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Squaw Peak 50 (51.25) Miler

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Location:

Pleasant Grove,UT,USA

Member Since:

Aug 04, 2008

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

PRs: Fleet Feet Turkey Trot 5k- 19:46;  St. George Marathon  3:07:11(2013-- coming back from the dead)  Utah Valley Marathon 2011- 3:09:13 : D  1st place Master Division, 7th Overall; Mt. Nebo 1/2 Marathon 2011- 1:19:35- 2nd Overall,  first master. Ogden Marathon 3:14  (2010); 10K 2011 Speedy Spaniard 40:47.  I have run 33 marathons: 15 St. George (1995, 2006-2019). Utah Valley (2011, 2014), Eiluj (2011), Deseret News (2015, 3:40 pacer),  Ogden (2009, 2010), Boston (1996,2012,2014,2018)Top of Utah (1999, 2011 pacer), and SLC (2006,2015), Pocatello (3:40 pacer 2012),park city marathon 3:41:53 (2013), and Big Cottonwood pacer (2017,2018)and three Ultras-Squaw Peak 51.25 miler 2010 in 12:05:27 (9th woman) and  Antelope Island  (32 miler) in  March, 2011 (4th overall in 5:10:25) and in 2009.

 

Short-Term Running Goals:

2020 Marathon Madness

April  Salt Lake City Marathon April 18

May  Ogden Marathon  May 16

June Utah Valley Marathon  June 6 

July  Deseret News Marathon  July 24 

August  Top of Utah Aug 22 

September  Big Cottonwood  Sept 12 

October Saint George Marathon Oct 3  

November New York City Marathon  Nov 1

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Marathon--  PR (3:06 or better)

10k--  PR (under 40:47)

5K-- PR (under 19:46)

RUN FOREVER!!!

Personal:

Married to Troy since 1997.  We have three daughters- Courtney 21,  Brooke 19, and Amber 16 and one dog-Cocoa (15). Troy works and cook lots of yummy dinners and desserts.  Courtney is back as of Aug 2019 from 18 months in England.  Now working as a CNA and going to BYU. Brooke graduated from PGHS IN MAY 2019. Attending UVU in Fall. Called to serve in the Michigan Landing LDS church mission. Leaves Jan22, 2020. Amber plays for Olympic Montreux Premier 1 soccer team.  And is a junior this Fall 2019. I  work full time (27 years in June 2019) as a registered nurse. Currently working in the special care nursery  at American Fork Hospital.  Our family loves to camp and go to Disneyland.  

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 39.47 Year: 532.59
Brooks Pureflow Lifetime Miles: 309.19
Altras Zero Drop (lt. Blue) Lifetime Miles: 366.29
Mizuno Precision 11 (orange) Lifetime Miles: 610.05
Saucony Mirage 2 Grey Lifetime Miles: 223.70
Nike Pegasus Charc/lime Lifetime Miles: 487.77
Nike Pegasus Grey/blue Lifetime Miles: 428.92
Mizuno Precision Pink Lifetime Miles: 479.56
Nike Lunar Flyknits RED Lifetime Miles: 893.47
Nike Lunar Flyknits MULTI GREY Lifetime Miles: 369.20
Mizuno Sayanaras Lifetime Miles: 292.58
Asics Gel Lyte 33-2 (blue) Lifetime Miles: 163.09
Altra Intuition 1.5 Grey Lifetime Miles: 55.31
Altras Pink Intuition 1.5 Lifetime Miles: 79.00
Kinvara 5s Peach Lifetime Miles: 576.20
Kinvara 5s YELLOW Lifetime Miles: 346.56
Kinvara Blue/lime Lifetime Miles: 578.77
Kinvara 5s Green Lifetime Miles: 47.31
Kinvara 6 Turquoise Lifetime Miles: 531.20
Race: Squaw Peak 50 (51.25) Miler (51.25 Miles) 12:05:27, Place overall: 7, Place in age division: 4
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
51.250.0051.25

