My Renault 5 was not quite as quick as a Fiat Panda |
In my Beemer I was the 'dogs Gonads' |
So as you can see telling myself I wasn't a salesman, nobody wanted the financial services that I had to offer, not biting the bullet, and hating cold calling never helped me. I saw little of a future in any of my jobs once I had decided I was unhappy. Looking back I can say I should have tried harder, I could have sold more as a life assurance salesman because the potential to earn a lot of money was definitely there and I would have been more successful in my working life and my home life. Factory and warehouse work should have worked as I could have worked harder for a promotion which would have given me more money so I like many of my friends, would have the security of my own home and holidays abroad every year. But Shudda, Cudda, Wudda is not much better than Shan't, Can't, Won't. To improve our lives and become successful we need to change the way we talk to ourselves. Positive thinking alone is not the answer. I have so many positive thoughts over the years. I was going to be a World Champion! Better than Muhammad Ali! That's fairly frigging positive. I am sure lots of people reading this had dreams of playing for their favourite football team, being a model and travelling the world or being an airline pilot? Lots of people, including my trainer told me I Shudda trained harder and Wudda been in the Olympics and Cudda been a World Champion. Whether I should have, would have or could have is all history now for me and I am getting on with my life. Do I have regrets? maybe a little as far as the boxing goes. It would have been nice to see how far I would have got if I was totally committed, and if I had actually believed in myself a little more. But lets be honest, that can be said for any of us. I am no different to anyone else, if anyone had trained for as long and hard as I did, with the same amount of conviction then they would have achieved the same as I did. All we can do now is make sure the rest of our lives go the way we want them to.
I am at the stage of my life now where I feel I need to take the next step. I feel I am moving from cudda, shudda, wudda to a place where I am making things happen. This is still an insecure place as I am not totally in control of my finances but more than I was before. I understand that I could still fail but feel more equipped to move forward. I feel the main reason for this is reading and writing.
I have never been one for reading books but since starting a couple of years ago I have been converted into a daily reader. I don't read anything that I feel I won't learn from. I understand that many people read as a form as escapism and that many fictional books are informative. My girlfriend reads books such as the 'Da Vinci Code' which is full of facts and is very descriptive to the point that she wants to visit Paris and see the places she has read about. I have read many self help books, some good and some a load of old b****cks, consequently this had lead to me writing this blog. In the past I have always had that boost after finishing reading as I mentioned earlier in a previous blog, but I have never been able to change my approach to life for a long period of time so often end up where I started. There is a short story that explains why we don't maintain a change of lifestyle in the book I am reading caleed 'WHAT TO SAY WHEN YOU TALK TO YOURSELF' The book was written in 1985 by a man called Shad Helmstetter and was given to me by a man who reads my blogs. In this book there is a section that says about why we don't move forward with our lives and keep slipping back to our old ways. He explains why positive thinking doesn't work by asking us to imagine we have a 'mental department' The place where we live with our thoughts. The department is filled with all our old thoughts about ourselves and the world around us. Many of our thoughts are handed down from our parents teachers, friends, colleagues, the media etc... All these have helped programme our subconscious minds. They have given us the furniture and we have stored it in our 'mental department' We are told to imagine that most of that furniture is negative 'hand me down' furniture and is weary with age and worn. The chairs are broken and shaky, ready to fall apart if sat on too heavily, the pictures, hanging crookedly on the walls, are yellowed and faint. the kitchen table leans at an angle, the dishes are chipped and cracked, no cup has a handle, long since broken away. Coils on the bed-springs show through, rusted and bent, the rug on the floor is more patches and holes than it is a rug. With these furnishing a strong new piece of furniture (some positive thought) would seem out of place, but though here and there, there might be a sturdy piece of furniture or two. But they are too over run by clutter to be noticed at all.
Now imagine someone comes over and offers to come over to your mental apartment and help you get rid of all your old furniture. They tell you they are going to get rid of all your negative thinking once and for all . So at 4.30 tomorrow afternoon they arrive and start to carry out all your old hand me down furniture and store it in the garage out of site. They remove every piece, every dish, every rug, every sofa, table, bed and chair.
