The Common Sense Practical Prepper

Building A Post‑Apocalyptic Tool Bag From Your Junk Drawer

Keith Vincent

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A well‑stocked bunker is nice, but a smart, portable toolkit you actually know how to use is better. We take a simple idea—the power of your junk drawer—and turn it into a lean, reliable post‑apocalyptic tool bag you can build this week without emptying your wallet. From raid‑the‑house finds to smart bargain buys, we map the exact steps to move from clutter to capability.

We start by auditing what you already own: laces that secure loads, chopsticks that double as splints, whetstones that keep blades sharp, and tapes and glues that fix more than they claim. Then we lay out a compact essentials list—metric and imperial sockets, a 16‑ounce hammer, crosscut and hacksaw, utility knife with spare blades, needle‑nose pliers, adjustable wrench, pry bar, headlamp, tape measure, pocket level, and a multimeter for basic electrical and DIY solar work. You’ll hear why rechargeable lights still benefit from a stash of tested AA and AAA batteries, and how a mix of zip ties, paracord, and fastener assortments solves 80 percent of field repairs.

Sourcing matters, so we share budget wins from discount tool stores, plus what to grab at yard sales, flea markets, boot sales, and estate sales where old‑school tools outlast modern throwaways. Organization transforms usability: a canvas tool roll keeps everything tight and visible, ammo cans protect bungees and zip ties, and magnetic trays stop screws from disappearing under your car. We also talk practice—learning your multimeter’s symbols, testing solar inputs, sharpening blades, and doing small fixes now so you’re calm when it counts.

If you’ve been doomscrolling, this is your nudge to do something tangible. Build a capable kit for under $150, stash it next to your get‑home bag, and refine it with each season. Enjoy the show, then subscribe, leave a quick review, and share your must‑have tool or best budget find so we can feature it next time.

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SPEAKER_01:

The National Liberty Service has issued a severe thunderstorm warning. Welcome. To the Common Sense Practical Prepper Podcast, where prepping doesn't have to be complicated or expensive. Coming to you from a well-defended off-grid compound high in the mountains. Coming to you from his Florida room in Richmond, Virginia. Neither off-grid nor well-defended, unless you count as chickens and cats, here is your host, Keith.

SPEAKER_00:

Hey all, this is Keith, and you're listening to the Common Sense Practical Prepper Podcast, January the 16th, 2026. And I so much want to talk about what's going on in the UK, and I so much want to talk about what's going on in Minneapolis, Minnesota, but I shall refrain for now. But basically, I could talk for hours about what's going on and how if you live here in the United States, regardless of where you live, regardless if what you believe is going on is right, wrong, or indifferent, I think it should cause everybody to pause. Same in the UK. Starmer and a lot of these new laws that are being passed. If you're concerned about your country, you folks in the UK or the folks here in the US, what's going on should give you pause. Again, it makes no difference to me, left, right, in the middle. I think we're going down a really dangerous road here in the States. I'm not going to comment on the UK. We have enough issues here, and we need to get our own house in order. But what I'm afraid of is the things going on in the UK are going to make their way across the pond and somehow manifest itself here. Now we talk about freedom of speech, First Amendment, the right to protest. A lot of that stuff has already come across here to the states. And see, and I told myself I wasn't going to talk about it. So I'm going to stop right now. I'm going to try to keep this light. My Indiana Hoosiers play Miami Monday for the national championship. So go Hoosiers. I have stayed away from social media again for the last 24 hours, 36 hours. And again, I said this last podcast. That's probably one of the better things that I've done. It helps keep me sane. It's too easy to get into doom scrolling, just scroll, just story after story, video after video, shenanigans after shenanigans. I'm going to do my best to leave it alone. So let's do a giveaway. This will be my first giveaway that I've done ever on the podcast. Now, about a month or so ago, I talked about giving away one of those fire blankets. And then I looked into shipping one of these fire blankets internationally. It doesn't weigh a lot. So if somebody in Australia was to win this fire blanket, it would be about$75, well above the price of the fire blanket, to send that down under. Folks, down under, I love you. Let's do this. The giveaway is going to be a$25 Amazon gift card. People all over the world, please enter, send me an email at Practical Prep Podcast, or DM me on the Twitters, Common Sense Practical Prepper or Prep underscore Podcast, and just send me a quick email, something in the header, something in the body. Hey, please enter me for the gift card giveaway. And what I'll do is I'll take all the entries and on the next podcast, or maybe the one after that, maybe we'll do it maybe a week from now. I'll take all the entries and I'll do like a random number generator or something. They're all over the place on the internet. And if there's 50 entries, I'll do one through 50, I'll hit enter. It'll be like 32. And then in order, in chronological order, I'll find the 32nd email that I received, and that will be the winner. I will then email you a digital code for an Amazon gift card. In the event you are not in the United States, it will automatically change over into the currency of your country. So if you're in Germany, obviously it'll go to Euros, that sort of thing. So go ahead, as soon as you hear this, email me at practicalpreppodcast at gmail.com. And somewhere in the body, somewhere in the heading, just put Amazon gift card. And then probably we'll just go a week from now. A week from now, I'll go ahead and grab them all, record the podcast, do the random number generator thingy, and we'll get us a winner. So looking forward to that. I think that'll be a lot of fun. So what I want to talk about tonight is something that is rather obvious for preppers, but it's one of those things that you kind of take for granted. It's one of those things you really don't think about. So if you live in an apartment or a small house or a small townhouse, you may not have as many of these things lying around as other folks that live in larger homes that have more storage room. I'm talking about your junk drawer. Now I would assume that all countries, everybody in every country since the beginning of time had a junk drawer somewhere. Since I can remember as a little kid, my parents had a junk drawer. And I would say to my mom or my dad, where is the screwdriver or where is the tape measure or where is the glue? Oh, just check the junk drawer. And it's not like you, and so when I moved into my house or the apartments or homes that I've lived in over the years, it wasn't like I moved in one day and went, that's gonna be the junk drawer. The junk drawer just happens. It just materializes. It just all of a sudden, like a month or two after you move into your new place, you open up a drawer to get something, and there it is. It stuff just it's like your socks. If you're like me and I do laundry, every month or two I always have an odd sock. I go check my junk drawer just for the hell of it. No socks in there. So I don't know if the dryer eats the socks. I don't know where the socks go. I don't know if there's a place in heaven where when we all die and we go to heaven, you can claim all your other socks. Well, that's gonna suck because you're like, I left the other socks back home, back on earth. What am I gonna do with the other 600 socks in heaven? I guess I'll be walking around with mismatched socks. I get do you even wear socks in heaven? Do you get what do you get? Clawed, do you get Uggs? If you're in the Netherlands, do you get those wooden shoes? If you live in Russia, do you get like big heavy