Where to begin?  Yesterday at 230 pm or so I was no longer a runner, no longer ever in my entire life EVER going to enter another race, my SGM number was up for sale, my blog was going to close shop, I was done.  I was utterly and completely beaten up by my FIRST EVER 50 miler and it was a long course, 51.25 to be exact verified by several other runners.  SERIOUSLY I was gone, I began to cry, cry out to the nature of the beast that I just didn't want to go ONE more step, I didn't want to see one more inch (never mind mile of snow) and slosh and mud.  This race was a 40 miler and then I was done.  It didn't matter that I had 9.5 miles of  downhill.  Four of those miles were snow and mud on narrow trail with drop offs.  I was completely unprepared.  Let's backtrack--- Hmmmm one 23 miler in under 3 hours (6weeks ago), one marathon 3 weeks ago in 3:14, and ONE short trail run LAST MONDAY of exactly 5 miles.  This was not enough training to keep up the early pace that I set at this race for over 26.2 miles.  I had heard of people running 7-8 hour trail runs every week and biweekly and thought who has the time and really is that necessary?  ah YES!!  Duh!!!   

BEST OF TIMES:  Strangely I was in the lead until aid station 6 (26.2 miles).  I won the Squaw Peak Marathon   : D in just under 5 hours!!!  I was told by many of the male runners that I was the lead runner and I just laughed and said "WHY?" and "Really?",  "Where are the other women?"  Darcie Gorman was back this year and she has the course record.  I passed Marci L. and Melanie C. after the third aid station, I knew they would kick my butt later.  In fact I ran quite a bit with Marcie's husband Richard.  He let me know she would be here soon but that  I was setting a pretty fast pace for this course.  Oooops.  Wasn't trying to do that. It felt fine.  I am after all a ROAD marathoner and 11:30 pace was EASY, even with a climb to 8900 feet.  But just after arriving at that aid station two woman, one of them Darcie passed me.  They stayed about 30 seconds.  I was there for 4 or more minutes.  They were trying to kick me out of the aid station to stay with them.  Are you kidding?  I am not a trail runner.  Look at my shoes, they are road shoes!!! 

WORST Of TIMES:

Oh there are many.  After aid station 6 you enter a dirt road and climb for forever!!  I walked a lot.  Came across a fast running deep creek and with a large log that you had to traverse.  I was so sure I would fall in.  My iPod was still not on so I decided to get it out and hopefully engage my mind in music.  The sounds of nature was nice but now I was getting pretty spent and needed civilization sounds.  Runners were all minutes and more apart.  Once in a while you would be by another runner but mostly you were on your own.  I got to aid station 7 and was so thankful it was nestled in shade and the helpful aid station crew telling me that I was in third but very close to the other women, like only three minutes away.  He tried to get me off quickly to catch them.  I didn't want to.  I was in my own race to finish, not win.  As I started out I was headed the wrong way, back up the dirt road and he said "not that way, that way" pointing.  Ummm "that's a creek!!".  Yup it was time to run a 1/2 mile up a creek!!  luckily I had several Angels in this course and another runner verified the way and I followed.  He also told me of the treacherous climb ahead after the next aid station.  I tried to just focus on the now.  I got to aid station 8 and changed my sneakers, socks and shorts (6 minutes here).  I wore my "zeroes" for the first 16 miles (yes the shoes I hate, but they had traction and miles 3 through 14 were uphill with lots of snow.  I changed to my "no tread" shoes at mile 14.6 and wore those until 33.4 aid station.  I was passed by another fast trekking woman (walking) just before here.  She looked really strong. Next is 8 miles to the summit of Windy Pass.  I got a second wind at mile 36 and ran/walked well to mile 39.5. Began slowly walking a 1/2 mile at the base of Windy Pass. Took a deep breath of my last available oxygen and walked baby steps.  I was dehydrated.  I had no water left since mile 37 and I had an odd gnawing headache and dizziness.  I just could NOT move up the 90 degree mountainside that would take me to 9200 feet above sea level.  I was like walking backward up it.  That mile was over 37 minutes long.  I just cried out in desperation and thought of LICKING my arms to get some very needed salt, a prayer answered.  After several licks and several minutes I was feeling a bit better but still I could not move my legs.  I was spent.  I was done and the summit was not closer.  It was a FALSE summit.  As I reached this peak you could look beyond and see several other runners on the next peak full of SNOW.  NOOOOO!!!!! I was so not doing that.  I was mentally and physically dying here. An angel bypasser gave me some of his camel back water and I decided to take my caffeine gu. Not always good for me especially on an uphill but I was desperate for energy.  About 4 women passed me here and WITH strength. Seriously?  Talk about salt in a wound!!  How is everyone even moving?  I don't know if I had hyponatremia, or altitude sickness or what but my muscles weren't achy I just was nauseated, headachy, dizzy and very irritable.  When I made it to 41.75 mile aid station 9 there was 9.5 miles left.  But I looked beyond it and there lay before me SNOW and MUD on a shadowed mountainside!!  NOOOOO!! I just can't do it .  I started out and was sliding all over the place.  This went on for 3 miles.  I began to cry.  I began to sob.  I began to just want to be over and NOT walk another step.  I just couldn't.  Running would prove fatal as I knew I would trip over a rock and crash.  3.5 miles of rocky downhill terrain and I couldn't do it.  I walked it.  This is where I became friends with Brigita.  She won it several years ago and she was the one who passed me miles before and she was not doing well at all.  I decided misery loves company and I asked her if we could walk together.  We did for 3 miles but she was wanting to stop and I got a burst of energy seeing the valley below.  I began to run and continued running for two miles to the last aid station.  It WAS SEARING  with heat now and it was more than my mind wanted to handle.  I don't do well with heat especially surprise heat after months of cold weather.  At aid station 10 they handed out ice cold wet rags and I placed one on my head and yelled out to the other runners there "come on guys, let's get this thing done".  I was at the start of the Provo Half Marathon in road running territory I knew quite well and by-golly I was going to let it rip.  I gave up the last 7 miles but now I am going to get it together.  That cold cloth did the trick and some new ice water in my pack.  (incidentally I carried a girls water bottle the last 7 miles because she gave me it when I was dying before AS 9 and asked me to leave it there, I forgot to and ended up holding onto it for those gruesome snowy miles, losing balance but not wanting to lose her bottle).  I left her bottle there and left with just mine in my waist carrier.  I took off in a "sprint" and passed four guys along the.  All the ones that passed me earlier.  My last mile was at a 7:41 and last .25 7:26!!!  Kim and Melanie were a sight for sore eyes.  They reeled me in for the last 1.5 miles.  I told them it was Hell on Earth and that they should never ever run it!!!  I was a basket of negativity.  When I crossed the finish line I was so happy.  My family was there and my friends had roses and chocolate for me!!  I was so lucky to have everyone still waiting.  I felt like I had let everyone down, making them wait an hour longer but what do you do?  50 miles of running on trails is the hardest thing I have ever done and ever will do.  I am sure of it.

Splits and Brief Narrative:

1- 8:15, 2- 7:42, yup the provo trail down hill,  Now the uphill trail 3- 10:38, 11:11, 15:51 (obviously walking VERY STEEP), 18:13 up hill with aid station, 18:32 (AS 2), 11:29, 8:30, 10:33, 13:45, 15:30 (AS 3), 12:29, 10:23, lots of snow and mud 16:47 (AS 4), downhill slosh and mud 9:26, 8:17, 8:17 easy dirt road terrain, here comes the south sun!!!, 10:52 ("TURN" I vaguely hear to my left, "UP there?"  yup off the lovely downhill dirt road onto a steep incline into the wooded trails with need for fancy footing in pathetic shoes), 8:17 (back on that road and across and into a dry creek bed), 8:19 more dirt road, 11:18 (AS 5, verified leader and lots of cheers for the first female : D), 8:57 (iPod too wet with sweat for the volume to work first time putting it on, but back off it went, bummer),  9:28, 10:27, 11:13, 15:07 (AS 6, the last 4 miles were UP the left fork on heated tar and whizzing by cars!! Passed by two women, Oh well, fun while it lasted), 12:44,  14:59 so walking here, river bed crossings and horse travelers to maneuver around, 14:47, 17:00 (AS 7, this is where the guy points me up a creek to run instead of the dirt road and telling me to win this thing for him, seriously?  like maybe if I trained correctly),  14:24, 18:13 too much up hill but lots of BEAUTIFUL backside of the mountain beauty, awesome!!!, I also fall into a creek bed trying to go over by way of a log, nice sloshy wet feet but the coldness was refreshing, just added lots of weight to my feet), 16:21 (AS 8 at last new sneakers but unfortunately many more creek beds, mud and snow to traverse.  These are my new ascics that I also hate, they no longer look new today), 13:40, 19:27, 17:13, 13:34, 11:58 (those last three I ran but it was very steep uphill, but NOT nearly as steep as the next mile, here comes the FALL),  22:34 (barely able to move legs upward, feel like I am falling, dizzy, headache and no water or fuel except one caffeine gu, I wait to take that),  37:53 (since when does a mile take this long?  I wasn't in a traffic jam I was mentally FREAKING OUT!!  I walked that mile in BABY STEPS, no joke.  It looked like the movie LION KING with the barren branches and dry land, except for a few yellow flowers trying to bloom.  Oh and so much fun to see a second summit up ahead!!   It was covered in snow of course).   35:59 (AS 9, it's about time?  I heard it was at 40.5 miles and my garmin read 41:76!!  So much for hope in the dessert.  I was beside myself falling into this AS, as it was in a "bowl", after reaching the summit you slide down a mudded hillside to it.  Literally.   23:35 (not quite fast enough for downhill hiking but what do  I do?  I don't want to break anything.  I have no scratches and one blister to show for this run.  Sore muscles of course.  No broken bones because I was sooooo careful.  After falling in the slosh on to my wrist I knew I wouldn't take any risks so I walked for the next 5 to 6 miles),  21:06, 18:45, 19:09,  14:08,  11:28 (AS 10, the cold washcloth and "let's get this thing overwith attitude" comes out),  8:13,  8:23,  7:41 (Kim and Melanie, Alleluyah!!!), .25 (7:26 pace).  I could go on and on about this race about highs and lows.  Know this--- that if you look at my mile splits and think "I so can do that!!"  More power to you.  It is way tougher than you imagine and takes more strength and preparation than anything you ever prepare for.  It will take you mentally and physically to the depths of despair mixed with only moments of exhilaration.  Yesterday afternoon I was no longer a runner.  Today I think I might be.  Tomorrow I will prepare better. 

 


Night Sleep Time: 0.00Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 0.00Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Bonnie on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 18:53:39 from 64.119.33.134

WOW! what an experience. I still say that is so amazing that you did so well off of "road marathon" training (and I loved that you won the Squaw Peak "marathon" - that was pretty funny, in hindsight). Amazing Julie, just amazing! Now you need to comment on Nevels blog and tell him how incredibly awesome that ultramarathoners are ;-).

From seeaprilrun on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:10:02 from 68.103.243.146

Wow Julie that sounds incredible and brutal and amazing. I am inspired to run a 50k in July now! I can't believe you could run like that at the end! Wow! I am in total awe! I wanted to cry reading your race report. I can only imagine!

From Teena Marie on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:32:36 from 174.52.45.85

I am in total awe!!! Julie ... Julie ... Julie ... you are so incredibly tough.

I just finished reading "Born to Run" and started contemplating ultras, 50 milers, etc ... your post has brought me back to reality!!! :)

You are so amazing.

What a journey ... and it's YOURS!!!!

PLEASE tell me that you have printed out your race report and put it some place for safe keeping.

Beyond impressed.

Congratulations. :)

From Nan on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:35:38 from 174.51.250.151

Sheesh! That sounds horrific! You just scared me away from ultras for at least another decade. I'm glad you got 'er done though.

From allie on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:37:57 from 67.177.0.102

well done julie! once again you prove how tough you are. what an experience you had! i can't even imagine how hard that must have been to keep going. you are so awesome. thanks for the great read.

