Inspire to Run Podcast

Path to Personal Growth Through Running with Shawn Buttner

December 07, 2023 Shawn Buttner Season 2 Episode 108
Path to Personal Growth Through Running with Shawn Buttner
Inspire to Run Podcast
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Inspire to Run Podcast
Path to Personal Growth Through Running with Shawn Buttner
Dec 07, 2023 Season 2 Episode 108
Shawn Buttner

#108 - Are you looking for personal growth and renewed motivation in your running journey? Look no further! Listen to my conversation with Shawn Buttner, Certified High Performance Coach, as he shares the solution to help you unleash your full potential and achieve remarkable transformation in running and life. 

Together, we will unlock the power of personal growth, fuel your motivation, and pave the way for unparalleled success on your running journey. So, are you ready to conquer your limits and embark on a running adventure like never before?


Topics Covered:

  • Discover how your running journey can lead to personal growth and self-discovery
  • Learn the five ways running can help transform your personal and professional life
  • Explore running as a therapeutic outlet for mental and emotional well-being
  • Understand the transformative power of running and its impact on overall personal development


Today’s Guest

Shawn Buttner

Shawn is a Certified High Performance Coach and host of The Meaningful Revolution Podcast, operating out of Oakland, CA. After a successful 15 year career in technology, working for companies like Wal-Mart and Apple, Shawn now helps individuals live better lives through high performance coaching. 

His method of coaching includes a holistic approach to find higher levels of performance in your career, health, relationships, and well-being.



Follow Shawn:


Resources:


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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

#108 - Are you looking for personal growth and renewed motivation in your running journey? Look no further! Listen to my conversation with Shawn Buttner, Certified High Performance Coach, as he shares the solution to help you unleash your full potential and achieve remarkable transformation in running and life. 

Together, we will unlock the power of personal growth, fuel your motivation, and pave the way for unparalleled success on your running journey. So, are you ready to conquer your limits and embark on a running adventure like never before?


Topics Covered:

  • Discover how your running journey can lead to personal growth and self-discovery
  • Learn the five ways running can help transform your personal and professional life
  • Explore running as a therapeutic outlet for mental and emotional well-being
  • Understand the transformative power of running and its impact on overall personal development


Today’s Guest

Shawn Buttner

Shawn is a Certified High Performance Coach and host of The Meaningful Revolution Podcast, operating out of Oakland, CA. After a successful 15 year career in technology, working for companies like Wal-Mart and Apple, Shawn now helps individuals live better lives through high performance coaching. 

His method of coaching includes a holistic approach to find higher levels of performance in your career, health, relationships, and well-being.



Follow Shawn:


Resources:


Rate, Review, & Follow on Apple Podcasts

“Inspire to Run Podcast is truly inspiring!” <– If that sounds like you, please consider rating and reviewing my show! This helps me support more people — just like you — move toward the healthy life that they desire. Click here, scroll to the bottom, tap to rate with five stars, and select “Write a Review.” Then be sure to let me know what you loved most about the episode!


Join the Inspire to Run community:

For more information, visit Inspire to Run.

Join the community and click the subscribe

Support the Show.

Help us continue making great content for listeners everywhere by clicking here to support the show!

Speaker 1:

Hey, my friend, are you looking to level up in fitness or maybe even in your professional life? Well, I have the pleasure of speaking with a high performance coach who will share his personal experience and coaching philosophy that can help you in multiple areas of your life. Hope you enjoy. Welcome to.

Speaker 2:

Inspire to Run Podcast. Here you will find inspiration, Whether you are looking to take control of your health and fitness or you are a seasoned trainer looking for community and some extra motivation. You will hear inspiring stories from amazing runners, along with helpful tips from fitness experts. Now here's your host, Richard.

Speaker 1:

Connor. Hi, my friend, welcome to Inspire to Run Podcast. Today I have the pleasure of sitting down with Sean Butler, who is a certified high performance coach and owner of SB High Performance Group LLC. Operating out of Berkeley, california. After a successful career in technology, working for companies like Walmart and Apple, sean now helps individuals live better lives through high performance coaching. His method of coaching includes a holistic approach to find higher levels of performance in your career, health, relationships and well-being. Welcome to the show, sean. Thanks, richard, thanks for having me. Yeah, so excited to have you here. I love to talk about the work that you're doing from a coaching standpoint. Plus, I know that you're a runner I think a relative runner, but you've got a great story there and really to help our community, our listeners, in their own journey, whether they haven't run before and they're looking to take that first step, or they're looking to level up and do something that they haven't done before. So excited to have you here.