boots? If you live in the Caribbean, do you get flip-flops or you just go barefoot? I don't know how any any of this stuff works. You always hear about folks they're dying, they see the light, or they get almost to the pearly gates, and then for some reason they're drawn back. I don't think of all those stories I've read, I don't think I've read any stories where somebody actually got as far into heaven to the point where they saw a bunch of socks like in a big basket with like your name on it. I don't even know if that's a thing. If anybody's heard, if all your socks and all your old shirts and that, man, that hoodie that you absolutely love that you lost when you're like 19, if somebody that has good solid information that my socks will be waiting for me in heaven, I I'm pretty sure I'm gonna go to heaven. But if there's a chance I'm not, I'm probably gonna work towards getting into heaven because I would really love to get a hold of that hoodie and those t-shirts and those socks. So I went and opened up my junk drawer, and this is what I found a shot glass from Las Vegas, I've never been to Las Vegas, chopsticks, a tape measure, a rain poncho, a couple screws, a couple nails, two tin containers of sucretes, cough drops, a whetstone, which I absolutely need to sharpen my knives, a glue stick, some keys that I have no idea what they go to, a deck of cards that's still sealed up, a red light bulb, and some boot laces. So the glue stick. The glue stick would work great on a zipper that's stuck, or a zipper that you're having trouble zipping or zippering. The boot laces, you can do a million different things with boot laces other than put them in your boot. The chopsticks, now I know I'm maybe stretching it a bit, but the chopsticks would make an excellent splint for a finger or a couple fingers that were broken or hyperextended. I'm just kind of thinking outside the box. So as I'm going through the junk drawer, finding things that I never knew existed, I thought about putting together in my mind the post-apocalyptic toolbox. So I have a garage and I have a shed. And growing up, my father had a very well-organized garage. Big old toolbox, you know, with like 7,000 drawers in it. I think it was a red one. I think it's a craftsman, I think. Every tool under the sun. After my father passed a couple years ago, I took the toolbox from the house and now it's in my garage. So I've been going through it. I have found wrenches, vices, sockets. I have no idea what my dad was doing with it. These sockets are so large, I have no idea what it goes. It's like a six-inch socket. I don't know what my dad was working on back in the day or what he ever worked on back in the day, where he needed like a six-inch socket. Monkey wrenches that probably weigh 20 or 30 pounds. So, in the event of a bug out situation, we got our food, water, solar panels, our go bag, loading everybody up in the family truckster, maybe it's just you and somebody else, jumping in the car, jumping in the van, you need tools. You don't know where you're going. Well, hopefully you do. But if you don't, you're probably in the same boat with the rest of us, including myself. But once you get there, you're gonna need tools. So if you have your underground bunker in the mountains, God bless you, you probably have tools there. I don't have a bunker in the mountains, I don't have a cabin, off-grid cabin in the mountains yet. So I don't have any tools at the place that doesn't exist yet. But just think about it. If you're gonna bug out, you have to be in the mindset that there's a good chance you may not be coming back to your home again, depending on the situation. So you're gonna need some tools. There are a million different places that you can start building your post-apocalyptic toolbox. So we'll talk about walking your garage and going up in the attic later on. But let me tell you about where I get some of my tools, my odds and ends. Obviously, here in the States, Home Depot, Lowe's, in the Midwest, you've got Meyer, all the different big box stores. You got the little hardware stores, but little hardware stores are going the way of the dinosaur because obviously Amazon and the big box stores. But here in the US, we have what's called Harbor Freight, or as some people refer to it as horror freight. Now, if you're not familiar with Harbor Freight, so everybody here in the States, you probably know what I'm talking about. Folks abroad, maybe not so much. Harbor Freight is like the discount hardware store, the discount tool store. The tools are good, they're not great. Some of the name brands Bauer and some names I've never heard of. You're not gonna get Ryobi, you're not gonna get Milwaukee, you're not gonna get Makita, or is it Nikita? Nikita's a Russian movie or Russian show, I believe. Makita and some of the other name brands. These are all off-name, off-brand items, but they work. Not super expensive, but they still work. So here are some of the things that I have purchased over the years that I get from Harbor Freight that I don't necessarily want to pay a higher price at Home Depot or Lowe's or Walmart or Amazon. And some of the things at Harbor Freight you really won't find at some of these other stores. So at Harbor Freight, they have these little plastic containers of you can get screws, nails, wood screws, sheet metal screws, o-rings, cotter pins, everything. And they come in these little plastic cases, about 12 bucks a pop. Silver different sizes. So O-rings. There's O-rings from 4 mil to 20 mil. So if you ever think you need an O-ring, and believe me, once in a blue moon, you might need one, and then you don't have it. For like eight or nine bucks, you pick up a little