LECTURE THREE
From what
has already been indicated about the life between death and the new
birth you will recall that during that period a human being
continues, to begin with, to live in conditions and with
relationships he himself prepared during his existence on Earth. It
was said that when we again encounter some personality in the
spiritual world after death, the relationship between us is, at
first, the same as was formed during our existence on Earth and we
cannot, for the time being, change it at all. Thus if in the
spiritual world we come into contact with a friend or an individual
who has predeceased us, and to whom we owed a debt of love but during
life withheld that love from him, we shall now have to experience
again the relationship that existed before death because of the lack
of love of which we were guilty. We confront the person in question
in the way described in the last lecture, beholding and experiencing
over and over again the circumstances created during the life before
our death. For instance, if at some particular time, say ten years
before the death of the person in question, or before our own death,
we allowed the relationship caused by our self-incurred debt of love
to be established, we shall have to live through the relationship for
a corresponding length of time after death and only after that period
has elapsed shall we be able to experience once again, during our
life after death, the happier relationship previously existing
between us. It is important to realise that after death we are not in
a position to expunge or change relationships for which we had been
responsible on Earth. To a certain extent change has become
impossible.
It might easily be believed that this is inevitably a
painful experience and can only be regarded as suffering. But that
would be judging from the standpoint of our limited earthly
circumstances. Viewed from the spiritual world things look different
in many respects. It is true that in the life between death and the
new birth the individual concerned must undergo all the suffering
resulting from the admission: I am now in the spiritual world and
realise the wrong I committed, but I cannot rectify it and must rely
upon conditions to bring about a change. An individual who is aware
of this undergoes the pain connected with the experience, but he also
knows that it must be so and that it would be detrimental for his
further development if it were otherwise, if he could not learn from
the experience resulting from such suffering. For through
experiencing such conditions and recognising that they cannot be
changed we acquire the power to change them in our later karma. The
technique of karma enables these conditions to be changed during
another physical incarnation. There is only the remotest possibility
that the dead himself can change them. Above all during the first
period after death, during the time in Kamaloka, an individual sees
what has been determined by his life before death, but to begin with
he must leave it as it is; he is unable to bring about any change in
what he experiences.
Those who have remained behind on Earth have a far
greater influence on the dead than the dead has on himself or others
who have also died have upon him. And this is tremendously important.
It is really only an individual who has remained on the physical
plane, who had established some relationship with the dead, who
through human will is able to bring about certain changes in the
conditions of souls between death and rebirth.
We will now take an example that can be instructive in
many respects. Here we can also consider the life in Kamaloka, for
the existing relationships do not change when the transition takes
place into the period of Devachan. Let us think of two friends living
on Earth, one of whom comes into contact with Anthroposophy at a
certain time in his life and becomes an anthroposophist. It may
happen that because of this, his friend rages against Anthroposophy.
You may have known such a case. If the friend had been the first to
find Anthroposophy he might himself have become a very good adherent.
Such things certainly happen but we must realise that they are very
often clothed in maya. Consequently it may happen that the one who
rages against Anthroposophy because his friend has become an adherent
is raging in his surface consciousness only, in his
Ego-consciousness. In his astral consciousness, in his
subconsciousness he may very likely not share in the antipathy.
Without realising it he may even be longing for Anthroposophy. In
many cases it happens that aversion in the upper consciousness takes
the form of longing in the subconsciousness. It does not necessarily
follow that an individual feels exactly what he expresses in his
upper consciousness. After death we do not experience only the
effects of the contents of our upper consciousness, our
Ego-consciousness. To believe that would be to misunderstand entirely
the conditions prevailing after death. It has often been said that
although a human being casts off physical body and etheric body at
death, his longings and desires remain. Nor need these longings and
desires be only those of which he was actually aware. The longings
and desires that were in his sub-consciousness, they too remain,
including those of which he has no conscious knowledge or may even
have resisted. They are often much stronger and more intense after
death than they were in life. During life a certain disharmony
between the astral body and the ‘I’ expresses itself as a
feeling of depression, dissatisfaction with oneself. After death, the
astral consciousness is an indication of the whole character of the
soul, the whole stamp of the individual concerned. So what we
experience in our upper consciousness is less significant than all
those hidden wishes, desires and passions which are present in the
soul's depths and of which the ‘I’ knows nothing.