Speaker 3:

Excited to be here and I definitely can help with all of that. Cool, cool.

Speaker 1:

Well, let's get into it. Thanks, here a little bit about you and a little bit about your running journey.

Speaker 3:

All right. So I was a late bloomer when it came to running. In high school I was athletic but I was a lineman for football. I did track and field through shot and disc. So a lot of weight room, a little bit of sprinting really did not like running. My best friend growing up went on cross country in high school, lost a bunch of weight, continued his running journey, eventually running the Chicago Marathon.

Speaker 3:

Originally from Chicago and I left college. I had done a couple like 5Ks or whatever the big seven mile race in the Quad Cities, iowa, if you're familiar with that with my friends and then moved to Arkansas for a job at Walmart, didn't know anyone and got sick of staring at the paint on my walls after work. And that was when I decided to sign up, probably just out of boredom, for the Chicago Marathon. And I couldn't really. I did a couple of races. It was more like half walking, half running with your friends type thing. But I had nine months to figure out how to go from not really being able to run for 15 minutes straight to 26.2 miles. And so that's how I got into running. I was inspired by my friend, but if he could do it I could do it and then out of desperation, maybe Like, okay, let's try to make this happen. So send in the money. And that was the beginning of years and years of running.

Speaker 1:

I love that. I love that and hearing the origin story of having a friend bring you into the kind of the running world and running community is really wonderful and I love how you just kind of embraced it and it wasn't like, no, I can't do that, maybe some other time. You really embraced it and you figured out a way to get to that. And my background is I am a runner since running, since high school track in cross country, and I did enjoy running but I still haven't run my first marathon. So it's off to you for doing that seemingly right out of the gate.

Speaker 3:

Thanks, yeah, maybe I would have done it a different way. I might have warmed up a little bit more. It was tough.

Speaker 1:

Stretched a little bit.

Speaker 3:

Stretched a little bit, but that was also part of the fun Every week. So I got a Hal Higdon's how to Train book which has classic how to Train for the Chicago Marathon Should be able to run three miles three days a week before you start training. And so that was my first three months was just trying to get to that base. But each time I had a new mileage goal for the week or a new long run. It was this excitement of I have never pushed my body in an endurance way that far before, so you get kind of addicted to that. That's kind of good and bad.

Speaker 1:

That's awesome and you, but you have to get over kind of that hump of can I do this or am I willing to commit to this. So I'd love to hear whether you, some listeners, whether someone has done their first 5K and they're like, well, maybe that's it, or they've never run their first 5K and maybe there's a lot of reasons why. Like what were your reasons? Maybe they first came to mind and were like, well, run a marathon, like what are kind of those objections? And then how did you overcome that within yourself?

Speaker 3:

Well, part of it was naivety. I had been athletic so I'm like I could probably figure this out. So I think that belief of I think I can do this right. It starts with that throwing down setting the deadline where I had nine months in October I'm gonna be part of that race and we're gonna walk it, I'm gonna run it or I'm gonna die, right. And so being that committed to it and then past that like it was getting a clear plan, so like I mentioned getting that hell-hicked in book what I needed to do, so I didn't have to think about that. And then the rest of it was just a little bit of faith in consistent showing up, consistently right. So if I knew I had to.

Speaker 3:

Just like starting out like the first month of training was mostly me just putting on my running gear, showing up to where, the route that I found around my apartment building to where I'd start, and it's like February in Arkansas, so it's like chilly and icy and, you know, not really inspiring to go out and run and just being okay with like I put on my stuff.