plastic box of O-rings. Sheet metal screws, again, fasteners, all sorts of things. So for about 60 bucks, you can pick up five or six of these containers and be set. Now, the screws and the nails, they're not the highest quality. Depending on the tool that you're using to drive that sheet metal screw into the sheet metal or wood screw into the wood, there's a very good chance you might strip the head off of the screw. So again, you you get what you pay for: all sorts of washers, nuts, bolts, everything under the sun. So while you pick up those, when I'm working on things, my big fat fingers, I drop the screw and I never see it again. I'm working on the car, working on the van, I'm taking screws out, bolts out. You always need a place to put them. For a couple bucks, they have these really nice magnetic trays. Got a big magnet on the back. You can put it on, you can put it on the ground, you can put on the side of the car, you put on the side of your toolbox, anything metal, even when it's on its side, very strong magnet. So you can put all your little doodads in this magnetic tray and you're not gonna lose it. So other things that you might need at Harbor Freight or at any other hardware store, I have picked up a small socket set, both metric and imperial, maybe 20 or 30 sockets in it, nothing crazy. About eight or ten bucks. And again, it gets the job done. I'm not gonna pay$125 for a socket set when I can get this little one and have it ready to go in my SHTF toolbox. We need a hammer, about a 16-inch hammer, fiberglass grip, so it does it break, cross-cut saw, hack saw, utility knife, replacement blades, kneater nose pliers, adjustable wrench, pry bar, headlamp, tape measure, a level. You can get a small level, or I guess you can use the app on your phone, a multimeter. Multimeters are invaluable. You never need a multimeter until you need a multimeter. Now with my little DIY solar projects, I use a multimeter a lot. I'm not about shocking myself, but again, not to get off on a tangent, but if I'm putting together my solar panel, solar charge controller, the whole nine, I need to know the amps and the voltage coming from the solar panels to make sure the solar charge controller can accept and make sure I'm not going to exceed the volts or amps coming in from my panel. So a multimeter for me is perfect in this situation. And also, if you're doing some DIY around the house, replacing sockets, minor electrical work, you're gonna need a multimeter and you're gonna need to know how to use a multimeter. I've been on YouTube trying to figure out because I don't understand half the drawings, half the diagrams. There's one that's like an omega, there's all like little squiggly lines. I don't know what that means. So I actually had to do some research and find out what all these little symbols meant to make sure I was looking at the right setting to measure what I needed to measure given a situation. Tape. You can get some fancy duct tape, you can get some knockoff duct tape. I would recommend getting some gorilla tape. While you have gorilla tape, get some gorilla glue. Get you some wood glue just in case. Get you some knockoff super glue. It works great for fixing what's broken. And in a pinch, you can also close up a laceration with super glue if you don't have any other way to close up the wound. Batteries. I have the thing called a I think it was called a battery daddy. It was like 12 bucks. You can get them on sale. Has a little battery tester and it has room for hundreds of batteries. I think I have two of them. I think I bought one for myself several years ago, and then somebody thought it'd be cool to give me one as a gift. And I was not the person to say, oh, I've already got one of these. I said to myself, now I have room for the rest of my batteries. So I have two battery daddies that are pretty much full. On the back side, you can put so many double A and triple A's and as a little battery tester. Remember, test your batteries. They will go dead if you don't use them. So I'm set on batteries for quite a while. A whetstone or a sharpening stone, zip ties. You can get at Harbor Freight, you can get the little zip tie assortment bundle, thick ones, maybe a foot long, all the way down to little tiny ones that are just maybe an eighth of an inch wide and three inches long, if that. An assortment pack. Grab a couple bags of those. Now, when it comes to flashlights, we've talked about rechargeable flashlights, headlamps. Don't be afraid to toss a mag light, M-A-G-L-I-T-E, in a couple different sizes. There's the D cell size mag light that is pretty much a metal tube with D-sized batteries. Works very well. Can also be used as a weapon in extreme cases, bust out a window. Let's just say it has multi-use capability. Now, what are we going to put all this stuff in? I'm not rolling out my dad's 700-pound craftsman toolbox into the back of the car, the van, or whatever I'm taking. You can get the little canvas tool bags with the handles. That works great. Worst comes to worst, you can throw everything in a five-gallon bucket. That works. But something I bought a few years ago was like a canvas roll. It's like a tool bag and it's canvas and it's like a burrito. You unroll it, either comes with ties or snaps, and there's a lot of room in these. So if you unroll one of these little canvas tool bags, you can put a lot in there. Probably the vast majority of the things we're talking about, maybe with the exception of the socket set, will fit into this little canvas tool roll. Roll it up, looks like a big burrito, very compact. You're not going to lose anything. And those are like nine or ten bucks at Harbor Freight. And if you're worried