In the case mentioned, let us suppose that the man who
denounces Anthroposophy because his friend has become an adherent
passes through the gate of death. The longing for Anthroposophy,
which may have developed precisely because of his violent opposition,
now asserts itself and becomes an intense wish for Anthroposophy.
This wish would have to remain unfulfilled, for it could hardly
happen that after death he himself would have an opportunity of
satisfying it. But through a particular concatenation of
circumstances in such a case, the one who is on Earth may be able to
help the other and change something in his conditions. This is the
kind of case that may frequently be observed in our own ranks.
We can, for instance, read to the one who has died. The
way to do this is to picture him vividly there in front of us; we
picture his features and go through with him in thought the content,
for example, of an anthroposophical book. This need only be done in
thought and it has a direct effect upon the one who has died. As long
as he is in the stage of Kamaloka, language is no hindrance; it
becomes a hindrance only when he has passed into Devachan. Hence the
question as to whether the dead understands language need not be
raised. During the period of Kamaloka a feeling for language is
certainly present. In this practical way very active help can be
given to one who has passed through the gate of death. What streams
up from the physical plane is something that can be a factor in
bringing about a change in the conditions of life between death and
the new birth; but such help can only be given to the dead from the
physical world, not directly from the spiritual world.
We realise from this that when Anthroposophy actually
finds its way into the hearts of men it will in very truth bridge the
gap between the physical and the spiritual worlds, and that will
constitute its infinite value in life. Only a very elementary stage
in anthroposophical development has been reached when it is thought
that what is of main importance is to acquire certain concepts and
ideas about the members of man's constitution or about what can come
to him from the spiritual world. The bridge between the physical
world and the spiritual world cannot be built until we realise that
Anthroposophy takes hold of our very life. We shall then no longer
adopt a merely passive attitude towards those who have passed through
the gate of death but shall establish active contact with them and be
able to help them. To this end Anthroposophy must make us conscious
of the fact that our world consists of physical existence and
superphysical, spiritual existence; furthermore that man is on Earth
not only to gather for himself the fruits of physical existence
between birth and death but that he is on Earth in order to send up
into the superphysical world what can be gained and can exist only on
the physical plane. If for some justifiable reason or, let us say,
for the sake of comfort, a man has kept aloof from anthroposophical
ideas, we can bring them to him after death in the way described.
Maybe someone will ask: Is it possible that this will annoy the dead,
that he does not want it? This question is not entirely justifiable
because human beings of the present age are by no means particularly
opposed to Anthroposophy in their subconsciousness. If the
subconsciousness of those who denounce Anthroposophy could have a
voice in their upper consciousness, there would be hardly any
opposition to it. For people are prejudiced and biased against the
spiritual world only in their Ego-consciousness, only in what
expresses itself as Ego-consciousness on the physical plane.
This is one aspect of mediation between the physical
world and the spiritual world. But we can also ask: Is mediation also
possible in the other direction, from the spiritual to the physical
world? That is to say, can the one who has passed through the gate of
death communicate in some way with those who have remained on the
physical plane? At the present time the possibility of this is very
slight because on the physical plane human beings live for the most
part in their Ego-consciousness only and not in the consciousness
connected with the astral body. It is not so easy to convey an idea
of how men will gradually develop consciousness of what surrounds
them as an astral or devachanic or other spiritual world. But if
Anthroposophy acquires greater influence in the evolution of
humanity, this will eventually come about. Simply through paying
attention to the teachings of Anthroposophy men will find the ways
and means to break through the boundaries of the physical world and
direct attention to the spiritual world that is round about them and
eludes them only because they pay no heed to it.
How can we become aware of this spiritual world?
Today
I want to make you aware of how little a man really knows about the
things of the world surrounding him. He knows very little indeed of
what is of essential importance in that world. Through his senses and
intellect he gets to know and recognise the ordinary facts of life in
which he is involved. He gets to know what is going on both in the
world and in himself, establishes some kind of association between
these happenings, calls the one ‘cause’ and the other
‘effect’ and then, having ascertained some connection
based either upon cause and effect or some other concept, thinks he
understands the processes that are in operation. To take an example:
We leave our home at eight o’clock in the morning, walk along
the street, reach our place of work, have a meal during the day, do
this or that to amuse ourselves. This goes on until the time comes
for sleep. We then connect our various experiences; one makes a
strong impression upon us, another a weaker impression. Effects are
also produced in our soul, either of sympathy or antipathy. Even
trifling reflection can teach us that we are living as it were on the
surface of a sea without the faintest idea of what is down below on
the sea's bed. As we pass through life we get to know external
reality only. But an example will show that a very great deal is
implicit in this external reality. Suppose one day we leave home
three minutes later than usual and arrive at work three minutes late;
after that we carry on just as if we had left home at the usual time.
