The big question in astrology is fate or free will.
It can’t be a simple either or question, there has to be some kind of spectrum and we all try and work out where we sit along it.
My standard position over the years is that your astrology isn’t fate, but it does require you to experience life within some kind of symbolic range indicated by the planetary patterns at your birth.
You have the potential to operate at many different levels within that range but you can’t step outside it.
And in a way, the greatest freedom that you do have comes from accepting that range and choosing to work with it.
Because the more you fight it and try to be something else, the more you will fail and lose your opportunity to make the most of it.
Within this position I have also come to the conclusion that certain things are predetermined, particularly the comings and goings of people into your life.
The science of secondary progressions has convinced me of this.
As souls we all have connections with others in our group. These individuals will make an appearance in our lives at a particular time that has been prearranged as some kind of contract that we made before we were born.
The reason for this meeting is presumably to help us work through our chart patterns and particularly the astrological conditions at the time of their appearance.
Any kind of pre birth soul agreement cannot occur without full knowledge of the astrology of the lives concerned. Our respective birth charts must have been chosen as part of that agreement.
Major transits would also have to be taken into consideration something along the lines of “well you’ll be having Pluto on your Sun around the age of 50 and you’ll need some help with that, maybe so and so can step in just before then”.
But we still have some choice in terms of how we respond to their appearance.
My soulmate turned up on astrotwitter when I was aged 63, I gave up everything and flew to the other side of the world to be with her.
It was a complete no-brainer for me, to do otherwise would have been absurd, but if seen within the context of my life up to that point there is nothing that would suggest that I would ever do such a thing.
There is no way that someone with a Sun, Moon, Ascendant Capricorn with a Venus/Saturn conjunction would behave in such a spontaneous fashion. I didn’t even believe in love or soulmates, until my own turned up.
In the 7 years since then, I have made this type of thing a major theme in my astrological research and I have identified many other people’s soul group meeting moments.
Our real freedom lies in our capacity to see these moments and respond positively when they occur. An understanding of our astrology, our progressions and transits is the greatest gift we have to help us see these moments.
Many versions of the time spent between lives contain some kind of review, where the returning soul gets a chance to look back on the life just lived, but from a detached perspective.
This is different from the “Day Of Judgement” that so many kids of my generation were threatened with weekly from the church pulpit.
The Book of Matthew 25 describes the final judgment, where people are separated into “sheep,” representing the righteous and rewarded with eternal life or “goats,” representing the wicked and condemned to eternal punishment.
This binary notion of good and bad is not helpful and certainly unfair on Capricorns.
Any life review would have to take account of the chart that you were operating with.
This review doesn’t even condemn you to spend the next seven lives receiving the karma that you’ve just dished out to others.
There’s no judgement at all, it’s simply a fresh look for your own benefit to enable your soul to reflect and decide what you need to work on next.
The way you have interacted with other members of your soul group would be taken into account, whether you have made the most of these opportunities, misused them or even missed them altogether.
Because this can happen.
I have seen situations where the person wasn’t able to recognise and make the most of the opportunity and their soulmate just drifted past or they reacted negatively and poisoned the possibility of an ongoing connection this time round.
The reasons for this missing out have been many and varied but usually run along the lines of the person being too attached to their past or concerned about their future and not being present enough to see what was happening in front of them.
In some cases this can be taken to extremes with a whole succession of soul group members coming and going without recognition.