Speaker 3:

I got here nine times out of 10. I'd be like, oh, if I'm here and I'm ready to go, I should just start right, and so it was like setting up the environment to be to make it easy to take the next logical action, which was to do the training. You know, past that, I think I got into a mindset of like, if I don't train, I'm going to show up to that race and I do not want to die. So the training was a survival thing, and I don't know if that's like a weird thing that other people have when they run, but like for the marathon, like that was it. You know, it's like I need to do this to not perish during this journey.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and you know it's interesting what you said kind of you know how, your thoughts and your actions leading up to the marathon, because I could see a parallel with the pillars that we have that we talk about here on the show in terms of like mindset, movement and motivation. So, you know, let's talk about each one of those individually. You know, go a little bit deeper. So, like in the mindset part, you said you know, you believed you could do it. So in some part maybe you didn't know exactly what you're getting into. But another part is it's 26 miles, so there's going to be some effort there. And then, based on what you've done in the past, you believed is there anything else if you weren't into sports maybe earlier in your life? Are there other things that someone could do to say to you know, really believe that they have the capability to do things that they've never done before, or get to that next level.

Speaker 3:

That's a great question and I think, other than believing you can do it, another belief is believing you can figure it out and make it work for you.

Speaker 3:

Like I didn't have to be the one that's winning the marathon and I came in with like, if I do that I'm going to hurt myself or you know, it's not gonna. I'm just gonna be a terrible experience to like go from zero to top performing in that. But I think what really helped with having the clarity of the training program kind of laid out. It's like, oh, I need to get up to this level and I'm not there, and accepting that like, oh, okay, I am not great at this right now, but I can get better. And what's going to get me better is showing up consistently and there'll be days where it's amazing and I feel great about it. There will be days where, like, I get a mile in and it feels well terrible and maybe you're extra tired and sleep or whatever and like, hey, I showed up and that's okay for now, as long as you're continuing to show up and progress.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, that's yeah for sure. I mean, showing up is super important and you know it's interesting like you're starting in one place and you have to be comfortable with being uncomfortable and being comfortable with not being perfect, kind of at the beginning. And I could tell you from my own experience I get super frustrated if I can't do something. So anything to do with mobility or anything that's overhead, like something that takes a lot of coordination. It doesn't come naturally for me, so I get super frustrated. But that's the only way you're going to get better is if you show up to do those things and you keep working at it until you get to where you want to be Totally. So tell me a little bit about the training now. So I think that takes us a little bit into, like the movement. So you mentioned that you had the training plan that you followed. So how did you find it? What was it like for you? You know, how'd you stick with it? Any tips that you would want to share after following that plan?

Speaker 3:

Well. So as a high-performance coach, I found out you know, I became a coach after this part of the journey but, like, being very clear on what the next steps are saves you so much energy. Like, if you have to get up and be like, what do I have to do for my run today? Like, is it a seven mile? Is it a five mile? Is it an easy one mile? You'll spend a half hour trying to think about what you got to do, and that could have been a half hour that you're running. And now, if you're allocated an hour, like you have 30 minutes now to do your thing. So really being clear on it, so clear on the training, which is kind of how I found that book. There's also a recommendation from my buddy who ran the marathon the year before and I'm like, well, that's what worked for him.

Speaker 3:

And like you, look at Hal Higdon's book, like hundreds of thousands of people have used it from beginning training to like more advanced, and so there's a little bit of credibility on that there. And it's not I mean, it's just miles right? So at least with running from erathons you're either going to like judge yourself by distance or time spent running, and so for me it was if I just did the distance and being okay, like if I had a five mile day and I ran four miles and walked and ran the last mile as long as I got the mileage in, like that was the goal right, and so you could either do it by time and say I'm going to run my three miles in 10 minutes, which is crazy, or you know, at lead level, or I'm just going to do the three miles however long it takes me, and so I think that distinction in that particular case of training really helped me.

Speaker 3:

But it's pretty impactful in other areas of your life too, like if you are running a business and you can either say I want to grow it, you know, either by this much, or I need to grow it in this amount of time. I think for me, breaking down that goal into either time or result is changes, the effort right, okay, okay.

Speaker 1:

So, first off, being clear about your goal as well as your next steps you're not spending all of that brain power and time trying to figure it out and then for the actual plan, making sure you break it down in terms of what it is that you're going to do in that particular day and then meaning it based on whatever your criteria. So, like you said, move. Either I want to finish that four miles or, like in my case, I'm typically run by time, so that could equate to the four miles, or it could equate to more or less, depending on you know how I'm running that day. So, but being really clear about that as well, definitely you know and I love how you brought kind of your coaching experience into the conversation. So you know, what other words of wisdom would you have kind of based on you know your performance coaching practice?