Nevertheless it may be possible to verify that had we been in the
street punctually at eight o'clock we might have been run over by a
car and killed; if we had left home punctually we should no longer be
alive. Or on another occasion we may hear of an accident to a train
in which we should have been travelling and thus have been injured.
This is an even more radical example of what I just said. We pay
attention only to what actually happens, not to what may be
continually happening and which we have escaped. The range of such
possibilities is infinitely greater than that of actual happenings.
It
may be said that this happening had no significance for our outer
life. For our inner life, however, it is certainly of importance.
Suppose, for instance, you had bought a ticket for a voyage in the
Titanic but were dissuaded by a friend from travelling. You
sold the ticket and then heard of the disaster. Would your experience
have been the same as if you had never been involved? Would it not
far rather have made a most striking impression upon you? If we knew
from how many things we are protected in the world, how many things
are possible for good or for ill, things which are converging and
only through slight displacement do not meet, we should have a
sensitive perception of experiences of happiness or unhappiness, of
bodily experiences which are possible for us but which simply do not
come our way. Who among all of you sitting here can know what you
would have experienced if, for example, the lecture this evening had
been cancelled and you had been somewhere else. If you had known
about the cancellation your attitude of mind would be quite different
from what it now is, because you have no idea of what might
conceivably have happened.
All these possibilities which do not become reality on
the physical plane exist as forces and effects behind the physical
world in the spiritual world and reverberate through it. It is not
only the forces which actually determine our life on the physical
plane that stream down upon us but also the measureless abundance of
forces which exist only as possibilities, some of which seldom make
their way into our physical consciousness. But when they do, this
usually gives rise to a significant experience. Do not say that what
has been stated, namely that numberless possibilities exist, that for
example this lecture might have been cancelled, in which case those
sitting here would have had different experiences — do not say
that this invalidates karma. It does nothing of the kind. If such a
thing were said it would imply ignorance of the fact that the idea of
karma just presented holds good only for the world of realities
within the physical life of men. The truth is that the spiritual life
permeates our physical life and there is a world of possibilities
where the laws operating as karmic laws are quite different. If we
could feel what a tiny part of what we might have experienced is
represented by the physical realities and that our actual experiences
are only a fractional part of the possibilities, the infinite wealth
and exuberance of the spiritual life behind our physical life would
be obvious to us.
Now the following may happen. A man may take serious
account in his thoughts of this world of possibilities or perhaps not
in his thoughts but only in his feelings. He may realise that he
would probably have been killed in an accident to a train which he
happened to miss. This may make a deep impression upon him and such
happenings are able as it were to open the soul to the spiritual
world. Occasions such as this with which we are in some way connected
may actually reveal to us wishes or thoughts of souls living between
death and the new birth.
When Anthroposophy wakens in men a feeling for
possibilities in life, for occurrences or catastrophes which did not
take place simply because something that might have happened did not
do so, and when the soul abides firmly by this feeling, experiences
conveyed by individuals with whom there had been a connection in the
physical world may be received from the spiritual world.
Although during the hurry and bustle of daily life
people are for the most part disinclined to give rein to feelings of
what might have happened, nevertheless there are times in life when
events that might have happened have a decisive influence upon the
soul. If you were to observe your dream-life more closely, or the
strange moments of transition from waking life to sleep or from sleep
to waking life, if you were to observe with greater exactitude
certain dreams which are often quite inexplicable, in which certain
things that happen to you appear in a dream-picture or vision, you
would find that these inexplicable pictures indicate something that
might have happened and was prevented only because other conditions,
or hindrances. intervened. A person who through meditation or some
other means makes his thinking more mobile, will have moments in his
waking life during which he will feel that he is living in a world of
possibilities; this may not be in the form of definite ideas but of
feelings. If he develops such feelings he is preparing himself to
receive from the spiritual world impressions from human beings who
were connected with him in the physical world. Such influences then
manifest as genuine dream-experiences which have meaning and point to
some reality in the spiritual world. In teaching us that in the life
between birth and death karma holds sway, Anthroposophy makes it
quite clear that wherever we are placed in life we are faced
perpetually with an infinite number of possibilities. One of these
possibilities is selected in accordance with the law of karma; the
others remain in the background, surrounding us like a cosmic aura.