The life surfers car park on the other side will have a number of souls passing through.
Some are coming back from one life, others are arriving ready to head out for another go.
You can imagine Henry VIII stomping back up from the beach, grumbling and struggling to get out of his XXXL wetsuit, while others coming back with him are trying desperately to avoid catching his eye.
Would be surfers going in the opposite direction would inevitably have their questions.
“What’s it like out there mate?”
“It’s a bit chop. Lots of decent looking waves, but tough to stay on one for long”
After a while Henry’s guide turns up
“What the f..k bro?”
“Well in my defence, you did give me that 8th house Moon”
“Yeah but you could have just had great sex with them, you didn’t have to xxxx them”
Henry’s reason for misusing his soulmates was a classic Cancerian one, he was just obsessed with his kids, or in his case the lack of them.
In The Six Wives Of Henry VIII, I explain some of the key themes in his life.
“Cancer is the sign of the family, the 11th is the house of politics, so as Henry’s Sun is there, this simply means that his life will centre around the politics of dynastic issues.
Henry’s Sun is opposite Uranus in the 5th house. The 5th is the house of children, Uranus is the coolest, most unemotional of planets operating in the barren sign of Capricorn. So it’s pretty clear that what Henry wants more than anything else, a strong son to continue the Tudor dynasty, is not going to happen.
Astrology often has a way of reinforcing its most important messages so that even the dumbest of us can understand.
Henry also has Mercury in the regal sign of Leo in the 11th house. This Mercury is opposite Saturn in Aquarius in the 5th. That’s Saturn in Uranus’ sign just as Uranus in Saturn’s sign, so we have a double whammy around restricted offspring. Clearly this dynasty thing is going to be a problem.
Uranus of course also rules revolution, so Henry’s thwarted Cancerian dynastic ambitions caused a massive upheaval in 16th century England, bringing about a separation from the Catholic church which had held sway over the souls of everyone for millennia.
Any opposition in a chart creates a challenge and a tension. If there is another planet that is square to both ends of the opposition, a T square is created.
The T square is an extremely dynamic aspect and the 3rd planet will always show the direction that the person will go in to attempt to resolve the problems and tensions created by the opposition.
The Moon in Henry’s chart acts as an apex of a T Square. It’s true that at 11 degrees 20 the Moon’s square to Uranus is a very wide aspect but Capricorn Research is prepared to include it because the faster moving Moon is applying to both the Sun and Uranus.
The Moon in astrology rules the female principle. Aries is the most impatient and impetuous sign often resorting to aggression in order to get its own way. The 8th house is the place of death.
So with the Moon in Aries in the 8th house as the apex of the T square, Henry’s response to his dynastic problems was simply to get rid of his wives. Henry as we know had six of them, two he killed, two were divorced, one died and one lived after him.”
How might the soul that played the role of Henry VIII answer his guide having seen his life review?
“Mmm, maybe I need to go back for another go and see if I can get it right next time round.”
The problem is finding a suitable chart vehicle to provide Henry with similar conditions to have another stab at his life lessons.
Another T Square in Henry’s chart would be the one with Jupiter in the 10th opposite Neptune with an apex Mars in the 1st house.
This was Henry the warrior king, who “was driven by a desire for martial glory and to emulate past English kings like his namesake Henry V.
He led military campaigns against France and Scotland, built up the navy and coastal defences, and used military action to project power and secure his international reputation.”
If we take Henry’s chart forward to when his progressed Sun was conjunct that Mars and his Moon was also in the T square we get to the year 1566.
Which coincides with the birth of James VI of Scotland.
Coming back as James would be ironic because he took over the English throne on the death of Henry’s own daughter Elizabeth as the Tudor succession ran out of the very steam that he spent most of his Cancerian life obsessing about.
It would be doubly ironic as James’ mother, Mary born 5 years before Henry died, was just six days old when she became Queen of Scots.
“Henry floated a treaty proposing that Mary should marry his five-year-old heir, the future Edward VI, and thus unite the two nations. Under Henry’s plans, he would take charge of the Mary (and Scotland) until the marriage.
Mary’s mother was against it. She preferred a union that would betroth the child to the heir of the King of France.
Henry was incandescent and sent an army, pillaging and burning, into Scotland – this was the beginning of what became known as the ‘Rough Wooing’. The Battle of Pinkie Cleuch in 1547 was a devastating defeat for the Scots and Mary was moved to Dumbarton Castle for safety. A French marriage was agreed just before Henry died.”
But this article is more about the Sun in Cancer square the Moon in Aries in the 8th house misuse of soulmates thing, so to find another of Henry’s incarnations that would do suitable justice to these themes, we would have to progress his chart further until it reached those degrees of Aries.
This takes us to the early 1760s.

Henry’s regressed Sun was conjunct his Moon and exactly square to his Sun.
To reinforce the importance of this date, his regressed Mars was in the exact same place.
For extra effect around the marriage theme, his regressed Moon was exactly on his Descendant.
This date coincides with the birth of another English king.

