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sue1957

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Posts posted by sue1957


  1. http://www.upledger.com/Clinic/autism.htm

     

    has quite an interesting article on craniosacral therapy and autism. (I think the difference between a craniosacral therapist and a cranial osteopath is that the craniosacral therapist studies cranial work exclusively. Cranial osteopaths I think train initially in osteopathy, and then do postgraduate training in cranial work.)

     

    Its interesting that that he is prepared to train parents to give their own children craniosacral treatments between sessions re-evaluated by a therapist.

     

    I've recently met a craniosacral therapist who gives free craniosacral checks to babies under 6 weeks old. :thumbs:


  2. I can do basic iridology, and I've used stress management (particularly reducing chemical and electromagnetic stress), nutrition, colour therapy, light therapy, flower essences (Bach rescue, but otherwise the Masters range, orange, lettuce, spinach, coconut, etc - I'm a foodie :lol: ), homeopathic treatment (one formula specifically relating to dehydration and also adrenal exhaustion), took them for food sensitivity testing using bioresonance, and I've given the occasional foot or head massage. I keep some homeopathic remedies such as arnica and apis and chamomilla, and a couple of relaxing aromatherapy oils.


  3. Recently I took him to see a complementary therapist at our (not so) local autism trust. I don't know what the method was called but she took photographs of his eyes and studied them, picking up deficiencies and sensitivities from what she saw.

     

    Iridology is analysing the iris of the eye. Very useful tool, can also be done by a therapist using a special iridology torch and making notes on an iridology chart of what they see, but using the camera is much easier, and probably the ony way of using iridology with some clients. A tool for information gathering, it can give a lead on what questions to ask, or contribute to information taken in a case history, and give pointers to possible avenues of treatment. Really interesting subject.


  4. The rot comes down from the top and it seems that to even get LA's to conform to the law is an impossible task, let alone try and get efective change for the best interests of the kids!

     

    HelenL

     

    :notworthy::notworthy: to anyone taking on the system. We made a complaint about being threatened with social workers if we took holiday in term time. God help anyone who wants to take the system on for anything more important.

     

    The LA "advised" the school not to talk to us, which the school took to mean any member of staff, about anything at all. When our son was bullied the school wanted us to wait a week to see the HT with CoG present, only out of school hours.

     

    We were isolated when the school suddenly started authorising holidays for others who applied - we were suddenly the only ones with a gripe. The contact restrictions would be lifted when the complaint was concluded (i.e. dropped, as the system makes damn sure that it takes months to get to LA panel).

     

    The LA ignored written requests to lift the ban as it raised health safety and welfare issues, then our daughter had her head slammed into a metal coat peg, the school didn't tell us, didn't record it, and sent her home. We took the kids out of school for 2 months, so the LA threatened truancy proceedings, got the ESWs involved, and didn't even bother to tell the health and safety unit. We stood our ground, so they suddenly produced a complaints panel about the holiday policy within 7 days, and gave us a "revised" investigating officer's report and an unsigned LA response statement 2 days before panel, confirming that their policy was flawed and would be rewritten in time for September. (The "independent investigating officer" turned out to have been a retired Education department officer, but even he agreed that the LA policy wasn't legal). Lies, fake minutes, "rewritten" investigating officer's reports because he cant spell, cant count to 11, missing attachments (whilst being asked to sign we've had everything), you name it.

     

    By this time the LA had told us that we weren't banned from entering the school premises for the purposes of our children's education, but refused to accept that any ban was in place for staff contacting us (Although we had written evidence, and 2 incidents had occurred :blink: ). The day before this term started we had to go into the school and sort the health and safety out ourselves, because as the dispute was concluded there was no legitimate reason to keep contact bans in place.

     

    We've tried to involve the Dfes, Ofsted, information commissioner, the health and safety exec, the MP, local councillor, the standards committee at the council, next its the ombudsman. Apart from fobbing you off to someone else, so far the silence is deafening.