The more deeply we believe in karma, the more firmly we shall also
believe in the existence of this cosmic aura which surrounds us and
is produced by forces which converge but have been displaced in a
certain way, so that they do not manifest on the physical plane.
If we allow our hearts and minds to be influenced by
Anthroposophy, this will be a means of educating humanity to be
receptive to impressions coming from the spiritual world. If,
therefore, Anthroposophy succeeds in making a real effect upon
culture, upon spiritual life, influences will not only rise up from
physical life into the spiritual world but the experiences undergone
by the dead during their life between death and the new birth will
flow back. Thus here again the gulf between the physical and the
spiritual worlds will be bridged. The consequence will be a
tremendous widening of human life and we shall see the purpose of
Anthroposophy fulfilled in the creation of an actual link between the
two worlds, not merely a theoretical conception of the existence of a
spiritual world. It is essential to realise that Anthroposophy
fulfils its task in the real sense only when it permeates the souls
of men as a living force and when by its means we not only comprehend
something intellectually but our whole attitude and relationship to
the world around us is changed.
Because of the preconceptions current in our times,
man's thinking is far too materialistic, even if he often believes in
the existence of a spiritual world. Hence it is extremely difficult
for him in the present age to picture the right relationship between
soul and body. The habits of thought peculiar to the times tend to
make him picture the life of soul as being connected too closely with
the bodily constitution. An analogy may be the only means of helping
to clarify what must be understood here.
If we examine a watch we see that it consists of wheels
and other little metal parts. But do we look at our watch in the
course of everyday life in order to study the works or the interplay
of the wheels? No, we look at our watch in order to find out the
time; but time has nothing whatever to do with any of the metal parts
or wheels. We look at the watch and do not trouble about what there
is to be seen inside the watch itself. Or let us take another
example. When somebody speaks of telegraphing today he has the
electric apparatus in mind. But even before electric telegraphy was
invented, telegraphing went on. Provided the right signs, etc. are
known it would be possible for people to speak from one town to
another without any electric telegraph — and perhaps the
process would not be very much slower. Suppose, for instance, pillars
or poles were erected along the highway between Berlin and Paris and
a man posted on the top of each pole to pass on the appropriate
signs. If that were done quickly enough there would be no difference
between this method and what is done by means of the electric
telegraph. Certainly the latter is the simpler and much quicker
method but the actual process of telegraphing has as little to do
with the mechanism of the electric telegraph as time has to do with
the works in a watch.
Now the human soul has just as much and just as little
to do with the processes of the human body as the communication from
Berlin to Paris has to do with the mechanism of the electric
telegraph. It is only when we think in this way that we can have a
true conception of the independence of the soul. For it would be
perfectly possible for this human soul with all its content to make
use of a differently formed body, just as the message from Berlin to
Paris could be sent by means other than the electric telegraph. The
electric telegraph merely happens to be the most convenient way of
sending messages, given the conditions of our present existence, and
in the same sense the body with its possibility of movement and the
head above provides the most convenient means, in the conditions of
our existence on Earth, for the soul to express itself. But it is
simply not the case that the body as such has anything more directly
to do with the life of the soul than the electric telegraph with its
mechanism has directly to do with the transmission of a communication
from Berlin to Paris, or a watch with time. It would be possible to
devise an instrument quite different from our watches for measuring
time. Similarly it is possible to conceive of a body — quite
different from the one we use in the conditions prevailing on Earth —
that would enable the soul to express itself.
