Last Updated on June 10, 2025 by Avia
I’ll never forget the first time I deliberately celebrated the summer solstice. I was barefoot, slightly sunburned, and wildly underprepared…but absolutely enchanted. Somewhere between crafting a wonky sun wheel from dried lavender and setting an intention while dodging mosquitoes, I realized something: Mindful ways to celebrate the summer solstice aren’t exclusively about sunlight. It’s about insight.
The summer solstice…when the sun is at its absolute peak…invites us to do the same. To rise. To radiate. To burn brightly in our truth without apology or dimming our glow for anyone else’s comfort. So, it’s with this vim n’ verve that I wanted to share some ideas about the symbolic and spiritual ways to celebrate the summer solstice.
And listen, I get it. Life’s busy. We don’t all have time to chase the sun in a linen robe with a tambourine (although that does sound fun). But celebrating the summer solstice doesn’t have to be complicated. It just has to be real…heartfelt, meaningful, and aligned with your personal rhythm.
In this article, I’ll share some of the most beautiful, fun, soulful, and even a little weird (in the best way) ways to celebrate the summer solstice. Some come from ancient wisdom. Others are stitched together from my own experience, blunders, and insights. All are designed to help you soak up the symbolism of this powerful celestial turning point…and make it your own.
“The sun does not shine for a few trees and flowers, but for the wide world’s joy.”
~Henry Ward Beecher

What Is the Summer Solstice? Symbolism, Spiritual Meaning, History, and More
This roasty-toasty solstice usually rolls around on June 20th to 22nd in the Northern Hemisphere. It marks the longest day and shortest night of the year. It’s the sun’s moment to take center stage, belting out a metaphorical high note like a celestial diva. Astronomically, it’s the point when the sun climaxes to its highest position in the sky, appearing to stand still (from the Latin solstitium, meaning “sun standing still”) before it begins its gradual descent.
But let’s be real…if this were just about daylight hours and axial tilt, I wouldn’t be writing about it, and you wouldn’t be reading. The solstice is far more than a moment on a calendar or a quirky tilt of Earth’s hip. It’s a spiritual and symbolic powerhouse.
A Universal Beacon of Power & Light
Across the globe and throughout time, people have honored this solar apex as sacred. Ancient cultures didn’t just casually glance at the sky and say, “Huh, bright today.” They built entire temples, monuments, and myths around it. From legendary Norse celebrations to Native American honor ceremonies, the solstice was (and still is) a gateway…a reminder that light triumphs, that growth peaks, and that time itself dances in cycles.
In symbolic terms, the summer solstice represents:
- Illumination – Both literally and metaphorically. This is the season of clarity, revelation, and radiant truths.
- Fertility and Abundance – Mother Earth is showing off. Plants bloom, bees buzz, and everything hums with creative life force.
- Joy, Vitality, and Power – The sun at full throttle is a cosmic pep talk: “Shine. Don’t hold back.”
- Balance Before the Shift – This is the tipping point. After today, the days begin to shorten. It’s a bittersweet reminder that even in peak bloom, change is coming.
In my own experience, I’ve found the solstice to be a beautiful contradiction: it’s both a celebration of “all is full” and a gentle nudge that says, “Nothing stays this full forever.” It’s nature’s way of telling us to revel in our abundance now…to gather the light, store the energy, and honor the brilliance of the moment before it shifts.
“With freedom, books, flowers, and the sun, who could not be happy?”
~Oscar Wilde (A man who clearly understood solstice vibes.)
So what is the summer solstice, really? It’s a mirror. A glowing, golden mirror held up by the universe to say: Look at you. You’ve grown. You’ve bloomed. Now shine like you mean it.
Why Celebrate the Summer Solstice? Personal Benefits, Natural Wisdom & Spiritual Resonance
Look, I get it. Between meetings, meal prep, doomscrolling, and trying to remember if you watered that one houseplant, it can feel… indulgent to carve out time for something (some may perceive) as woowey or fluffy as a seasonal solar celebration. But here’s the thing: it’s not indulgent…it’s instinctual (and it’s healing).
We are wired…body, mind, and spirit…to respond to the rhythms of nature, and we’re tremendously affected by the sun and its cycles through our clock time. I like to think of this solstice as a cosmic punctuation mark, a solar high-five from the universe saying, Hey, look how far you’ve come. When we acknowledge it…whether with a full-blown ceremony or a simple breath in the sun…we’re syncing up with something far older and wiser than any to-do list: the Earth itself.