     

    Our LA seem quite prepared to sacrifice the health and safety and welfare of any child whose parent stands up to them. After what's happened to us, I would be wary of helping or advising anyone to take the system on. :tearful: The price has been so high, it could have been a lot worse. After a year of it, I am emotionally and physically exhausted, financially its stuffed us, I've had to have therapy for months to cope with the stress, and we WON. :wacko:

     

    Or at least we thought we had - its one thing getting them to agree something is illegal and that they will put it right, its another them actually doing it. :wallbash: As yet they still haven't issued the new policy, so now it looks like year 2 could be a possiblity :wallbash:

     

    My daughter's new school has just issued a newsletter threatening referrals to ESWs for unauthorised holiday in term time, and we need to apply for a few days at the end of the Xmas break. Could be year 1 of a new complaint as well :ph34r::angry:

     

    We've just started a support group for parents in our town - but forming a pressure group for taking on the system just isn't in the plans at the moment. But give it time :devil:


  5. Bid

     

    We don't do sweets at all, the kids get a bit at Xmas and birthdays, but thats about it. But in terms of sugar and glycaemic index, chocolate can be a better option than some of the so called "healthy" snack bars passed by the school's nutrition police. If its just chocolate, and not say a biscuity chocolate bar, it can also have considerably less additives and no refined wheat. It doesn't contain the same damaged fats that crisps have. It contains magnesium, some protein etc. I think of it as a food, sometimes we eat it, sometimes we don't. Used moderately, it boosts feelgood hormone and neurotransmitter production (which is why we sometimes crave it). I also use raw chocolate powder therapeutically in smoothies :D because raw it also contains the enzymes that cooked chocolate doesn't. Its a part of my enzyme therapy :lol:

     

    Two of my fave books are "Why women need chocolate" and "Naked Chocolate."

     

    I've found that if I crave chocolate and eat a bit, the craving goes away. If I treat it as sinful or a treat only on special occasions, then I crave it more and finish up eating a lot more :oops:


  6. I had this argument with the school last year. So far they've banned crisps, biscuits, cake and chocolate at break, but not at lunchtime. So the break snack has to pass the nutrition police. I pack a sandwich (wholemeal with protein filling), fruit, a yoghurt and a snack size of chocolate. If my kids want to eat their chocolate ration at break then as far as I'm concerned they can. But on the days I've run out of fruit, they aren't allowed half a sandwich, they don't want to take spoons out in the playground so no yoghurt (unless I'm forced to buy drinking yoghurts) so in the event that nothing passes the nutrition police's check, they do without. Some of the things the school class as "healthy" I think are total c*ap, but in the absence of fruit I have put something in as a reserve.

     

    What really bugs me is that when I asked the school (very very nicely!) to stay out of it because their "rules" made my kids diet worse, I was given an out of date leaflet promoting the virtues of aspartame and low fat/diet stuff. I even had to argue to get water bottles in the classroom, when my son was going into meltdown after school from dehydration. I even offered to join the nutrition police to give some parental feedback, but was turned down. I might have logged a written request that my children be allowed to pick something from their lunchbox at break, but its ignored, and to be honest my kids wouldn't want to be "different" by being allowed stuff others aren't. Some kids just stuff banned things in their mouths when no-one is looking. Eating disorders in the making?

     

    The break rules aren't followed by the staff either - the kids can see that, and parents know it. In our school its some box ticking exercise by the governing body. I reckon it will spread to whats eaten at lunchtime as well. My son used to be food phobic, if he still was then if the rules get worse, he would have starved.

     

    Our school are not interested in holding an open meeting with parents to give advice and up to date information on healthy lunchboxes, or to get parental feedback, or just get an idea of some of the problems, they just dictate by newsletter and rules in the school.

     

    If I wasn't so busy fighting the LEA about banning the school from speaking to us because we complained about holiday in term time (which led to our daughter being sent home with a head injury and us not being told) I'd take it up.

     

    Just haven't got the fight in me at the moment :crying:


  7. I didn't do the chat, but I went to several BIBIC seminars a couple of years ago, at which the BIBIC nutritionist Caroline was a speaker. I did ones on ADD/ADHD, then Autism, Aspergers, and one on Early Behavioural Indicators, about the sensory issues that can be spotted and helped at a very early age.

     

    The nutritionist talked about avoiding artificial colourings, additives, caffeine etc, and aspartame, addiction to milk and wheat, how too much milk lines the gut and stops other nutrients being absorbed, the opioids etc and the GF/CF diet, withdrawal symptoms etc and about salycilates (cant spell that :unsure: ). She also went into supplementation generally. Children going to BIBIC are assessed over a couple of days by several professionals, including the nutritionist, advice given on nutrition, exercises, behavioural management etc etc, and the parents go home armed with the information of what they can do to help their child, information for their children's schools, and what to expect in the way of problems (for example if a child comes off wheat and/or milk), and then can telephone for further advice if they need to. Children can then return for a shorter reassessment later.