How are we to picture the relation of the human soul to
the body? A saying of Schiller, applied to man, is particularly
relevant here: “If you are seeking for the highest and the
best, the plant can teach it to you.” We look at the plant
which spreads out its leaves and opens its blossoms during the day
and draws them in when the light fades. That which streams to the
plant from the sun and the stars has been withdrawn. But it is what
comes from the sun that enables the leaves to open again and the
blossom to unfold Out yonder in cosmic space, therefore, are the
forces which cause the organs of the plant to fold up limply when
they withdraw or unfold when they are active. What is brought about
in the plant by cosmic forces is brought about in the human being by
his own Ego and astral body. When does a human being allow his limbs
to relax and his eyelids to close like the plant when it draws in its
leaves and blossoms? When his Ego and astral body leave his bodily
organism. What the sun does to the plant, the Ego and astral body do
to the organs of the human being. Hence we can say: the plant's body
must turn to the sun as man's body must turn to the Ego and astral
body and we must think of these members of his being as having the
same effect upon him as the sun has upon the plant.
Even externally considered, will it still surprise you
to know what occult investigation reveals, namely that the Ego and
astral body originate from the cosmic sphere to which the sun belongs
and do not belong to the Earth at all? Nor will you be surprised,
after what has been said in previous lectures, to realise that when
human beings leave the Earth, either in sleep or at death, they pass
into the conditions prevailing in the Cosmos. The plant is still
dependent upon the sun and the forces operating in space. The Ego and
the astral body of man have made themselves independent of the forces
in space and go their own way. A plant is bound to sleep when the
sunlight withdraws; in respect of his Ego and astral body, however,
man is independent of the sun and planets which are his real home,
and for this reason he is able to sleep by day, even when the sun is
shining. In his Ego and astral body man has emancipated himself from
that with which he is really united — namely the forces of the
sun and stars. Therefore it is not grotesque to say that what remains
of man on the Earth and in its elements after death belongs to the
Earth and to its forces; but the Ego and astral body belong to the
forces of the Cosmos. After the death of the human being Ego and
astral body return to those cosmic forces and pass through the life
between death and rebirth within their spheres. During the period on
Earth between birth and death, while the soul is living in a physical
body, the life of soul which strictly belongs to the sun and the
stars has no more to do with this physical body than time as such —
which is in reality conditioned by the solar and stellar
constellations — has to do with the watch and its mechanism of
wheels. It is quite conceivable that if, instead of living on the
Earth, we were born on some other planet, our soul would be adapted
to a quite different planetary existence. The particular formation of
our eyes and ears is not attributable to the soul but to the
conditions prevailing on the Earth. All we do is to make use of these
organs. If we make ourselves consciously aware of the fact that with
our soul we belong to the world of the stars, we shall have taken a
first step towards a real understanding of our relationships as human
beings and our true human nature. This knowledge will help us to
adopt the right attitude to our conditions of existence here on
Earth. To establish even this more or less external relationship to
our physical body or etheric body will give us a sense of security.
We shall realise that we are not merely beings of the Earth but
belong to the whole Universe, to the Macrocosm, that we live within
the Macrocosm. It is only because a man here on Earth is bound to his
body that he is not conscious of his connection with the forces of
the great Universe.
Wherever and whenever in the course of the ages a
deepening of the spiritual life was achieved, efforts were made to
bring this home to the souls of men. In point of fact it is only
during the last four centuries that man has lost this consciousness
of his connection with the spiritual forces weaving and holding sway
in cosmic space. Think of what has always been emphasised: that
Christ is the great Sun-Being who through the Mystery of Golgotha has
united Himself with the Earth and its forces and has thus made it
possible for man to take into himself the Christ-force on Earth;
permeation with the Christ Impulse will include the impulses of the
Macrocosm and in every epoch of evolution it will be right to
recognise in Christ the power that imparts feeling of kinship with
the Macrocosm.
In
the twelfth century a story, a splendid allegory, became current in
the West. It was as follows: Once upon a time there was a girl who
had several brothers, all of whom were as poor as church mice. One
day the girl found a pearl, thereby becoming the possessor of great
treasure. All the brothers were determined to share the wealth that
had come her way. The first brother was a painter and he said to the
girl: “I will paint for you the finest picture ever known if
you will let me share your wealth.” But the girl would have
nothing to do with him and sent him away. The second brother was a
musician. He promised the girl that he would compose the most
beautiful piece of music if she would let him share her wealth. But
she sent him away. The third brother was an apothecary and, as was
customary in the Middle Ages, dealt chiefly in perfumes and other
goods that were not remedial herbs but quite useful in life! This
brother promised to give the girl the most fragrant scent in the
world if she would let him share her wealth. But she sent this
brother away too. The fourth brother was a cook. He promised the girl
that he would cook such good dishes for her that by eating them she
would get a brain equal to that of Zeus and would be able to enjoy
the very tastiest food. But she rejected him too. The fifth brother
was an innkeeper (Wirt) and he promised to find the most
desirable suitors for her if she would let him share her wealth. She
rejected him too. Finally, or so the story tells, came one who was
able to find his way to the girl's soul, and with him she shared her
treasure, the pearl she had found.