Personal Power Meets Natural Timing
Celebrating the solstice is a way to pause and reflect at your own peak. It’s a check-in moment that says: What in my life is growing? What’s ready to bloom? What’s overstayed its welcome? That sunlight isn’t just outside of you…it’s in you. You are not separate from the cycles of nature; you are part of the same sacred choreography.
And guess what? When you take even five minutes to honor the solstice, your nervous system notices. Your spirit perks up. Your creativity remembers how to stretch. It doesn’t have to be complicated…this celebration is less about perfection and more about presence.
Ancient Wisdom, Modern Application
The solstice teaches us about balance before the shift. It’s the longest day, yes, but also the turning point where the light begins its subtle decline. That’s not meant to be sad…it’s meant to be sacred. It reminds us to savor the moment, to appreciate abundance while it lasts, and to make peace with change before it demands our attention.
By observing the solstice, even in small symbolic ways, we reclaim an ancient kind of wisdom that modern life often tramples under deadlines and Wi-Fi signals. We remember that celebration itself is spiritual. That joy is a ritual. That being alive on this wild, spinning planet is a reason to lift our faces to the sun and whisper thank you.
“Don’t wait for a reason to celebrate. The sun doesn’t.”
~Me, probably standing barefoot in a field again.
So why celebrate the summer solstice? Because it’s not just the longest day of the year. It’s a mirror, a milestone, and a message…to grow, to glow, and to live in tune with something bigger, brighter, and far more ancient than we remember on ordinary days.
Going Old School: Traditional Summer Solstice Celebrations in Cultural History
Before we dive into the how-tos of celebrating the summer solstice, I want to zoom out and look at the big picture…because this isn’t just a foo-foo trend or a sunshiney excuse to burn incense and wear flower crowns (although, honestly, both are welcome here). The solstice has been revered across cultures, continents, and centuries.
From temples aligned with the rising sun to wild dances around sacred bonfires, people have long marked this turning point in the wheel of the year with reverence, joy, and deep cosmic respect. I’m including this section to show how profoundly important this day has been throughout history…not to overwhelm you with facts, but to inspire awe. My hope is that in seeing how our ancestors honored the sun’s peak, you might feel stirred to create your own version of ritual, remembrance, or celebration.
Even if you don’t leap over flames or commune with fae folk (yet), you may walk away thinking: Yeah… this day is kind of a big deal. And you’d be absolutely right.
The Celts: Of Oaks, Otherworlds & the Fae

For the ancient Celts, the summer solstice wasn’t just a day…it was an enchanted threshold. They believed this was when the veil between worlds thinned, making it prime time for communicating with nature spirits, ancestors, and the notoriously sassy fae folk. Rituals were often held in oak groves, which weren’t just pretty picnic spots, no, this is big mojo because oaks symbolize strength, protection, and divine wisdom. These trees were believed to house spirits and served as living doorways between the human and spirit realms.
Bonfires blazed on hilltops, herbs were harvested at peak potency, and solstice night was alive with possibility. This was the time to honor the Earth’s abundance, commune with the Otherworld, and toast the sun’s glorious reign, while also preparing for the slow turn toward darkness. The Celts embraced the paradox: celebrate the light, but don’t forget the shadow is already stirring. And frankly, I love that kind of honesty in a spiritual celebration.
Norse Myth: Sol, Sunna, and the Chariot of Hope
In Norse mythology, the sun is a goddess, and her name is Sol (or Sunna). She rides across the sky each day in a blazing chariot, pursued by a ravenous wolf named Sköll. The summer solstice was a time to honor her strength, warmth, and unwavering drive to outrun darkness…quite literally. Her journey was seen as one of courage, persistence, and life-giving power.
Norse Solstice celebrations were entwined with fire, feasting, and deep symbolic acts of endurance and vitality. Fires burned not only to mimic the sun’s radiance but to protect against chaotic forces. Drinking horns were lifted to Sol for health, healing, and hope. If you’ve ever felt like the sun itself was cheering you on, like “You got this, even if a wolf is on your tail”…well, now you know where that energy comes from.