Speaker 3:

When it comes to running and high performance coaching. So high performance coaching is just beating whatever your normal result is, consistently over time, without burning out, so be in a sustainable way. So you know, clarity is one of the big points that we teach, but it's also, you know, managing your energy. So I'm sure we can have a really huge talk about how to fuel your body for your runs. Like people love to nerd out about it, everyone has their own favorite things. For me, I could tell you a crazy story about my first Chicago marathon.

Speaker 3:

That was back in 2009. And that was the year where it got canceled halfway through because it was so hot. And so, yeah, like you know, usually in October, chicago start. It's like probably like the East Coast, where it's cold at night and warm during the day, so like 40s or 50s at night. The race, at six o'clock in the morning, started at like 75 degrees, which was nuts, and so there wasn't any water and stuff you know.

Speaker 3:

So, managing your energy I bring that up because I learned from, you know, getting halfway through and then having the thing canceled on me, bad idea to bring my own water. So, like you know, the, the cowlback, like like, like hiking water hydrations system is with me now from that for anything over four miles, right, if I'm not going to hydrate. And then, like Goose, really helped, I think, like Hammer gels, which I think cyclists use, which is a better carbohydrate protein mix, really worked for me. But, like, so in coaching we talk about energy, so you talk about the nutrition component there, or how you're feeling your body outside. You know, you read stories of ultramarithoners who just need calories and so in the middle of a 60 mile race I'll eat two cheese pizzas, which is insane to me, you know, but there's a better way to do it than that. It'll probably help you long term with your energy, but sometimes calories are calories, but you know. So we talk about that. We talk about in high performance. One of the outcomes also is taking bold action, and for me it was throwing my money down on that race. That was kind of the driver for forcing me to show up when I didn't want to during the training.

Speaker 3:

You know again, because it was this like basically survival mentality, which I don't know why. I thought that was a good idea, but I just remember being in that headspace and also, in a weird way, running. So I, out of school, I had about $80,000 of student debt and my first corporate job was not covering student loan payments, car payment, food. And you know I was in that kind of rough spot in my early career where I'm like, do I buy food this week or do I fill my car up with gas or do I let you? Which built, you know that whole crazy thing. And the running and training became therapeutic, so one I could burn out emotions and then, you know, part of keeping my mind off the pain in my body was trying to do math of like, okay, like, how am I going to get myself out of this? And it allowed me to confront my financial or personal financial situation because I could burn through the negative emotions of just like being feeling so overwhelmed and not in control of my destiny at that time. So that was super powerful and part of these coaching outcomes.

Speaker 3:

Two other outcomes in high performance coaching that applies to running are just productivity. So what is getting you the results? What are distractions? You know? So trying up like 50 different shoes before you start running is not really productive. But running and the busted up shoes that you have and then upgrading later when you need it, you know the experience that I had of just like, just get in it and then we'll figure out the equipment. Don't get distracted by that stuff.

Speaker 3:

And then like influence, like for me, the first friends that I met in Arkansas at this new job were people through the running store Because there was a like a rush shout out to rush, running small, like mom and pop running shop. I think the guy used to like I own it, used to run for University of Arkansas. I think it was a sprinter, really cool guy. But that's where I can ask questions. That's where I could connect with people. I did a couple of crazy runs with them where, like, they had a sprint and I'm like this is too much for me. I didn't run for three days as I was so sore after that thing. But yeah, you know, help me connect with the community and a new place. So it's just super, super cool.

Speaker 1:

I love that running serves is so important for the running community. Just you know your local community. They provide so much more value than you know, obviously the running shoes, but just so, so much more. So I love that you brought that up and you know I appreciate you sharing. You know your personal story right about what was going on in your life during kind of those early years and you know from what I've seen through the conversations we've had on the show and others is running is there for folks, you know, during challenging times, right, if they're going through some sort of change in their life, whether it's family-related, health or job, and running is there for them. So I love it's not the reason why you got into it, but I love how it was there for you when you needed it most.