If you google the worst royal husband in British history, Henry V111 would surely come at the top of the list.
It’s also a fair bet that second place would be held by George 1V.
I wrote about George in the article How Not To Get Thrown Under A Wedding Train
George IV of England “led an extravagant lifestyle that contributed to the fashions of the Regency era.”
He commissioned the Royal Pavilion in Brighton as a pleasure palace to entertain his mistresses and “his dissolute way of life… earned him the contempt of the people and dimmed the prestige of the monarchy.
George’s rule was tarnished by scandal and financial extravagance. His ministers found his behaviour selfish, unreliable and irresponsible and he was strongly influenced by favourites.”
This is all fairly well covered in George’s Fixed Grand Cross, particularly the extravagant Moon conjunct Jupiter in Taurus in the 2nd house in opposition to the sleazy Mars in Scorpio in the 8th.
It is worth pointing out that while George has a challenging chart anyway, it is made much more difficult in the area of relationships.
Venus in the 7th house in trine to the Moon might be considered favourable. In square to Pluto it becomes very difficult.
The Sun on the Descendant would make relationships a major theme in his life, the conjunction with Neptune means that any kind of marriage would be a disaster laced with lies and deception.”
So if Henry V111 was coming back to take another step into the karmic marriage flames that he himself ignited, George’s Grand Cross with a Sun/Neptune conjunction on the Descendant would seem like an appropriate place to start.
What if we regressed George’s chart to Henry’s birthdate?
Would we see similar connections?

Interestingly, George’s regressed Sun is back in his Grand Cross again, closely square to his 7th house Neptune.
His regressed Moon is also sextile his Neptune.
His regressed Venus is exactly (4 minute orb) trine his Ascendant.
So we can safely conclude that George 1V was indeed Henry V111 coming back to have another go with his soulmates.
How did that work out for him?