Gone forever? |
By 6 o'clock everything is gone and we are left with a clear mind. Not a negative thought in sight. Not a sofa, chair, table. Nothing at all......now I can become a positive thinker. But that was at 6 O'clock. What happens later in the evening when there is nothing in your mental department? You need something in there. you need some thoughts otherwise you will go nuts. So you have to go to the garage and get some of your negative thoughts. First a table, then a chair and then maybe a dish or two.
We are most comfortable with our thoughts that we have lived with for most of our lives. It make no difference if those thoughts are bad for us, it was what we know. It is what we feel most secure with by our sides. By 10 0'clock we have brought back the trusty old TV and one by one we will begin to bring in all our old trusted and time worn negative thoughts back into our mental department! Why? Because when you moved all of your old furniture out you didn't replace it. You had no positive new thoughts to replace the negative old thoughts. When we decide to stop thinking negatively we need to immediately start to think positively to ensure the negative thoughts are kept out.
By reading and writing in order to hopefully inspire others I am inspiring myself. I am, not immediately, but slowly getting rid of my old furniture and replacing it with new. I no longer say I cannot do things and don't tell my self I am not clever enough, or not good enough to do anything. I am moving out of the cudda, shudda, wudda and taking as many people as I can with me, onto a better place where we are achieving more and fulfilling more of what we want to achieve.
What I have started doing is telling myself I am more organized. I am tricking my subconscious mind into believing I am more organized, that I have a good memory and that I am good enough to do my own paperwork. In the past I have gone hard at it and made rash changes thinking I can change the world in a day. By doing this I have achieved a lot in a short space of time only to suddenly stop. Now, as I tell my subconscious that I am organized, tidy, a good businessman etc I am starting to believe in myself. I regularly tell myself how I love to get things done, how I know that by doing things, I have always relied on others to do, that I will be successful. The more am telling myself the more I want to become what my subconscious is telling me. Believe me, this is something I have never tried before but I am starting to believe that this is easy. I am becoming the man I want to be just by telling myself I am him already him. Every time I do something I wouldn't normally do, I ask myself why I didn't do it before. It is a bizarre feeling but a great feeling. What I am beggining to realise is that I have always had the ability to do things but I have got into a way of life that has told me I can't. I was sent a text about funding and how I should apply for funding. Funding is something people told me I should have been applying for many years ago due to the work I do with youths. I apparently fit into all areas that the government want to give funding for: I work with all ages from 5 years old up to pensioners, I work with all ethnic diversities, I work with children and youths with social and behavioural issues, I provide a service in the way of work experience, visits and fitness classes to schools, colleges and special needs groups, I mentor children and teenagers and sometimes parents etc... But I don't apply for funding, why? The reason has always been because I didn't think I deserved it, And questioned why I should receive 'handouts'. I now believe that I do provide a service and truly believe that without my boxing club the crime rate in Banbury would be higher and more children would be getting into trouble. I remind myself of the people who's lives have turned around for the better because of Spit n Sawdust. When I hear of a crime being committed by a youth in Banbury and that youth has either hurt someone, or the crime is a result of the youth turning to drink and drugs, I wish they had joined my gym so I would have had a chance of changing their mindsets and maybe had pointed them on the right road. So now I am thinking, with funding we at Spit n Sawdust can help far more people, and by not looking for funding or following up on leads people have given me to find funding I am letting people down. There has always been this nagging voice in my head when I think of applying for funding. That nagging voice is the echo of the times I have heard of people saying 'Why should Dave Earle have funding he is a business?'. But I am assuming these people don't realize what my business does or what it will be capable of doing with the help of funding. More funding will secure the future of Spit n Sawdust and give us the opportunity to grow and help more people.
Dreaming is for dreamers. Don't wait |
So what do we all need to do to change. How do we move from being who we don't want to be to the person we do want to be? Once we have decided that we have moved on we need to 'close the deal'. If it was giving up smoking that we have decided to is going to be a thing of the past and we have recently managed to kick the habit we now need to tell ourselves 'I don't smoke, my lungs are clean and healthy, I have no habits that harm me or hold me back in any way' and instead of doing things when we feel like doing them we do them as soon as they need doing, telling yourself 'I enjoy doing things when they need to be done, I love being organised and love getting things done. This may free up more time to either do other important jobs that will help you move forward or even give you more quality time with a loved one.
Once you have convinced yourself 'I am a winner, I believe in myself', I respect myself and like who I am', I have decided to take charge of my life and be successful and that's what I am doing'. Can you imagine going through the rest of your life with that kind of self talk on your side. You deserve the best out of life perhaps it's time you did something about it?