Speaker 3:

Definitely. I don't think I could have gotten past that phase of my life if it wasn't for running. You know kind of a weird way that when I say it out loud it sounds weird, but it's definitely true.

Speaker 1:

No, no, I love that and you know what, and your experience is one of the things that I'm trying to bottle and share, you know, with our community, because it's so powerful what you said. And if you're not a runner, if you haven't experienced those things, it's hard to think of it that way. But once you do, oh my gosh, like the benefits are just great. So I appreciate you sharing that and, if I can recap, I'm going to try to say them all, but I might need a little bit of help here in terms of, like, connecting this with your coaching practice. So we talked about getting clarity, managing your energy, taking bold action, influence, but I know I missed one. So which is the one that I missed?

Speaker 3:

Productivity, so not getting distracted and focusing on what's working.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay, okay got it. So I'm going to try this again then. So, getting clarity, actually, you know what? It's better if you say it, because I'm probably going to mix it up again.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, no problem. So, yeah, it's having clarity on the next steps. It's managing your energy. It's being bold and taking courageous action towards your plan. It's focusing on your productivity so it's working and eliminating the distracting things that get in the way of you doing the work. And it's the influence, or community, like leadership, people, skills, but in this particular sense it was community.

Speaker 1:

Love it, love it and you shared a wonderful story about you know local running stores and that community, so I really love that. That's really awesome. So you know, one of the questions that I love to ask the guests on the show is you know, throughout your running journey, what would you say was your biggest obstacle and how'd you overcome it?

Speaker 3:

The first thing that came to mind was I had tendonitis in my IT band and so I ran three marathons, like basically three years in a row. So the Chicago first time Chicago or got canceled. The second time I ran with a buddy. We finished, which was awesome. Third time was Kansas City.

Speaker 3:

And so I think I over trained because I was like I didn't realize the science right now, but I was constantly tired, I was extra irritable and then, with this tendonitis, every time I'd run longer than two miles my knee would puff up the size of like a grapefruit.

Speaker 3:

And so the biggest obstacle now is I went to the doctor and I told him like this is a common marathon medical story where you go to the doctor like how did you injure your knee?

Speaker 3:

And like marathon training, and he's like the guy like threw that as clipboard and he's like you're not going to listen to anything I say. You know, it's like you guys are crazy. If you just take Advil, if you really want it to go away, you have to stop for a while. But you know, give me my $300 because I'm the doctor that just told you to keep running on Advil. But so the biggest obstacle there is after my third marathon, I took a little break which turned into a year's long break and then, like the biggest struggle, I was getting back into running consistently, where I'm not thinking that I can run a marathon when I really like. My physical capabilities I've got older is not as great right so it's been trying to chunk things down into smaller distances and to figuring out how do you get back to being more consistent. So that's been my biggest struggle right now with running.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, and you know we were talking about this before we started the conversation about habits, right? So if you're not in the habit of doing something is such a huge effort to start to build that habit and then, once you get going, it's so much easier. I mean, it's still hard, right, but it's so much easier because you're not really processing and thinking about, like what we talked about earlier. You know, what do I have to do today? You just kind of know and your body's like accustomed to doing it. But, yeah, if you fall out of that, you know you have probably the anxiety of, hey, I'm going to lose, I might lose some of my you know performance and progress by taking a break, but then also kind of rebuilding that habit when you're, you know, getting back into it. So I can understand that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. Or the third option is you don't have the good sense that the powers that be gave you and you push yourself so hard that you can't walk for a week. You know you overdo it, you know that's been another part of the struggle is just not knowing when, hey, you should slow down or stop instead of pushing through. So and have you done anything differently?

Speaker 1:

as a result of that, have you done anything differently from, like, a strength training or mobility standpoint because of it, or is it truly just kind of taking a break from the running?

Speaker 3:

I was taking a break. I got into yoga to kind of help with flexibility, because that is historically for my body been not a strong suit. So I'm working on that. I've been doing like a couch to 5k. Apps have helped because, especially in the earlier parts, there's a whistle that'll tell you to stop. So where I would normally just keep going because I'm like I could do this, it's been good to kind of have that structure, so sometimes apps can help. Getting into the habit of just kind of running a couple miles a couple of times a week too, has been really good. So, yeah, just kind of either. Have some external help. I haven't had a running buddy in a while. I think that's part of my current thing, because if you're talking with somebody, that's a natural limiter, so you're not like sprinting the whole time because I don't know why I do that, but I do so, yeah, Very cool, very cool, so any other things that someone could do.