As you can imagine, Henry V111’s six wives all had some fairly serious 7th house issues of their own.
Here’s my piece from The Six Wives Of Henry V111 on his first one, Catherine of Aragon.
“By any way of looking at it Catherine had an extraordinary chart. A seven planet stellium within 30 degrees is one of the tightest Capricorn Research has ever seen and it’s fascinating to see where it is.
Sagittarius is the sign of organised religion and six of these planets are in this sign, including a powerful conjunction of Jupiter and Uranus. These two were also conjunct Catherine’s Sun so whichever way we look at it her life was going to be bound up with powerful and revolutionary religious developments.
Sagittarius also is the planet of travel, and its not surprising she lived in a land far away from her own.
Catherine herself was a Capricorn, so her own religious allegiances were of the conventional sort to the established church.
The stellium occurs in the 3rd house of siblings and the crucial aspect of her fate was that she ended up marrying two royal brothers.
Interestingly of the three planets that make it outside the stellium, two of them form a close opposition that point to the major theme of her life.
Catherine’s Moon is in Aries in the 7th house of marriage. This Moon is also conjunct Henry’s Moon, which shows why they came together in the first place, but the condition of Henry’s Moon shows that for Catherine things are already looking rather bleak.
So when we see that Catherine’s Moon is opposite Pluto in the relationship sign of Libra, we’re already thinking divorce, even though divorce hadn’t actually been invented yet.
Catherine’s stellium starts with a Mars/Saturn conjunction so it’s clear that whatever she wanted in life would definitely not come to fruition, in fact it would turn round and give her a really serious kicking, particularly if it had anything to do with religion and travel (Sagittarius) and brothers (3rd).
Catherine was three years old when she was betrothed to Prince Arthur, Henry’s elder brother and heir apparent to the English throne. They married in 1501, but Arthur died five months later. Catherine stayed in England to become the first female ambassador in European history but more significantly married Henry VIII, in 1509.
Catherine’s 7th house Moon opposite Pluto was always going to cause problems, and the most likely time for it to do so would be when Pluto renewed the aspect by transit.
Pluto was square to Catherine’s Moon in 1526 when Henry became impatient with Catherine’s inability to produce a male heir for him and turned his eyes towards Anne Boleyn.
Whilst Catherine’s Pluto/Moon transit was in operation, Henry became intent on annulling his marriage. He convinced himself that in marrying Catherine, his brother’s wife, he had acted contrary to the bible and that the Pope had never had the authority to sanction it in the first place.
The Pope of the time was unimpressed with Henry’s arguments, mainly because he was under pressure from the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V who was Catherine’s nephew.
In 1533, on discovering that Anne was pregnant, Henry got the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer to declare his marriage to Catherine null and void. Five days later, on 28 May 1533, Cranmer declared the marriage of Henry and Anne to be valid, Catherine was formally stripped of her title as queen and in her place, Anne was crowned Queen on 1 June 1533.
A Reformation Parliament was set up to sort all this out and under the guidance of Thomas Cromwell the Act of Succession 1533 meant that Catherine’s daughter, Mary, was declared illegitimate, his marriage to Anne legitimate and Anne’s issue next in the line of succession. With the Acts of Supremacy in 1534, Parliament also recognised the King’s status as head of the church in England. The separation from Rome was complete.
That these few years constituted a serious revolution in both Henry’s world and for the whole country, was shown by the transits to the monarch’s chart. Henry’s natal Sun/Uranus opposition was triggered as the transiting Uranus conjuncted his Sun in 1531 -2. This was closely followed by Saturn doing the same thing in 1532 -3.
Of course Henry’s Sun was square his Moon natally so that meant that both these transits would also be square to Henry’s Moon, meaning the end for Catherine.”
How about when he came back as George?
Did he manage to fair any better?
Here’s a few more historical details, this time from How To Not Get Thrown Under A Wedding Train
“In 1794, George IV was engaged to Caroline of Brunswick. They had never met—George had agreed to marry her because he was heavily in debt, and if he contracted a marriage with an eligible princess, Parliament would increase his allowance. Caroline seemed eminently suitable: she was a Protestant of royal birth, and the marriage would ally Brunswick and Britain. Although Brunswick was only a small country, Britain was at war with revolutionary France and so was eager to obtain allies on the European mainland.
Caroline did not want to marry. On meeting George she complained “the Prince is very fat and he’s nothing like as handsome as his portrait.
Caroline and George were married on 8 April 1795 in London. At the ceremony, George was drunk. He regarded Caroline as unattractive and unhygienic, and suspected that she was not a virgin when they married.
In a letter to a friend, the prince claimed that the couple only had sexual intercourse three times: twice the first night of the marriage, and once the second night. He wrote, “it required no small effort to conquer my aversion and overcome the disgust of her person.” Caroline claimed George was so drunk that he “passed the greatest part of his bridal night under the grate, where he fell, and where I left him”.
Nine months after the wedding, Caroline gave birth to Princess Charlotte, George’s only legitimate child. Charlotte was second in the line of succession to the British throne after her father.
Gossip about Caroline and George’s troubled marriage was already circulating. The press vilified George for his extravagance and luxury at a time of war and portrayed Caroline as a wronged wife. She was cheered in public and gained plaudits for her “winning familiarity” and easy, open nature. George was dismayed at her popularity and his own unpopularity, and felt trapped in a loveless marriage with a woman he loathed. He wanted a separation.
By the end of 1811, King George III had become permanently insane, and the Prince of Wales was appointed regent. He restricted Caroline’s access to Princess Charlotte further, and Caroline became more socially isolated as members of high society chose to patronise George’s extravagant parties rather than hers.
Caroline, unhappy at her situation and treatment in Britain, negotiated a deal where she agreed to leave the country in exchange for an annual allowance of £35,000. On 8 August 1814, Caroline left Britain.”
She spent the next few years travelling round Europe.
In 1816, Caroline’s daughter, Princess Charlotte, had married Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and the future of the British monarchy looked bright. Then tragedy struck: in November 1817, Charlotte died after giving birth to her only child, a stillborn son. For the most part, Charlotte had been immensely popular with the public, and her death was a blow to the country. Caroline had lost her daughter, but she had also lost any chance of regaining position through the succession of her daughter to the throne.
George was determined to press ahead with a divorce, at this time in England divorce by mutual consent was illegal; it was only possible to divorce if one of the partners admitted or was found guilty of adultery. However on 29 January 1820 George III died. Caroline’s husband became king and, at least nominally, she was queen of the United Kingdom.
Instead of being treated like a queen, Caroline found that her estranged husband’s accession paradoxically made her position worse. In an attempt to assert her rights, she made plans to return to Britain. The King demanded that his ministers get rid of her. He successfully persuaded them to remove her name from the liturgy of the Church of England, but they would not agree to a divorce because they feared the effect of a public trial. The government was weak and unpopular, and a trial detailing salacious details of both Caroline’s and George’s separate love lives was certain to destabilise it further.
When Caroline arrived in England riots broke out in support of her. Caroline was a figurehead for the growing Radical movement that demanded political reform and opposed the unpopular king. Nevertheless, the King still adamantly desired a divorce and the following day, he submitted the evidence to Parliament of Caroline’s adultery. Examination of the bags of evidence was delayed as Parliament debated the form of the investigation, but eventually they were opened and examined in secret by 15 peers. The peers considered the contents scandalous, and a week later, after their report to the House, the government introduced a bill in Parliament, the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820, to strip Caroline of the title of queen and dissolve her marriage.
The bill was effectively a public trial of the Queen. The trial caused a sensation. The bill passed the House of Lords, but was not submitted to the House of Commons as there was little prospect that the Commons would pass it.
Even during the trial, the Queen remained immensely popular and despite the King’s best attempts, Caroline retained a strong popularity among the masses, and pressed ahead with plans to attend the coronation service as queen.
George had Caroline turned away from the coronation at the doors of Westminster Abbey. A witness described how the Queen stood at the door fuming as bayonets were held under her chin until the deputy lord chamberlain had the doors slammed in her face.
The night following Caroline’s failed attempt to attend her husband’s coronation, she fell ill and three weeks later she died at the age of 53. Her physicians thought she had an intestinal obstruction, but she may have had cancer, and there were rumours at the time that she had been poisoned.”