READING THIS BLOG AND SELF HELP BOOKS DO NOT CHANGE PEOPLE. THEY ARE JUST AIDS TO GUIDE YOU.
YOU ALONE CAN MAKE THE CHANGES BUT IT REQUIRES ACTION SO GET STARTED AND DON'T BE INSPIRED JUST FOR TODAY, TOMORROW OR NEXT WEEK.
START PUTTING THINGS RIGHT TODAY AND REPROGRAMME THE WAY YOU THINK, TAKE IT WITH YOU FOR THE REST OF YOU LIVES
Some believe that what ever we create in our lives we can change, but changing it has been the hardest part. Despair, despondency, and depression are a part of too many of our lives. But those types of feelings that are self created can be lightened or removed but we ourselves must act as therapists to ourselves. We must tell ourselves and truly believe that we can change our programming. Talking to ourselves may sound like a crazy concept but it what we do for every waking hour. By talking to ourselves we can redirect our self-belief and turn our lives around and will help us see the world as a different place. Sometimes we may feel there is nowhere to turn and nobody to turn to. But by looking again and telling ourselves there are so many avenues to take and so many lovely people to help us, our lives can be transformed. What's more, it's truer than you think.
Self help books are a little like the exercise machines we have at home. Before I had my gym I used offer personal training at peoples houses. I would advertise my services via fliers through peoples letterboxes and then wait for the calls so I could arrange appointments. I would then visit the people who expressed an interest in personal training and set up a programme to help them with their health and fitness. Some people would want to lose weight, others might want to gain muscle and some just didn't feel comfortable using gyms. So on the next visit I would arrive at their house with a range of equipment that I felt would be suitable for their fitness training. One man I visited was ex-army. He had long since left the army but in his quest to keep fit he had turned his garage into a gym and had a good range of fitness equipment. But like many people the thought of training was more appealing than the reality. On starting his training routine he was full of enthusiasm and he increased his fitness levels in a very short time. His programming from his army days slipping easily back into action and in only two months the changes were phenomenal. He had lost his belly, from being unable to run a few hundred meters without getting out of breath he could now run 5 miles, his strength and stamina returned and I found I was getting fitter just keeping up with him. This was truly a win, win situation for me. But like many of my customers, he suddenly stopped training saying work was getting in the way. whether this was the real reason I will never know but many of the people I used to visit had similar stories. Many people who wanted personal training were reasonably comfortable financially and had their own fitness equipment at home ranging from a couple of pieces of gym equipment, to an entire gym. I remember visiting one customer and thinking "This lady should make herself some money and open this gym to the public". But, just like that teach yourself a foreign language cassette we used to listen to in the car, the self help books that once inspired us and the running shoes we bought so we could one day run that marathon they soon all become discarded. Most of the houses I visited had fitness equipment that doubled as a place to dry clothes.
Getting from I cannot do something to should do something and onto I will do something is a step by step procedure that takes us onto doing things. Personally I have never been organised which I feel is the reason my business has never moved forward at any pace. I have always been terrible at paperwork and doing the books and even dropped out of a business course at college because I found it too difficult. Hence the reason I don't feel I am cut out for business. But eight years after starting my business I was still in business telling myself that if I was better at business I would be more successful. Whilst I have watched businesses close all around me I have be telling myself "It is only a matter of time before I lose my business" The pub next door has closed down 7 or 8 times since I started my gym in November 2003. The credit crunch has been responsible for the closure of multinational co-operations such as Woolworths and Chicago Rock Cafe but I was still here giving myself a hard time about how rubbish I am at business. I need to be better at running a business, of that there is no doubt otherwise I will struggle on for the next 8 years. But does the fact that I have never been organised and flunked a business course mean that I don't have the ability to be successful? Am I unsuccessful? Does the fact that I couldn't even get finance on an additional mobile phone that would have cost me an additional £15 a month, last month mean that I will probably fail in the long term and I have been 'lucky' since 2003?