From JulieC on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:38:17 from 207.224.202.191

Thanks everyone!! I just finished editing and adding all the rest of my report. I had accidentally posted it before I was done. I am still delirious. : D

From Oreo on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 19:46:38 from 174.27.230.198

Great run! That thing is a beast. Way to power through it. That false summit was like a mental dagger!! You did awesome.

From JulieC on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 20:09:58 from 207.224.202.191

Hey, I just looked up the updated results, my unlucky day came with a Lucky Number, I was 7th overall :D. I will take that.

Nan, I am sure you would break the course record. And be way wiser than I. You too April, just be wise. Invest in trail shoes!!!

From Holt on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 20:53:52 from 75.169.90.161

Sounds very familiar to me! Great job on "getting through" it!

From josse on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 21:06:02 from 75.231.99.161

Congrats you finished:) I thought about you all day and so glad you finished in good time. I know you say not to do this but reading your race report actually makes me want to take on the challange.....someday.....maybe.....in 10 years:) But I still think ultras are crazy and well as the people who do them;)

From Smooth on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 21:53:09 from 174.23.172.155

WOWZER!!! Julie! I kept thinking about you and my friend Maynard all day yesterday!!!

You are the toughest toughies I've known. I started crying when I read that part where you sobbed. You persevered and finished RUNNING FAST to the end at 7th overall! That is beyond amazing!!!! I am soooo proud of you! What a brutal journey and you triumphed over this beast! there's nothing you can't do! seriously, you're my hero! I have a feeling you will do it again!

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!!

From Bryce on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 22:48:40 from 174.52.190.220

Nice job getting through the low spots and finishing strong. I love the fighter attitude at the end, so easy to give up on those last miles. That is a very tough race and you did well. I think I was just in front of you coming up to the aid at mile 14, we had a short conversation about whether or not everyone was hurting at that point or just us.

From runningafterbabies on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 23:09:25 from 67.177.9.74

I enjoyed reading your race report even though I was wincing in pseudo-sympathy pain for you during most of it.

I am so proud of you and admire how strong you are. I think that race will be one you can draw strength from in all of your future trials: physically and mentally. You can do anything, Julie!

You will most likely want to do it again. I am basing that on my first marathon that was not even 1/100 as hard as your race, but my thoughts were the same, and I've come to love marathoning.

From JulieC on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 23:11:36 from 168.103.184.126

We must have commented on the blog at the same time. I remember that conversation. It's pretty funny how toughing it out is required even in the very beginning. Wish I could have stayed up with you!!

From Bryce on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 23:50:03 from 174.52.190.220

Julie, Ultra's are tough, but running a marathon in the times I see you have is even tougher in my book! If you are like the rest of us, memeory is short when it comes to the bad parts and in a day or two you'll be ready to send in your entry for next year. Happy recovery!

From CookieLegs on Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 23:59:13 from 71.36.66.200

Wow! Congratulations - you are an awesome runner! Great write-up, too, really lets us envision what you went through!

From Oreo on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 12:14:07 from 174.27.215.243

Julie... Where are you seeing updated race results? Thanks...

From KP on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 12:22:48 from 65.208.22.26

now a few days later, i am sure you are ready to sign up for another one.

congrats on a great race!

From Nevels on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 12:55:48 from 131.204.15.93

Congrats on a solid run.

Way to push through the lows to the finish. Funny how you get the double whammy of the trail taking it right out of you, while simultaneously the added distance seems to make things spiral exponentially downward...until the exact opposite happens and you get to the upswing and feel invincible for a while, before repeating the whole process.

Now you know that you can push through, you are more aware of that of which you are capable, and you have a bit more insight as to the nature of the beast (and more importantly, how to prepare).

It's not a question of if you'll be back, but when and where.

Congrats again, and rest up; you've earned it.

From mozzer on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 13:42:48 from 76.199.100.190

awesome report on an amazing experience! You guys are all scaring me into definitely trying to get in next year. see you then! Bravo, only a select few can do it. My half-marathon xterra trail race here in cali next week seems a bit dinky in comparison!