Swedish Midsommar: Sunshine, Songs & Maypole Magic
If the Celts gave us oak groves and druids, Sweden gave us flower crowns and maypole dancing…and I am equally grateful for both. Midsommar is a big deal in Sweden, typically celebrated around the solstice. Families and friends gather in open fields, don bright floral wreaths, dance around maypoles (yes, that’s a fertility symbol), and sing songs with lyrics that may or may not involve frogs and schnapps, hee hee!
But beneath the joyful surface, this is a deeply symbolic homage to light, fertility, and community. The Swedes know how to hold space for beauty and connection. The day begins with sunlight and strawberries, but as the bonfire crackles and the sky refuses to darken, something ancient stirs. This is a festival of life force, rooted in both laughter and reverence, and frankly, I think we could all use more maypole moments in our lives.
Latvia’s Jāņi & Lithuania’s Joninės: Fire Leaps & Floral Crowns
In the Baltic lands of Latvia and Lithuania, the solstice is serious business. Known as Jāņi in Latvia and Joninės in Lithuania, these celebrations date back to pre-Christian times and are soaked in symbolism. People craft intricate wreaths of oak, fern, and flowers to wear on their heads (yes, again with the wreaths…it’s a thing), and gather for an all-night fire festival. The fire isn’t just for warmth…it’s meant to freak out evil spirits, essentially casting them away while also magnetizing good health and fortune.
And then there’s the part I love most: leaping over the fire. Couples jump hand in hand over the flames to bless their bond, while individuals leap solo to burn off bad luck or stagnant energy. Songs, laughter, and herbal beer abound. It’s sweaty, smoky, joyful chaos in the best way. These are not passive observers of nature…they are participants in its mystery, dancing at the edge of light and shadow.
Ancient Egypt: Ra, the Nile, and the Cosmic Flood
When it comes to sun worship, the ancient Egyptians were the gold standard (pun intended). The summer solstice marked a crucial moment: the rising of Sirius, which preceded the flooding of the Nile…an event that meant life, fertility, and food. The sun god Ra is the hub of it all, sailing across the sky in his solar barque, battling chaos and bringing light, order, and rebirth to the world.
Temples and obelisks were painstakingly aligned with the sun’s zenith on this day. The idea was to channel divine energy (think spiritual solar panels sucking up all the good juju from the sun at this peak point of the year). Priests conducted offerings, the people feasted, and the entire land buzzed with gratitude and reverence. The solstice wasn’t just observed…it was engineered into stone, etched into myth, and encoded in the rhythm of life itself.
Berber Tribes of North Africa: Rhythm, Fire & Ancestral Praise
In the highlands and deserts of North Africa, Berber tribes have long celebrated the changing seasons with powerful ritual. As we’ve already acknowledged, the summer solstice is a time of transformation, and the Berbers take this to the hilt. This time of year is marked by music, trance-dance, and sacred fire. Summer solstice celebrations for the Berber are kinda like spiritual recalibrations. The dance, the drums, the heat…it all stirred something primal, connecting participants to ancestors, earth, and sky.
In places like Morocco and Algeria, the solstice was often tied to sun deities and ancestral spirits, with ceremonies that blurred the line between this world and the next. Offerings were made, rhythms were played, and people were moved…literally and spiritually. The fire burned as a beacon for renewal and release. It was a time to shed the old skin and step boldly into the light.
Indigenous Solstice Ceremonies – Lakota, Inca, Anishinaabe & More

For Indigenous peoples across the Americas, the summer solstice has always been a sacred appointment with spirit. The Lakota Sun Dance, for example, is a powerful ritual of endurance, sacrifice, and connection to the Great Spirit. Dancers fast, pray, and offer their bodies in ceremony…not to suffer, but to commune with divine energy, asking for healing and balance for the community.
Meanwhile, the Anishinaabe people honor the solstice in tandem with the Strawberry Moon, marking a time of sweetness, gratitude, and renewal. Feasts are held, stories are shared, and the Earth is thanked with song and offerings.
The Inca Empire held Inti Raymi, the Festival of the Sun, in Cusco…honoring Inti, their solar deity. Offerings were made to the sun and the land, and to this day, the festival is still celebrated in grand form. In all of these traditions, the solstice isn’t just a cosmic event…it’s a communal prayer.