With the Sun in Taurus and Moon in Gemini in trine to Jupiter conjunct a Libra Ascendant, you would expect Caroline to lead a charmed life.
With her ruler, a dignified Venus in the 7th conjunct Mercury and sextile Mars in Pisces, the 7th house ruler and Saturn in Cancer in the 9th you might expect her to marry someone from abroad but this looks very much like a Prince Charming, happy ever after scenario.
Unfortunately for Caroline, by the time she reached her 13th birthday, Uranus had been discovered. And in a place that would give her own marital ambitions a very particular shove off the platform.
For Princess Caroline of Brunswick, Uranus is exactly conjunct her Venus in her 7th house of marriage.
Once we see that Neptune is opposite Caroline’s Mars, this 7th house ruler Prince Charming starts to look more like a drunken, debauched figure prone to having secret affairs (Mars in Pisces in the 5th house).
And Pluto’s exact square (a mere 4 minutes of arc) to Jupiter would take any ambitions that she had of becoming a Queen into a shredder.”
There’s a few similarities between Henry’s marriage to Catherine and George’s with Caroline.
The arranged thing with a foreigner, the succession question and the numerous attempts to divorce.
Could Catherine and Caroline be related per chance? Is it possible that Ca of A, was coming back for another life as Ca of B?
Since Caroline’s troubles began when she left Brunswick, if we are asking whether she was a reincarnation of Catherine, it seems fair to look at her progressions to her wedding date.

If we progress Catherine’s chart forward 310 years to the date of Caroline’s wedding to George, we get an astonishingly tight T Square.
Mars, Uranus and an apex Venus in the thick red triangle are all contained within 1/4 of a degree.
Catherine’s 7th house Moon was trine her Jupiter showing that she would marry a king, it was also opposite Pluto showing that it would cause her no end of trouble.
In April 1795, her progressed Moon was exactly trine her Jupiter again, but that T square would be likely to bring her even more pain than the last time.

Caroline’s chart came with a clear warning against foreign travel.
With Saturn and the South Node in the 9th, she should have stayed in Brunswick.
With the Nodes in an excruciatingly tight T square with Pluto and Jupiter, some fairly vicious lessons would be expected from venturing overseas.
But it’s also fair to say that most of Caroline’s problems came because she was married to a drunk, surely the most debauched figure to ever sit on the English throne (and there has been some pretty stiff competition).
This is beautifully described by her 7th house ruler, Mars in Pisces opposite Neptune.
If we regress Caroline’s chart to the date of Catherine’s marriage to Henry.