     

    BIBIC's not far from me, very interesting place, had a good look round whilst I was there at the pool, sensory room etc.

     

    If no-one else did the chat, hope this helps give you a general idea. :)


  8. Sue This mediator is not directly employed by the LEA but is employed by the Regional mediation service. However, it is funded by the local regional SEN partnership, so a bit like Parent partnership how independent can they be when they are funded by the LEAs themselves.

     

    All the mediators are SEN trained and are fully up to date on the law and code of practice, all are members of professional bodies (but what professional bodies is not clear). They could well be EPs or similar employed within the regional LEA grouping that finances the service. Your comments about what your meeting was is exactly what is worrying me. On the other hand, I can see that having these people present may make it possible to toss around ideas and come up with a way of providing the tuition that the LEA seems to be struggling to provide.

     

    Ours is different then, as its not SEN related. Our "independent investigating officer" came round to interview us, with a business card saying he was independent etc, talked about a case for another LA he was currently working on, full of mediation c*ap. Lets just say that the first "independent" report we got from the LA referred to documents that weren't there, and there was a document enclosed not referred to in the text. One numbered paragraph was missing, it was unsigned, and the first page didn't mention us by name at all. We were sent it with instructions not to discuss it with the other parties prior to a panel meeting, which could take some time because of synchronising of diaries. Buried. Except we'd pulled the kids out of school, and to get them back they had to produce a panel. Suddenly we got another report "tidied up" by the Local Authority renumbering the paragraphs and documents. Caused a row at the start of panel, but he said that it was normal for the LA to tidy up his reports. Lets just say that we have found out a thing or two that are going to prompt a few enquiries about just how "independent" he is.

     

    But "mediation" and "independent" are dirty words in this house at the moment :lol:


  9. Had a phone call from the mediator today.

     

    The mediator kept telling me how lucky I am to be under my LEA, how they're really fair unlike the neighbouring one and how my statementing officer is really reasonable.

     

    So, do I carry on and allow this large meeting to be arranged or do I voice my doubts to the mediator when I see him Tuesday week and see why it is necessary. Anyone any experience?

     

    This is probably a thick question but what defines a mediator? Our LA offered us independent mediation for our parental complaint to a governing body that went pear shaped, and its the ed. social worker manager doing it, our mediation is suddenly a "School attendance meeting" Also our "independent investigating officer" is very obviously not "independent" to the extent that his report can be retyped by the LA (apparently just to tidy up spelling mistakes and cos he cant count up to 10 attachments in the first version).

     

    Does "mediator" and "independent" mean something different to anyone elses LA? Or are we just the lucky ones? :lol:


  10. Isn't it always the way, the odd thing that you forget to officially confirm in writing is the thing that they chose to use against you. Like you though I usually find if I search my files hard enough I have the evidence to prove my point.

     

    Good Luck with the panel's decision. I'll keep my fingers crossed it goes your way. When will you know their decision?

     

    Should be the end of the week latest. But as the kids are out of school, the result doesn't matter so much. They have to reconcile. The LA have previously tried to get us to put in writing that we will take them off roll, find another school or home educate. We have flatly refused, our children will not be punished for something that is not their fault. They are now classed as "children missing from education" so the LA have to act under the policy guidance under the Dfes Every child matters and "no child slips through the net." Our county policy guidance makes VERY interesting reading. The panel would have been stalled for months I reckon, except that the kids are not being educated at all. Suddenly a panel meeting that normally takes months for diaries to be synchronised appeared in less than a fortnight. Four days before the panel, a second "independent" investigating officer's report arrived, with a letter for us to sign saying that we had received the report and all attachments. Needless to say we didn't sign, and lodged a written statement concerning that at the start of panel, saying that we were so desperate to get our kids back into education that we would accept the panel on the second report, on the understanding that it did not override our rights under the FOIA and complaints procedures to query the 2 versions of the report we held to date. :devil: The fact that the panel went ahead meant that we can ask questions - in writing of course :devil:

     

    Before the kids were withdrawn, we told the LA several times that contact restrictions placed on us because we had lodged a parental complaint constituted a health safety and welfare risk, which they ignored, our daughter had a head injury, we weren't informed, and the kids have been withdrawn until the health, safety and welfare has been sorted to OUR satisfaction. I said at panel that I wouldn't leave my kids with a babysitter who wouldn't tell me if one of them was injured, and I wasn't leaving them with a school that wouldn't.