From JulieC on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 14:32:09 from 207.224.203.19

Oreo-- Correction as I looked more closely late last night Marcie L. and Elizabeth M. were missing from the overall results but were placed in the masters. So I really am 9th. Not sure why they were left out of there. Marcie was on a team with her husband but I don't think that counts, at least I don't count that. She still outdid me by quite a bit!!!

From JulieC on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 14:33:02 from 207.224.203.19

Nevels- Thanks, So you are a fast and a far kind of NUT huh?!! Way to go!!!

From JulieC on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 14:33:55 from 207.224.203.19

the results are at RACE DAY UPDATES on the Squaw Peak website. Lots of details there.

From Nevels on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 14:40:33 from 131.204.15.93

fast, far - to some degree, i can do either, but putting them together... that's the trick...

(the best i've done to combine the two is 7min/mile for 26~ish training or 11:50/mile for 100; if i could only juxtapose the two...)

From Oreo on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 17:14:01 from 174.27.215.243

Julie - I just get error on page when I try and view that site.. I'm using IE 8. What browser are you using?

From seeaprilrun on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 19:25:08 from 68.103.243.146

I had to come back and read this report again--it's an awesome journey! Licking salt off your arms? You are a runner, hardcore, runner. I am in awe, totally not worthy! :) This actually pumps me up to try an ultra. What a tough, taxing, incredible journey--a memory you will have forever and will never forget. You triumphed over all the odds! It must feel incredible!

From JulieC on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 19:41:07 from 207.224.203.19

Oreo-- Firefox, is that a browser? I am so non-computer handy.

April, strangely enough I am replaying my journey, how I got there, why it went the way it did and how the heck I can do this a heck of a lot better, I AM INSANE!!! Please just check me in NOW!!

From Ericka on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 20:08:29 from 174.52.6.216

You are truely an inspiration! I could feel your pain reading through this but it kinda makes me want to do it.. I'll take your advise though, I don't think I'm up for the challenge any time soon. You looked so strong when I saw you just before aid station 10, you would have never thought you went through everything you did. I'm proud of ya girl and I'll get those pics to you so you can always remember the beatiful meadow you passed that you probably didn't notice with 4 miles to go.

From JulieC on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 20:13:45 from 207.224.203.19

ERICKA-- Your idea of the cut off sock at the wrist under the garmin so saved my mentality from sinking even more into oblivion. Seriously, I never once was irritated by my garmin (other than not reading the miles faster : D). I am keeping my cut off kids pink sock FOREVER!! It really did the trick. I will wear it at every run now. THANK YOU!! KIM thanks you too!! : D. sorry so negative when I saw you. I just barely came to about a mile before I "ran into" you. Thanks for pictures too!!

From crockett on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 23:49:14 from 71.36.86.21

Way to hang in there. The heat made it tougher this year. Times were slower than normal, so you did very good, especially for your first mountain 50. I remember back in 2004, I was hiking on that trail and saw flags marking some sort of course up that hill. I had never heard of ultras before and I was convinced that anyone who would race up that thing is stupid. Well, now I've gone up or down it at least ten times.

It only gets better. This year I enjoyed the climb, but only because I prepared for it...pushing calories and drink right before it and enjoying slush from the snow in my water bottle, really cooled me down for the rest of the run.

You did great, feel proud of the accomplishment!

From Maynard on Tue, Jun 08, 2010 at 23:51:07 from 71.213.28.77

Congrats on the awesome finish!

Reading your detail from Little Valley over to the finish brought back a lot of my recollections from my first year--when I swore I'd never give John another red cent for the privilege of beating myself up like that again. But I did.

From JulieC on Wed, Jun 09, 2010 at 00:11:30 from 207.224.203.19

Maynard-- I still can't get why I was walking faster or the same uphill (miles 33 to 39) then I did those last downhill miles!!! I was seriously out of my mind delusional!!! How does that happen? I can't figure out why I couldn't get my head in the game!!!

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