't become hopeless, and your search and enquiry goes higher
and higher, and you try to see why this love failed... the first love failed
because it was only bodily -- it could not satisfy the mind; the second failed
because it was only of the mind -- it could not satisfy the soul: and when the
third type of love arises, then you will be near me.
30. Learn more and more to be in a state of
non-chattering -- the inner talk has to stop. Then your mind is not hindering;
then you are available; then your deepest shrine of being is available to me.
But by and by, you will learn. In the beginning, it happens so. You have always
been talking, and if you are very articulate in talking, then of course you
feel crippled. If you are very articulate and you can talk beautifully,
artistically, if you can play perfectly with language and then suddenly you
come to me and your throat does not allow you to speak... and something goes
wrong and the mechanism doesn't function: you feel that you are crippled. But
you are not crippled -- the impact of my presence has simply given a shock to
the mechanism of your mind. And it is good. Don't try to bring it back. Let it
go. Be quiet, still, silent and waiting. Be feminine.
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