Sanskrit Vedic Rituals – India
If you’ve ever read the Vedic texts, you’ll know that in India, the sun is Surya, a brilliant deity and divine witness to all earthly activity. Though the winter solstice gets more overt attention in rituals like Makara Sankranti, the summer solstice still holds meaning in the turning of the year, especially in connection with solar deities and spiritual consciousness.
That’s why the modern world’s International Day of Yoga lands on June 21…it’s the solstice. This isn’t coincidence…it’s cosmic alignment, if you ask me. Yoga means “union,” and there’s no better time to realign with self, nature, and source than when the sun is at its highest, offering clarity and power. Whether you’re practicing sun salutations on a mountaintop or breathing mindfully in your living room, it’s all part of the same solar rhythm.
Ainu Solstice Celebrations – Japan
The Ainu, Indigenous people of Hokkaido, Japan, saw the solstice as a sacred time to commune with the Kamuy, spirits that inhabit all living things. Fire, in particular, was a central element. So, you could say the sun was viewed as a living being rather than a big star-ball of face-melting heat. It’s a divine presence honored with prayer and offerings.
Solstice rites included ritual dances, harvest blessings, and storytelling, weaving together nature, ancestry, and the divine. It was a time of spiritual reciprocity: give thanks, receive blessings. In the Ainu worldview, to acknowledge the sun’s fullness was to step into right relationship with the world around you…a sentiment that echoes across every tradition on this list.
Hawaiian Solstice Acknowledgements
In traditional Hawaiian spirituality, the sun is a life force, bound up with gods like Lono (peace, fertility, agriculture) and Kū (war, strength, and prosperity). Solstice observances include hoʻokupu…offerings of food, flowers, and chants to honor the balance between these divine energies.
Seasonal change is an epic theme in the Hawaiian worldview, and the solstice is no exception. Rituals took place at heiau (sacred temples), often in tandem with ocean and agricultural cycles. These ceremonies are practical and ecological, maintaining harmony between people, land, and cosmos.
Litha – Wiccan & Neo-Pagan Traditions
If you’ve ever danced barefoot around a bonfire, clutching a mug of herbal tea and feeling a little witchy under the sun, you’ve touched Litha’s energy. In modern Wiccan and Neo-Pagan practice, Litha marks the height of solar power and one of the eight spokes on the Wheel of the Year.
It’s a time of celebrating abundance, light, fertility, and masculine energy (balanced with a reverence for the Earth’s feminine creativity). Altars are adorned with sunflowers, citrine crystals, and oak leaves.
Rituals often include solar spells, gratitude lists, fire magic, and connecting with nature spirits. Whether you’re a full-on practicing Pagan or just a solstice-curious soul, Litha reminds us to honor the light within…and share it boldly.
Ways to Celebrate the Summer Solstice

You don’t need a robe, a ritual athame, or a PhD in Sun Worship to find uniquely symbolic and spiritual ways to celebrate the solstice. All you need is a willing heart, a dash of presence, and maybe a flower crown if you’re feeling extra. Below are some of my favorite ways…both ancient and modern, simple and ceremonial…to greet the longest day of the year and make it matter.
Sunrise Rituals & Meditations
There’s something downright holy about greeting the sun on solstice morning. You don’t need a chant, a mat, or a mountain…just showing up with reverence is enough. Watch the sunrise in silence, or sip your coffee with intention and let that golden light pour into your bones like liquid clarity. Imagine it as your soul’s reset button.
If you’re into meditating, this is a powerful time to breathe with the sun. If you’re not into meditation, that’s cool too, but since it has saved my life, I feel bound to tout the revolutionary potential just simple, present-moment mindfulness can do for you as you explore symbolic and spiritual ways to celebrate the summer solstice. Heck, it’s a good practice any & every day of the year (not just on the solstice).
But I digress, if you want a solar-centric meditation, start by visualizing a warm glow entering your heart space, igniting purpose, vitality, and courage. I’ve done this with my toes in the dewy grass, muttering affirmations like a half-awake druid…and somehow, it works. It reminds me that every day is a chance to begin again…but solstice mornings? They’re supercharged.
Bonfires & Letting Go Ceremonies
There’s a reason fire shows up in nearly every solstice tradition…it burns away what no longer serves. Light a bonfire, candle, or even just a match, and declare what you’re releasing. Doubt? Gone. Resentment? Poof. Fear? Ashes. (Safely, of course. We’re conjuring transformation, not forest fires.)