I found out last night whilst door knocking for votes as a town councillor that 'we' as councillors are treated in many ways less welcome than a Jehovas Witness. My father was a Witness and told me of the constant rejection he got when knocking doors spreading the 'good word' Whilst out last night I realised I was responsible for everything the Conservative government has done wrong. The pension reforms, family tax credit reforms, the price of fuel at the pumps etc.... It was all our fault and last night it was my fault. Like my father I am a foot soldier, but I am a foot soldier for the Conservative government. I became a town councillor because I love Banbury. I had no alliance to any political party as I believed they are all the same. Like any business they are given a budget and told to keep the country afloat. As far as I could see all governments make promises they can't keep to win votes, if they didn't they would never be elected. I knew that by becoming a town councillor I would be in a position locally where I could visit schools and help children. Helping people is my business. Joining the conservative party helps me run my business. Whilst we were out canvassing one man said, of me, that he would not be voting for me because I am only doing it to help my business? Well I am not ashamed to say, yes it is to help my business. My business is everything to me and if the government can help me get into schools and help direct children and youths onto a better life then I am guilty as charged..... That's enough politics for now
Back to how talking to ourselves. I want to talk about how easy it is to be down on ourselves and conversely how we can pick ourselves up. But first I want to put things into perspective I want to talk about yesterday when a friend of mine came around for a chat and a catch up. He has quite a good life, he doesn't have a lot of money, a nice car or a big house, in fact he likes to talk about what he does have and the good times he has had or is gong to have in his life. We use Facebook to occasionally chat and catch up with each other and maybe discuss a bit of boxing, as his days are primarily spent on the internet talking about boxing to many professional boxers and boxing fanatics, and I run a boxing club. Yesterday as he occasionally does he decided to pop in for a chat and a cuppa in my bar. We exchanged formalities and I asked him how he was doing. He said he was fine, doing great, talking to lots of people in the 'game' he did a bit of name dropping and I was suitably impressed.... and then he told me he had just recently been diagnosed with lung cancer. I was obviously surprised and asked him when he found out and the prognoses. He said he is taking each day as it comes but after the initial shock had quickly come to terms with it and is making sure he keeps on enjoying life. Since taking an interest in boxing he has met so many people and has been treated so well by the boxing fraternity that he feels lucky to have such great experiences. He told me of his all expenses paid trips to Germany to watch world title fights, he meets and talks to people everyday either through Facebook or on a personal level, he introduces people to each other through his boxing forum, who then, although they live in different countries and continents will go on to be friends and travel to see each other. Whilst he was talking to me his voice was full of excitement and he was looking forward to things that were going to happen in the near future rather than focusing on his disease. He was here for an hour or two and when he left I thought "that was amazing"
A few months ago I was talking to another person who had came to the gym one afternoon for a chat. Again we exchanged formalities and I asked how she was doing. She said she was ok thanks. She then went on to say she had been signed off work with depression. I know this lady well and I also know she was going through a bad time and had recently ended a relationship, so could understand why she was signed off with depression. I asked if she was feeling alright and she said yes she was feeling fine so again we exchanged banter whilst having a hot drink. Whilst I see that this lady was going through a difficult time and can see that being away from work may help her 'condition', on reflection now, after talking to my friend and seeing how he is dealing with the fact that he has cancer and in his words "I don't know if I will see Christmas" I start to wonder how the human mind works? I think my first friend showed an amazing amount of courage to face his disease and make the most of his time, experiencing as much as he can in the time he has left, whilst I imagine my second friend, although I don't doubt she was depressed, could with a different mindset manage her illness better. I have low moments like anyone else but I find I am getting better at dealing with them by putting everything in perspective. If we accept we need to solve problems to grow as people then surely the problems will become just obstacles that lead us on to a better life? Otherwise if they remain as problems they will always be problems and we will never move forward. Have you ever, Yes you! have you ever had a long standing grudge with someone? It might be from years ago when you were at school about a relationship, or a time when that person made you look stupid in front of your friends. Have you then met this person years down the line and realised they are not as bad as you remembered and not only have they changed but so have you? We can change how we feel in an instant if we look for the positives in a situation and stop dwelling on the negatives.
If you get down, feel lonely, or become depressed: If things aren't going so well, its's time to change the programme and start to get things back on track. And this will start when you start telling yourself the way forward and actually believe there is a way.
We Created It We Can Change It
Our situation in our lives were created by us or the influences in our lives. I may never have liked reggae music and boxing if my father was not a Jamaican boxer? I certainly wouldn't have been a conservative councillor if I hadn't been approached by the conservative party. Tiger Woods may not have been a prolific golfer had his dad not introduced him to golf before he could even walk and if you or I were born in another country to another religion our view of the world might be totally different. We are all products of our programming.