     

    The LA have tried to force attendance meetings, (including one immediately after the panel). We agreed to a "reconciliation meeting" provided all our outstanding issues were addressed (and we listed them) and that a parent governor was present plus one other from a list. Just before panel they tried to fob us off with another governor (ex staff) and insisted it was an "attendance meeting" so we refused. Our emails all show how keen we are to have a meeting as soon as possible to reconcile our differences (which is quite true) but that certain criteria must be met, i.e. parent governor, health and safety issues, etc. Lets see them try and take that to court. :)

     

    But we've done it all in writing, making sure we don't make any complaint about any individual, we've kept it completely non personal. If we get a letter or email that makes us fume, I've typed a draft rant email or letter but then left it at least 24 hours til I've calmed down before careful editing to calm and reasonable mode before sending it. Rant emails and letters are just the ammo they need.

     

    Sorry that turned into a bit of a novel, :oops: but its the waiting that's the worst. I'm a bit stressed in case you haven't noticed :lol:


  11. If its any consolation we went to level 3 county complaints panel last week and the school said that it was up to the parents to initiate meetings to deal with disputes. :blink: They also said that the school objected to us putting dealing with the matter in writing, as they preferred to deal with everything verbally, cos it was less susceptible to misunderstanding. :lol: The one thing they came up with that wasn't in writing they thought was going to bite us in the bum. Although we argued it pretty well at panel, I kicked myself for not sending confirmation of my understanding of the incident they were talking about. But fortunately I made notes after the incident which are still held on computer disc showing the time and date my record was made. The incident in question was also prior to the completion of the school's position statement for panel, which does not make the allegation. So immediately following panel we have made another complaint, as it constituted an unsubstantiated public allegation that we can prove is false.

     

    Kids have been out of school for weeks now, and there will be no chance of reconciliation without an unreserved apology. Its either unreserved apology, or it looks like home tuition next. If we think its affected the conclusion of the panel, its ombudsman.

     

    If they are moaning about things being in writing, you've got em worried. Keep writing :thumbs:


  12. Yes I use enzymes.

     

    I've got several books on their use generally. I've also got Karen DeFelice's book "Enzymes for Autism and other neurological conditions" ISBN 97259817-7 which I find quite useful.

     

    I'm getting ready for an LA panel tomorrow :angry: but if you want some links to some online articles about enzymes in general, then pm me, although it may be a day or two before I get a chance to do it.


  13. Water companies are private businesses. Health authorities officially have no powers outside of the NHS and are incapable of passing any legislation dictating what private companies can and can't do. Only parliament has the power to dictate that water companies fluoridate.

     

    Domestic water filters can't remove fluoride. Only complicated expensive processes such as reverse osmosis or distillation are capable of removing fluoride. What I am interested in knowing is what happens to 99.9% of the fluoride in the water that isn't consumed. It is being released into the environment as sewage works don't remove it.

     

    Last I heard (which was ages ago so I'm not stating it as fact) was that our water authority will fluoridate if the health authority requests it, after consultation etc etc. My FIL wrote to the local water board 3 or 4 years ago and that was their response then I think, but it may be a bit different now. He registered an objection to any future plans, on health grounds, and asked to be told if they were ever even considering it. Not holding my breath they would get in touch :lol:

     

    We'll go for the complicated expensive processes of removing it from our water supply when or if we need to, even if it means upping the mortgage. :blink: As for the pollution aspect, I think that if the whole country becomes fluoridated, it could become a major problem. I think a lot of the US is fluoridated, so I don't buy certain US products (even organic) if I can avoid it.


  14. The water in Birmingham and the surrounding area has been fluoridated since the 1960s. A few other places are also fluoridated including North Tyneside. There are plans to fluoridate all of England and the NHS is backing it.