about the quality, you can always upgrade in Lowe's, Home Depot, Walmart, Amazon, and get a more robust tool bag burrito. So before we go to Harbor Freight, before we set foot in a store, we want to check our drunk drawer. Well, it's not a drunk drawer unless it has alcohol in it. Mine doesn't. We want to check our junk drawer for any of those items. Now in my junk drawer, I'm gonna leave this, I'm gonna leave pretty much everything in there. I don't I'm gonna take the chopsticks. There are a couple batteries, I think I need to test them. And the more I think about it, I'm not really sure if there's anything in that junk drawer that I would use, like in my kitchen or around the house that I don't have in my garage. But regardless, we're gonna check our junk drawer and we're gonna take out what we need, if anything. Then we're gonna walk the garage. If you have a garage, garage, shed, garage, and a shed, whatever you have, we're going to walk that area and we're gonna pick out what we need for our SHTF tool bag. Now, one thing my dad did and that my grandfather did that I do for nuts and bolts and all the things that are kind of just laying around, he would take a baby food jar or a pickle jar. I use pickle jars now, and on the underneath of a shelf or the workbench, you would take the lid and screw it to the bottom of the workbench, or screw it to the bottom of the shelf, put all your bits and bobs into the jar, pickle jar or baby food jar, and you just screw it in. Now, obviously, the the better visibility, you can see it, obviously it's a lot easier to get to your stuff. So my shed, I may have five or six of these, and it's just miscellaneous screws, nuts, wire nuts, some wire. And if I'm looking for a particular size, I may have a if I'm looking for like a three-inch wood screw or a two and a half inch wood screw or some sheet metal screws, I'll have them in a separate drawer, or I'll go to my little plastic container I got from Harbor Freight, but if I'm looking just for a little a miscellaneous, I'll check the baby food jars or the pickle jars and see what I have. So I'm putting together this little toolbox, this little tool bag, I'm gonna grab a handful, maybe five or six, eight or ten, of each of these little screws and supplement my little plastic cases to supplement the fasteners that I purchased at Harbor Freight. And again, I'm not able to take all of my tools with me. Now, am I gonna take my corded drills, impact drivers? Probably not. I'm gonna grab the battery operated version of those. And the batteries that come with it, and the little charging stand. You'd be amazed on what you can gather from your existing inventory of tools and such, and not have to go out and purchase things brand new. Now, let's talk about yard sales, garage sales, flea markets, Facebook marketplace. I assume in other countries in the EU and Australia, you all have the equivalent to a yard sale or garage sale. Now, some cities here in the US that are very densely populated, people that live in townhomes or apartments or high rises, you're not really going to have a garage sale per se. Maybe a flea market, maybe a community yard sale in the park. In the UK, they're called boot sales, trunk sales. I've been to a couple flea markets in the outskirts of London, and they were enormous. It took hours to walk through. And again, it's everybody's junk, everybody's leftovers that they want to get rid of. I saw a garage sale sign not too long ago that said, Come make my junk your junk. All the stuff that I want to get rid of, you can come purchase from this particular garage sale. So know what you're looking for. You would be amazed on what you can find. And then there are estate sales. And again, I'm not sure what they call them in other countries, but an estate sale normally is when somebody passes away and nobody's going to live in the house or they need to empty everything out of the house. They have an estate sale. Like I said, my father passed away a couple years ago. And after I removed everything, other family members and friends came and picked up things that they would use. I had an estate sale. And I can talk about estate sales, but I get I get pretty emotional, as you can imagine, because a company comes in and prices things, and you can't put a price on memories. And here I go, going off on a tangent again, but when there's a frame or a painting that you don't really have a use for, that you don't have any room for, and nobody else wants it, no other family members or friends want it, and they're going to sell it for$10 or$20. I mean, you can't put a price on a memory. But I digress. So estate sales are a thing. I assume they have them in other countries. So you would be amazed on what you can find at these yard sales. Kerosene heaters, headlamps, old tools. I mean old, old school tools. Tools that are 30, 40, 50, 80, 100 years old that are still in great working order, not like some of the cheaper tools that we have today, but you can find augers, you can find planes, you can find all sorts of tools, drill presses. There was a yard sale in my neighborhood about a year or so ago. And my goodness, if I had room for some of the things that I ran across, this gentleman, his garage rivaled any Home Depot or Lowe's that I've ever been in. He had all of his little miscellaneous tools, nuts and bolts in old cigar boxes like my grandfather did. I mean, talk about walking down memory lane. And if I had room for some of the items that this gentleman had in his garage, I absolutely would have spent a wheelbarrow full of money because some of that stuff is priceless. That stuff will live on and on just because of the quality and durability. If