I’ve scribbled down old stories on scraps of paper, tossed them into a crackling fire, and felt lighter than a sunbeam afterward. Fire is not just for warmth…it’s for witnessing your willingness to change. Invite a few trusted friends, or make it private and quiet. Just make it real. Flame is a messenger, and it listens when you speak with heart.
Nature Offerings & Plant Magic
Midsummer is when the earth is drenched in green magic. Herbs are at their peak potency, flowers are in full flirtation mode, and the entire natural world is humming with energy. Create an altar celebrating the bodacious bounty of nature this time of year using whatever the land offers: ferns, daisies, oak leaves, mugwort, or wild strawberries if you’re lucky.
Leave offerings to the land or spirits if that’s your jam…herbs, fruit, or a simple whispered thank-you can work wonders. You can also make a herbal bundle for your door, infuse oils with sun herbs, or dry flowers for later spellwork or tea. This is a day to honor reciprocity with nature…to say, “I see your gifts,” and then ask, “How can I walk more gently in return?”
Solar Symbolism & Sacred Geometry
One among the wicked-keen ways to celebrate the summer solstice is to get jiggy with your creative muse. Dive into solar symbols and sacred geometry. Draw spirals, create sun wheels, build mandalas out of flowers or stones. Spirals, in particular, represent growth, consciousness, and the cyclical nature of life, which, let’s be honest, describes most of our emotional processing, too.
I once walked a labyrinth I’d crafted from nothing more than twine and flower petals. It was messy. It was beautiful. It was exactly right. The act of creating these forms can be a meditation in motion, helping you anchor solar energy into your everyday space. It’s like leaving a breadcrumb trail for your spirit to follow back home when life gets noisy.
Music, Dance & Joyful Expression
If you’ve ever danced barefoot in the grass under the sun with zero rhythm and even less shame, then you know: this is medicine. Music and movement unlock the body’s natural joy, especially at the solstice, when energy is high and life wants to be felt in full volume.
Create a solstice playlist. Drum. Sing. Move your hips like no one’s watching…because honestly, no one is. They’re too busy trying to remember how to feel alive again. You don’t need choreography. You need courage to embody your joy, and maybe some bug spray if you’re celebrating outside. The point is to let your spirit stretch as far as the sun’s rays. Let joy be your ritual.
Reflection, Journaling & Intention Setting
The solstice is a checkpoint, right? So, it should only be natural to ask good questions and give honest answers during this sacred time. Here are some ideas:
- What have I grown this year?
- What do I want to nurture next?
- What light have I been afraid to show?
- What has blossomed in my life since the last solstice?
- What am I proud of that I haven’t taken time to celebrate?
- Where have I been dimming my light, and why?
- What fears or beliefs am I ready to release into the fire?
- What kind of energy do I want to cultivate for the rest of the year?
- What would it look like if I fully stepped into my power?
- What relationships, habits, or patterns need more light (or more letting go)?
- How am I nourishing my joy, my creativity, and my spirit?
- What season of growth am I in personally, and what is asking to be harvested?
- What wisdom has the sun offered me lately: through nature, intuition, or synchronicity?
Grab a journal, a favorite pen, and your sunniest corner…and let yourself unravel gently.
You can write a letter to your future self, create a “solar vision board,” or jot down five things you’re grateful for and five things you’re ready to release in your secret-squirrel symbol journal. This kind of sacred self-inquiry can feel like a sunbeam inside your chest. And you know what? That’s the point. Let this moment be a mirror and a map. Reflect. Realign. Reignite.
And if all you do is whisper one small, honest desire to the wind and let the sunlight hold it—that’s enough. That’s sacred. The solstice sees you.
Solstice Feasts with Meaningful Foods
When it comes to ways to celebrate the summer solstice, you can’t do any better than partying with food (if you ask me). But you don’t need a ceremonial feast that rivals the Queen’s table, but a well-thought-out solstice spread can absolutely be a ritual. Think sun-colored foods: corn, citrus, yellow squash, honey, berries, and anything you can grill under the sky. Even better if it’s shared with others.
Make it intentional. Say a blessing before you eat. Honor the hands that grew the food. Sip something fermented and thank the sun for the yeast. Invite friends to each bring something from the earth. Food is more than fuel on this day…it’s solar energy made edible. So eat well. Laugh often. Nourish your spirit as much as your stomach.