Getting from I cannot do something to should do something and onto I will do something is a step by step procedure that takes us onto doing things. Personally I have never been organised which I feel is the reason my business has never moved forward at any pace. I have always been terrible at paperwork and doing the books and even dropped out of a business course at college because I found it too difficult. Hence the reason I don't feel I am cut out for business. But eight years after starting my business I was still in business telling myself that if I was better at business I would be more successful. Whilst I have watched businesses close all around me I have be telling myself "It is only a matter of time before I lose my business" The pub next door has closed down 7 or 8 times since I started my gym in November 2003. The credit crunch has been responsible for the closure of multinational co-operations such as Woolworths and Chicago Rock Cafe but I was still here giving myself a hard time about how rubbish I am at business. I need to be better at running a business, of that there is no doubt otherwise I will struggle on for the next 8 years. But does the fact that I have never been organised and flunked a business course mean that I don't have the ability to be successful? Am I unsuccessful? Does the fact that I couldn't even get finance on an additional mobile phone that would have cost me an additional £15 a month, last month mean that I will probably fail in the long term and I have been 'lucky' since 2003?
I found out last night whilst door knocking for votes as a town councillor that 'we' as councillors are treated in many ways less welcome than a Jehovas Witness. My father was a Witness and told me of the constant rejection he got when knocking doors spreading the 'good word' Whilst out last night I realised I was responsible for everything the Conservative government has done wrong. The pension reforms, family tax credit reforms, the price of fuel at the pumps etc.... It was all our fault and last night it was my fault. Like my father I am a foot soldier, but I am a foot soldier for the Conservative government. I became a town councillor because I love Banbury. I had no alliance to any political party as I believed they are all the same. Like any business they are given a budget and told to keep the country afloat. As far as I could see all governments make promises they can't keep to win votes, if they didn't they would never be elected. I knew that by becoming a town councillor I would be in a position locally where I could visit schools and help children. Helping people is my business. Joining the conservative party helps me run my business. Whilst we were out canvassing one man said, of me, that he would not be voting for me because I am only doing it to help my business? Well I am not ashamed to say, yes it is to help my business. My business is everything to me and if the government can help me get into schools and help direct children and youths onto a better life then I am guilty as charged..... That's enough politics for now
Back to how talking to ourselves. I want to talk about how easy it is to be down on ourselves and conversely how we can pick ourselves up. But first I want to put things into perspective I want to talk about yesterday when a friend of mine came around for a chat and a catch up. He has quite a good life, he doesn't have a lot of money, a nice car or a big house, in fact he likes to talk about what he does have and the good times he has had or is gong to have in his life. We use Facebook to occasionally chat and catch up with each other and maybe discuss a bit of boxing, as his days are primarily spent on the internet talking about boxing to many professional boxers and boxing fanatics, and I run a boxing club. Yesterday as he occasionally does he decided to pop in for a chat and a cuppa in my bar. We exchanged formalities and I asked him how he was doing. He said he was fine, doing great, talking to lots of people in the 'game' he did a bit of name dropping and I was suitably impressed.... and then he told me he had just recently been diagnosed with lung cancer. I was obviously surprised and asked him when he found out and the prognoses. He said he is taking each day as it comes but after the initial shock had quickly come to terms with it and is making sure he keeps on enjoying life. Since taking an interest in boxing he has met so many people and has been treated so well by the boxing fraternity that he feels lucky to have such great experiences. He told me of his all expenses paid trips to Germany to watch world title fights, he meets and talks to people everyday either through Facebook or on a personal level, he introduces people to each other through his boxing forum, who then, although they live in different countries and continents will go on to be friends and travel to see each other. Whilst he was talking to me his voice was full of excitement and he was looking forward to things that were going to happen in the near future rather than focusing on his disease. He was here for an hour or two and when he left I thought "that was amazing"
A few months ago I was talking to another person who had came to the gym one afternoon for a chat. Again we exchanged formalities and I asked how she was doing. She said she was ok thanks. She then went on to say she had been signed off work with depression. I know this lady well and I also know she was going through a bad time and had recently ended a relationship, so could understand why she was signed off with depression. I asked if she was feeling alright and she said yes she was feeling fine so again we exchanged banter whilst having a hot drink. Whilst I see that this lady was going through a difficult time and can see that being away from work may help her 'condition', on reflection now, after talking to my friend and seeing how he is dealing with the fact that he has cancer and in his words "I don't know if I will see Christmas" I start to wonder how the human mind works? I think my first friend showed an amazing amount of courage to face his disease and make the most of his time, experiencing as much as he can in the time he has left, whilst I imagine my second friend, although I don't doubt she was depressed, could with a different mindset manage her illness better. I have low moments like anyone else but I find I am getting better at dealing with them by putting everything in perspective. If we accept we need to solve problems to grow as people then surely the problems will become just obstacles that lead us on to a better life? Otherwise if they remain as problems they will always be problems and we will never move forward. Have you ever, Yes you! have you ever had a long standing grudge with someone? It might be from years ago when you were at school about a relationship, or a time when that person made you look stupid in front of your friends. Have you then met this person years down the line and realised they are not as bad as you remembered and not only have they changed but so have you? We can change how we feel in an instant if we look for the positives in a situation and stop dwelling on the negatives.