     

    There's also a lot of opposition. Our health authority aren't pushing it yet, but if they do, we will oppose it. We are even prepared to buy a special unit that takes fluoride out at the mains. Its pretty expensive, but if they do start talking about fluoridating our water, I am going to send the water authority details of it, and tell them that if they fluoridate I will install it and knock the cost off the water bill. :devil:

     

    Problem is, if anyone has problems excreting it, then the more people drink or the more they bath in it, the bigger the "dose" of fluoride medication. If they then brush their teeth a couple of times a day with a fluoride toothpaste............ :hypno: I'm not 100 % sure if fluoride in toothpaste damaged my sons thirst sense, or if a poor thirst sense (and therefore low urine output) caused fluoride to accumulate, or just he took in more than he could excrete, but for us fluoride was bad news, and removing it has made a huge difference to my son's quality of life.


  15. Fluoride is my pet hate. From when he started brushing his teeth to when he was four when we finally realised what was causing it, my son had light sensitivity, water phobia, lining things up etc etc. He was also food phobic, which left him malnourished, and with sore gums and sensitive teeth.

     

    Changing to a non fluoride toothpaste made a huge difference. Fluoride is neurotoxic, and some people just don't excrete it very well. Absorbed through the gums or swallowed when brushing the teeth, mouthwashes, maybe even the water supply fluoridated, :wacko: I've heard of some people using some of the mouthwashes you can buy to treat headlice. :(

     

    The fluoridealert.org website has a health effects database

     

    http://www.fluoridealert.org/health/


  16. Okey-dokey, let's go for...

     

    When my soul was in the lost-and-found

    You came along to claim it

    I didn't know just what was wrong with me

    Till your kiss helped me name it

     

    Now I'm no longer doubtful what I'm living for

    Cause if I make you happy I don't need to do more

    You make me feel, you make me feel, you make me feel like

    A natural woman.......

     

    Yup found me old Carole King "Tapestry" LP :thumbs:

     

    OK here's another

     

    So don't look surprised, there was no disguise

    You knew where I stood from the start

    So stop -look around you

    You're right back where I found you

    Take back your cold and empty heart


  17. Okey-dokey, let's go for...

     

    When my soul was in the lost-and-found

    You came along to claim it

    I didn't know just what was wrong with me

    Till your kiss helped me name it

     

    You make me feel like a natural woman ?

    Was that Carole King?


  18. We've never had a problem until this year. Last Sept the HT refused to consider any holiday at all, we needed 11 days cos of flights, and he threatened us with social workers if we went, (and they had 100 per cent attendance otherwise). We complained to the governors, major row, gone on for months, contact bans from the school, etc etc finally led to us not being told about a head injury, so the kids have been pulled out for over a month now. Currently waiting for a county panel, which is supposed to be next week, but no paperwork yet, and I'm not holding my breath.

     

    Fortunately came across the authority's "children missing from education" policy guidance which states that parents withdrawing their children counts as "missing from education" and the LA have to do something, its now over 20 days out, we've refused to find another school, or home educate, or send them back until our dispute is over because of welfare issues in school whilst staff are banned from talking to us. (Which is just because we made a complaint). And they cannot take us off roll.

     

    And as "LEAs cannot decide not to arrange any education or to make arrangements which do not provide suitable education for that child." We're pushing for them to settle the dispute, or provide home tuition until they do.

     

    This is all over holiday in term time, but the law states that HT's can authorise up to 10 days, more in exceptional circumstances. HT's don't have to authorise, but if you've got all authorised absence, I personally would ignore it, and just go. We only fought it because they refused to even consider us, we had 100 per cent attendance, and were threatened with social workers.

     

    At the end of the day a family holiday does more for my kids health and wellbeing than the same 2 weeks in school, and if we can't afford to go in the school holidays, its not fair that the kids miss out. We always offer to take homework with us, (this year was the first time we got it).

     

    But with the hassle I'm having, if its authorised (or even if its not but won't prompt a report to ed. social workers) then I'd just keep quiet and go.


  19. Flutter got it. You need air to function which you can't find underwater. You also need self-stimulation and the stims that Autistics do are done for specific and important reasons. When you try to stop them you are dismissing those reasons when you know little about them.

     

    Leo Kanner realised very early on that institutions made Autistic residents disintergrate on the inside and it all comes down to how staff handle stims which they deemed unacceptable. But an Autistic doesn't have to be in an institution for this to happen, it can now happen and does happen at home when they are young.