Animal Symbolism & Seasonal Totems
Animals are nature’s messengers, and around the solstice, you might notice some showing up more frequently. Bees, for instance, are symbols of hard work, community, sweetness, and aligned purpose…perfect companions for this solar season. Deer, hawks, butterflies, and snakes also hold powerful summer energy.
Take a quiet walk and notice who appears. Or pull an animal card for the day and meditate on its meaning. Let their presence guide your own growth: What animal reflects where you are…or where you’re being called? Our ancestors looked to the animal world for clues, comfort, and connection. You can do the same. Let your wild kin remind you: you’re part of this sacred ecosystem, too.
Modern Meets Mythic: Bridging Ancient Traditions with Modern Lifestyles
In my world, the summer solstice is Litha…a high holy day on the Wheel of the Year, brimming with nature-based mysteries, solar magic, and sacred symbolism. It’s when I feel most in sync with the Earth’s heartbeat, like the universe itself is cracking open and spilling golden light into every corner of my being. It’s a time of celebration, yes…but also reverence, intention, and connection to something far older than cities and screen time.
But here’s the thing: you don’t need to be a full-time mystic to find symbolic and spiritual ways to celebrate the summer solstice. You can do a little candle magic in your air-conditioned apartment. You can speak gratitude over a grilled cheese sandwich. You can host a backyard bonfire while also knowing it’s the kickoff to beach trips, fireworks, and flip-flop season. Celebrating the solstice doesn’t mean rejecting modern life…it means weaving the ancient into it. It’s about noticing the sacred in the ordinary. It’s about saying, Yes, I honor the sun’s peak, even if I also have to pick up dog food and answer emails.
What I love about the solstice…what keeps me coming back to it year after year…is that it’s always waiting for you. Whether you’re cloaked in ritual robes or just pausing between work meetings, the solstice meets you exactly where you are. It asks: What is blooming in you? What are you ready to offer the light? And it never demands perfection…only presence.
Since humans could track time and read the stars, the summer solstice has been marked with awe. From stone temples to starlit stories, from sacred chants to floral feasts, this day has carried the weight of wonder. And in our modern world…faster, louder, and often disconnected from rhythm…we need that wonder more than ever.
So yes, mix your mysticism with your spiritual mojito. Build an altar next to your Bluetooth speaker. Dance barefoot with Spotify blasting. Pull a tarot card for reflection. The point isn’t to reenact history…it’s to remember that you’re part of it. Your solstice celebration can be ancient in heart and totally modern in form.
Just make it yours. Just make it sacred.
“Time is not a line, but a circle…each solstice a sacred point reminding us who we are, and who we’re becoming.”
~Me, under the sun, again.
The Final Word: Let the Light In
Here’s what I hope you take with you after all this talk of rituals, fire leaps, feasts, folklore, and ancient mysteries: The symbolic and spiritual ways to celebrate the summer solstice aren’t wholly the point – the big point is tapping into the greater infinite that you’re a part of, or connect with the divine (of which you are also an integral part). It’s also a moment that asks you to stand in your own radiance. To say, Yes, I am alive. I am growing. I am allowed to shine this brightly.
Whether you honor it through a full Litha ceremony, a humble walk in the sun, or a backyard gathering with grilled corn and laughter, the solstice is your invitation to come home to yourself. You don’t need to do it “right.” You just need to do it with presence. With heart. With some sense that this day…this longest, brightest, boldest day…means something. Because it does. It always has. And your ancestors knew it.
We are not separate from the ancient rhythms of the Earth…we are woven into them. We are the myths being written, the solar medicine wheels still turning, the wildflowers still blooming in places where we thought nothing good could grow. Honoring the solstice is a way to remember that. To remember you.
So go ahead…light that candle, speak that intention, sing that silly song to the sun. Let the solstice be both sacred and simple. Let it hold space for your joy and your questions. Let it remind you that even in a complicated world, there are still pure and powerful things worth celebrating.
Here’s to standing still for a moment. To soaking in the light. And to walking forward with a little more magic in your bones.
“The sun doesn’t apologize for showing up fully…and neither should you.”
~Yup, that one’s mine too.
Mighty brightly,

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