If you get down, feel lonely, or become depressed: If things aren't going so well, its's time to change the programme and start to get things back on track. And this will start when you start telling yourself the way forward and actually believe there is a way.
We Created It We Can Change It
Our situation in our lives were created by us or the influences in our lives. I may never have liked reggae music and boxing if my father was not a Jamaican boxer? I certainly wouldn't have been a conservative councillor if I hadn't been approached by the conservative party. Tiger Woods may not have been a prolific golfer had his dad not introduced him to golf before he could even walk and if you or I were born in another country to another religion our view of the world might be totally different. We are all products of our programming.
If we decide that things are dark and gloomy then that's the way they will stay. I hear people say "I wish I was rich, I wish I was fitter, I wish I could give up smoking etc... All these things are achievable to almost every one of us but wishing for something never gets it ... unless you are Aladin and have a magic lamp. Wanting things to work out right is the reason they didn't work out right in the first place. We have to make things happen. It is up to us to create the lives we want. When dealing with depression psychiatrists and counselors will often recommend a change of diet, I would recommend a bit of positive self talk to ease your mind and then rather than getting depressed you can start to manage your life better and appreciate your self more. I have just picked up a book I read a short while ago called 'the One Minute Apology' by Ken Blanchard and read a short passage from a chapter called Self Appreciation where a young man is recieving life skills from the One Minute Manager
A young man asked " How does a person learn to appreciate themselves?"
"From four sources" Replied the One Minute Manager.
- "The first is fate. At birth you don't have a choice of where you are born , who your parents are, or whether you are male or female or the color of your skin, it is fate.
- The second is your early life experiences with adults - Your parents, relatives, teachers and coaches.
- "Third" continued the One Minute Manager are your successes and failures in life
- And the fourth source of your self worth is your perception of the first three
"Which of these four do you think are the most powerful?" asked the One Minute Manager?
"The fourth" the young man replied
The story continues and the young man learns more about life skills and in particular in this book of how a one minute apology can make a huge difference to relationships without you looking foolish. After I read this book I then tried it out for myself to see if it had any value. After I had told people close to me how I accepted I had made mistakes and wanted to be judged from what I did from then onward. But instead of being compassionate the people just agreed with my failings telling me I needed to buck up my ideas because they were working so hard and I was letting them down. That didn't seem to work, and I was furious inside and wanted to retaliate by saying how much I had been trying and how much more I was doing compared to what they were doing etc, I thought what a crap book I just embarrassed myself with my honesty. I tried to change what I had created by adopting a new approach and fell flat on my face. Once the dust had settled a week or so later I had another talk with the same people explaining that I was not happy with their reaction to my admission of my mistakes and thought they should have reacted differently. I explained how much I attributed to the cause and although I could see their help was important and valued I would be happy if my efforts were appreciated too. This time the reaction was much better The heat of the moment at the first meeting seemed to take over any rationality. They also apologised for the way they had reacted and since then there has been a huge change in our relationships and we understand each other far more than we ever did before.
This was the first time I had stood up and said "I made mistakes" but although I will try not to put myself in that position again it won't be the last. We all make mistakes it's is one of the ways we learn
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