The
story is graphically told and it has been narrated in greater detail
and even more beautifully by Jakob Balde, [Jakob Balde, born
in Ensisheim, Upper Alsace, 4th January, 1604, died 9th August, 1668.
Entered the Order of Jesuits in 1624. Was widely acclaimed during his
life but after his death was neglected as a poet until the end of the
eighteenth century. Herder translated many of Balde's lyrics and
brought his genius to the notice of scholars.] a lyric poet of
the seventeenth century. There is also an exposition dating from the
thirteenth century by the poet himself, so it cannot be called a mere
interpretation. The poet says that he had wanted to portray the human
being and the free will. The girl represents the human soul endowed
with free will. The five brothers are the five senses: the painter is
the sense of sight, the musician the sense of hearing, the apothecary
the sense of smell, the cook the sense of taste, the innkeeper the
sense of touch. The girl rejects them all, in order, so the story
tells, to share her treasure of free will with the one with whom her
soul has true affinity — with Christ. She rejects the
attractions of the senses in order to receive that to which the
Christ Impulse leads when it permeates the soul. The independence of
the life of the soul — the soul that is born of the Spirit and
has its home in the Spirit — is beautifully contrasted with
what is born of the Earth, namely the senses and all that exists
solely in order to provide a habitation — an earthly body —
for the soul.
In order that a beginning may be made in the matter of
showing that right thinking can lead beyond the things of everyday
life, it will now be shown how reliable and well-founded are the
findings of occult investigation when the investigator knows from his
own direct vision of the spiritual world that the Ego and astral body
of man belong to the world of the stars. When we consider how man is
related to those members of his being which remain together during
sleep, how this condition is independent of the world of the stars,
as indicated by the fact that a man can also sleep in the daytime,
and if we then make a comparison with the plant and the sunlight, we
can be convinced of the validity of occult investigations. It is a
matter of recognising the confirmations which can actually be found
in the world. When someone asserts that the findings of occult
research lack any real foundation, this is only a sign that he has
not paid attention to everything that can be gathered from the
external world and lead to knowledge. Admittedly this often calls for
great energy and freedom from bias — qualities that are not
always put into practice. But it may well be insisted that someone
who genuinely investigates the spiritual world and then passes on the
results of his investigation to the world, passes it on, presumably,
to sound judgement. Genuine occult research is not afraid of
intelligent criticism; it objects only to superficial criticism which
is not, properly speaking, criticism at all.
If
you now recall how the whole course of the evolution of humanity has
been described, from the Old Saturn period, through the periods of
Old Sun and Old Moon up to our Earth period, you will remember that
during the Old Moon period a separation took place; a second
separation occurred again during the Earth period, one of the
consequences being that the life of soul and the bodily life are more
widely separated from each other than was the case during the Old Sun
period. As a consequence of the separation of the Moon from the Sun
already during the Old Moon period, man's soul became more
independent. At that time, in certain intervals between incarnations,
the element of soul forced its way out into the Macrocosm and made
itself independent. This brought about those conditions in the
evolution of the Earth which resulted in the separation of the Sun
from the Earth and later of the Moon, during the Lemurian epoch. As a
consequence, a host of individual human souls, as described in detail
in the book
Occult Science — an Outline,
[See PP. 177–9 in the
translation by George and Mary Adams,
Rudolf Steiner Press, 1963.]
pressed outwards in order to undergo
particular destinies while separated from the Earth, returning only
at a later time. Now, however, it must be made clear that when a man
has passed through the gate of death into the spiritual world which
is his real home, he — or rather what remains of him —
lives a life that is radically different from and fundamentally has
very little relationship with the former earthly body.
In the next lecture we shall be able to learn what is
necessary for more detailed knowledge of the life between death and
the new birth.
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