Caroline’s regressed Sun in June 1509 was exactly opposite that Mars.
The regressed square between Mars and the Moon is fairly close as well.
And despite the 260 year time difference her regressed Saturn has returned to the exact same place (5 minute orb) and is placed in her 7th house.
And Saturn is joined there by the South Node.
With these two way progressions/regressions we can see quite clearly that Catherine was returning as Caroline to have another go with Henry/George.
Catherine of Aragon’s Sagittarius stellium would always be optimistic that things would work out better next time.
They definitely didn’t as Caroline.
But it’s also fair to say that neither of them came off as badly as Anne Boleyn.

There are a couple of different charts proposed for Henry V111’s second wife, Anne Boleyn, but this one speaks for itself.
Like Catherine, Anne had a 7th house Moon in tight hard aspect with Pluto.
Anne’s Moon was the apex of a T square. So marital troubles for sure.
Her Sun was in exact square with Saturn indicating problems with men generally.
But that afflicted Venus in Aries in the 8th house would show she had problems keeping her head in conjunction with the rest of her body, particularly when we see her synastry with Henry.

Anne’s Aries Venus is exactly conjunct Henry’s Moon showing the passion that would bring them together and the trauma that would end their relationship.
Both Catherine and Anne had Aries placements that squared Henry’s Cancer Sun obsession with producing a male heir.
Catherine’s Aries Moon in the 7th paid for this with her divorce.
Anne’s Aries Venus in the 8th paid for it with her life.
Is it possible that Anne Boleyn also came back for another go with Henry once he had been reincarnated as George?
What would happen if we progress Anne’s chart forward to the point where her Sun reaches her Descendant (the point of marriage).

On the 15th December 1785, Anne’s progressed Sun was exactly conjunct her Descendant.
She also had a progressed Venus/Saturn opposition, with the latter falling right on her 7th house Moon.
What happened on that date?
“Technically Caroline of Brunswick wasn’t George’s first wife.
In spring 1784, he was introduced to twice widowed Maria Fitzherbert who was six years older than him. “The prince became infatuated with her and pursued her endlessly until she agreed to marry him. Secretly, and – as both parties were well aware – against the law, they went through a form of marriage on 15 December 1785.
The marriage was not valid under English law because it had not received the prior approval of King George III and the Privy Council as required by the Royal Marriages Act 1772. Had approval been sought, it might not have been granted for many reasons, including, for example, Fitzherbert’s Catholic religion. Had consent been given and the marriage been legal, the Prince of Wales would have been automatically removed from the succession to the British throne.
On 23 June 1794, Fitzherbert was informed by letter that her relationship with the Prince was over.”
George had been forced to give up Maria and marry Caroline by his father George 111 in return for covering his enormous gambling debts.

We don’t have a birthtime for Maria but she had some similar themes to Anne.
They both had a difficult Sun/Saturn aspect and both had Mutable T squares.
So while Catherine of Aragon was reincarnated as Caroline of Brunswick, Anne Boleyn came back as Maria Fitzherbert.
Henry had four other wives, Jane Seymour, Anne Of Cleeves, Catherine Howard and Catherine Parr.
George had four other notable mistresses, Mary Robinson, Lady Jersey, Lady Hertford and Elizabeth Conyngham.
They may all be reincarnations of each other but this article would never come to an end if I was to explore all the possible connections.
Anne Boleyn was the closest thing Henry V111 had to a true soulmate.
This fact was evidenced by his progressions.
Henry’s progressed Venus was square his Moon when he first met Anne, conjunct his Sun when he was wooing her and opposite his Uranus when he had her executed.
Equally George’s progressed Venus was sextile his 7th house Sun and trine his Ascendant when he first met Maria Fitzherbert.
So how might we consider the progress of the soul known as Bad King Hal?
Is this particular Aries Moon a sheep or goat?
There is no such place is a hell. It is simply an invention by people who want to keep others under control while seeming equally determined to turn this place into one.
There is no fury, even if you murder your wife you get another chance to make it up to her.
Time is an illusion, particularly in the life surfer’s car park.
A few hundred years can pass in the blink of an eye.
Henry returned to the car park as George and the next group of souls were asking
“What’s it like out there mate?”
“Some pretty decent waves again but I got pissed and couldn’t stay on one”
His guide was there again.
“Still not really got the hang of this have you?”
“Well you gave me a Sun/Neptune so what would you expect? At least I didn’t kill any of em”
“Small steps bro, small steps”.
Posted on 25 November 2025
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