     

    Once upon a time prisons were extremely horrible places and the amount of control exerted over the behaviour of inmates by the system was extreme enough to replicate mental-institution standards and prisoners often became insane. Life sentences didn't start out as life means life, they were only supposed to be a few decades should a stay of execution be granted but once a prisoner had gone mad they could never be let out. The death penalty was far more humane in those times.

     

    Bruno Bettelhiem based his refridgerator mother theory on the fact that he had witnessed the same behaviour he saw in Autistic patients that were found in prisoners in Nazi extermination camps.

     

    I'm sorry that I have to use inflammatory examples, but I only have to because the idea of controlling another person's self-stimulation even if they are a child and you are their parent is sickening and

    inflammatory. Try going without any self-stimulation yourself for a while.

     

     

     

    I might not like it Lucas, but I could go quite some time without self-stimulation if I really had to, but I will only last a few minutes without air. I don't agree its comparable.

     

    I really don?t understand your postings. Are you suggesting that parents who choose, for whatever reason, to stop or redirect specific stims are comparable to those who hold their children?s heads underwater, to staff who behave badly in institutions in order to control inmates, or that our choices have relevance to Bettelheim?s discredited theory based on what he had witnessed in the Nazi extermination camps? :blink: The Leo Kanner opinions you quote related to staff handling stims in institutions, not to a parent trying to handle them, for whatever reason, in the context of a loving home environment.

     

    I agree with you that stims are for a reason, and should be accommodated as much as possible to reduce stress. But as a parent, my first choice is to try and reduce stress so that some stims might be dropped voluntarily. Then I?d accommodate those stims that don?t make a child?s life more difficult in other areas. But I?d redirect any that do, if I thought they would ultimately lead to more stress to my child. That?s parenting.

     

    Have you any helpful or relevant examples, or at least less inflammatory ones than holding heads underwater, institutions and death camps?


  20. You may be a parent Gardenia, but that wouldn't give you the right to hold either of your boys heads underwater and that is comparable with the stopping stims. Which is why I would suggest you see how long you can go underwater before you make that decision for anyone else.

     

    People make rude comments to me all the time, usually without knowing. If I've made any such comments myself, I don't know of them.

     

    I'll rephrase it Lucas. As a parent, I would like to know how does my not having the right to hold my child's head underwater (which prevents breathing) compare with stopping stims (that doesn't stop them breathing )? Do you have another less inflamatory example that can reflect what you mean, to me as a parent?


  21. You may be a parent Gardenia, but that wouldn't give you the right to hold either of your boys heads underwater and that is comparable with the stopping stims. Which is why I would suggest you see how long you can go underwater before you make that decision for anyone else.

     

    People make rude comments to me all the time, usually without knowing. If I've made any such comments myself, I don't know of them.

     

    A parent drowning or pretending to drown a child compared to stopping or redirecting a stim, rightly or even wrongly, with good intentions? :huh: I don't understand, I can't see that example as comparible at all. Could you clarify Lucas?


  22. :thumbs:

     

    I regularly give talks. Depends on how long I've got but when I first started I struggled to fit in too much information :blink: so now I have a set format, with just some real basics.

     

    Visuals usually works best so I usually take a couple of drinks with colourings and additives, and talk about just one or two of the ingredients such as aspartame. I also take a couple of examples of toiletries with the nasties in, and how the colourings and additives are absorbed through the skin, think of how a nicotine patch works etc. How just by reading the labels, changing some brands, or removing some of the worst ingredients it can alleviate the pressure on the nervous system and reduce chemical stress, and often has a good effect on sleep patterns or reducing hyperactivity.

     

    I usually do a bit on milk, and explain a bit about leaky gut, and about cravings/addiction for milk/wheat.

     

    I have a picture showing how the body might look without the skin, showing all the veins, arteries and nervous system, to give a visual of where all the nasties might finish up if its ingested or absorbed, or leaks through without being digested properly.

     

    Also the importance of a balanced diet, but that if a child will only eat a restricted diet that isn't balanced that there are strategies to help. Each child being individual, its like peeling the layers of an onion, etc.

    This format usually draws lots of questions.

     

    Good luck, are we looking at this being your new career? :lol:

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