you have a chance to go to a garage sale, yard sale, or even an estate sale, you would be amazed on some of the things you can find. So now that we've got our little tool bag burrito, we can put that into an ammo can. We don't have to, but an ammo can would keep it dry. They're certainly waterproof. Little plastic ammo cans, or even the metal ammo cans can be used for a million different things. I've purchased both the metal and plastic ammo cans at Harbor Freight. One of my plastic ammo cans is nothing but zip ties. Another plastic ammo can is nothing but bungee cords and have a little label on it just with Sharpie, bungee, zip. And so more for an organizational reason for me, I know where they are on the shelf. So for my little SHTF tool bag, I'm probably just gonna grab the plastic ammo can of bungees and zip ties. And when I get to my location, I'll figure out what I need. So here in the States, we have Aldi and Lidl, both German grocery stores. But the Lidl and the Aldi's here in the States, don't call it a junk aisle because you might offend somebody. We call it the fun aisle. There is everything under the sun. If you go into a grocery store, a Lidl or an Aldi, for the very first time I went into one here in the States, and they had American products and they had a lot of European food products as well. I mean, it's a German grocery store. We're not gonna fill a German grocery store just with all American products, but in the middle of the store, they had this miscellaneous aisle. There was everything. There were stuffed animals, there were tools, there were tents, there's skateboards, and it changes every week. That's why we call it the fun aisle. So we'll go into Aldi for some bread, some really cool cheese, or some shinken or other types of lunch meat you can't really find at Kroger or Food Lion, but you can get it at Little and Aldi. So we'll go in for the basics, but we always have to walk through the fun aisle. And the prices are reasonable. Now, every time that I go into the fun aisle, do I get something? Probably not, but you would be really surprised on the items that are stocked in the fun aisle. They have tools. I've seen some decent socket sets in the fun aisle at Little. I've been into Aldi's in Germany and I don't remember the fun aisle now that I think about it. So if you're in Germany, if you go to Lidl, email me and let me know if they have a fun aisle in Little or Aldi. Because now I'm really curious. All the times I've been to Germany, all the times I've been to an Aldi to go shopping, I never said to myself, I need to check out their version of the fun aisle and see what they have. But maybe they do, but maybe I just wasn't paying attention. So between walking your garage or your shed or your fancy junk drawer or maybe a hall closet where you keep all of your extra stuff, I think between that and walking your garage or shed and then having to go to Harbor Freight or the Fun Isle at Letle, I think you could probably get away with spending less than$100, maybe less than$150, depending on what you already have on hand. So that's what I'm going to do as soon as the weather breaks, because it is very cold here in the East Coast. I could always fire up the little heater in the garage, but Mr. Rogers sleeps in the garage and he probably wouldn't appreciate it if it if it got too hot. Mr. Rogers is my outdoor cat that sleeps in the garage. He sleeps in a van now. He sleeps in my K-van now. And he gets upset when I take the K-van out for a drive because he has a blanket on the passenger seat of the K-van, and that's where he sleeps. I leave the sliding door open on the side. I think once the weather breaks, I'm going to pull the van out and I'll take an inventory. I'll take stock in what I have. And I'm going to go, and I have one of the canvas bags, but it's not completely full. It's just got a few miscellaneous things in it. And I think I'm going to go ahead and take the little canvas burrito bag, the tool bag, and I'm going to empty it out. That's going to be my post-apocalyptic tool bag. And it makes sense. Now I have the little basic tools I keep in my car, either the van or the Jeep, just basic stuff, screwdriver, you know, some things I might need to tighten a few things down. So I think I'll go ahead and put one of those together because the little burrito tool bag is relatively small once it's all wound up and tied off. And I'm just going to set that either in the floorboard, I can put it in the trunk of my car next to the get home bag because you never know what's going to happen. You never know when you might need some of the things we're going to put in there. All right, folks, I appreciate you stopping by. I appreciate all the shares, all the likes, all the reviews for consistently jumping up in the rankings, and I really do appreciate it. And don't forget the giveaway practicalprep podcast at gmail.com. Just email me with gift card, Amazon, make me the winner, whatever you want it to be. And probably a week from now, I'll gather everything up, do a little random number generator thingy, and I'll let you know who wins the$25 gift card. And I can email you the digital code. All right, folks, have a good weekend. If you listen to this sometime next week, I hope you had a good weekend. And if you're going to watch the national championship game against the Indiana Hoosiers and the Miami Hurricanes, let's pull for the Hoosiers. They'll be undefeated, which rarely, rarely happens. And the coach has turned that program around in the last two years. Absolutely amazing. And as always, be careful out there. Take care of one another. And until next time.

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