Speaker 1:

So again, we're talking about how do we get to that next level, how do we do something we've never done before? We talked about believing that we can and then taking it one step at a time, and then you mentioned some of those concepts around kind of the high performance. So like anything in general that could help someone kind of get into something that may not be something they think they could do or something that's appealing, anything else that could help someone get into the right mindset for.

Speaker 3:

I think finding what makes it fun could be really great. So if we take the thing outside of running, that I found really hard in the last five years it's been jumping into my coaching business as a solo producer, trying to figure out the marketing and how to talk to people. Coming from an analytical background as a software engineer, it's extra hard. I think what's made me basically not get kicked off the horse as it's bucking. This new experience has just been how do I connect with people? That's really fun. When I coach somebody, that's an amazing feeling to help people make realizations and so that's super fun.

Speaker 3:

And so, focusing with running, what made the initial training fun was pushing my body and having new PRs every week during training. That made that fun. Running with a friend that made it fun. So where's the fun in the running, in the new exercise routine, in the new job, in the new phase of life? I think if you can connect with that consistently when things go wrong they tend to be more funny than debilitating and if you can approach it with that sense of joy, with that sense of again confidence, that you'll find your way through in your unique way too, like there's no right way to do it, but there's your way and that's cool. I think you'll go a long way, maybe even a marathon.

Speaker 1:

I love it. Sage advice for our listeners. Sean, this has been an incredible conversation and I love how you shared your journey, how running has helped you, and your advice and tips to help others along their journey. Again, whether it's running or other aspects of their life and getting into something that's new and something they've never done before or maybe at first believe in, may not believe that they can do it, so I appreciate all that. So, just as we wind down here, one last question I have for you is what is the one thing that you would say to inspire our community to run or do something new, like if it's a new race or another area of their life?

Speaker 3:

I think if there's one thing if you're doing, if you want to get into running or you want to do something hard in life, it's to welcome the challenge, but understand that it's going to be hard, right. I think a lot can be overcome. If you're like this is just going to be part of it and I might not like it, maybe I can get used to it or maybe I can shift it in a way where it's not so hard, right. One of my favorite questions in a coaching setting is what? I guess it's a couple of questions either. What would make this easy? What would make this if you could do this in half the time? What would you need to do? And those types of questions get you thinking about oh, I have control over how this goes for me and I could find a different way. And that puzzle problem solving to me. I think if you can approach it as a problem that you can solve, you'll be able to get through it and you'll probably find that fun and joy on the way.

Speaker 1:

Love it, love it. Thank you so much, sean. So what's next for you, what's coming up for you in your running journey?

Speaker 3:

Running journey. I am getting into rucking, so it's not running, but it's weighted walking with a weighted backpack. And I'm looking at some races. Actually, I think, doing some 5Ks, I realized that if I don't have a goal, it's also much harder. So maybe that's another thing to put a line of the sand where you're going to sign up for something or do something with people, and I think that socialness, whether it's a formal race or not, will help carry you through. So, yeah, so looking at some 5Ks.

Speaker 1:

Awesome, awesome. Thank you so much, Sean. Great value provided here on this conversation. I'd love to connect our community and our listeners to you, follow your running journey, as well as get connected to you through your high performance coaching business. So share a little bit about where folks can find you.

Speaker 3:

All right, you can find me at my website, wwwseanbuttercom, or you can find me on Instagram at coach, underscore SeanButter, or YouTube at SeanButter coaching. I think We'll put that in the show notes. I'll send that to you.

Speaker 1:

All right, we'll do that. Thank you again so much for coming on the show, sean, and good luck with the rucking and the races that you're going to sign up for and with that, thanks and have a great day.

Speaker 3:

Thanks, richard, it's a pleasure.

Speaker 2:

That's it for this episode of Inspire to Run Podcast. We hope you are inspired to take control of your health and fitness and take it to the next level. Be sure to click the Subscribe button to join our community and also please rate and review. Thanks for listening.

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