This content recounts three unsettling encounters in the remote Blue Lakes area of the Sierra Nevada, where individuals experienced strange phenomena suggesting a presence in the wild that was not entirely natural.
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Hey guys, Chris here. This afternoon and
this evening, we are in the Sierra
Nevada and an area called the Blue
Lakes. I have three stories that took
place right here in this area and they
all involve people just going for a
walk, going for a hike or camping and
something in the wild does not want them
Okay, so I found a really nice spot
along this beautiful stream. I saw some
trout in here a little bit earlier in
this little pool. Pretty cool. Goodized
trout. So, I'm going to have to come
back with a fly rod. And also for the
third story, we're going to go up in
this plateau to the Lost Lakes. And
that's where this family was camping.
And that's where something happened to
them late at night. We're gonna go right
to the exact location or at least try to
find it.
Also, for our beer, we have moose drool,
which I put in this lovely little stream
here. Got it nice and chilled. And that
is a 5%
ABV on that. It's one pint. And that is
from the Big Sky Brewing Company of Montana.
Montana.
And that is out of Missoula, Montana. I
used to live up in Bosezeman, Montana.
And that's a big beer. I bought just one
of these. It's been saving me on buying
the six-pack and then drinking five
beers and saving one for the video. So,
I just buy one big one. Sometimes you
got to buy the one big one. And uh
also if you know anything about Montana,
it's uh Charlie Russell Country and
that's one of his little symbols is a
buffalo skull. He is the famous western
artist from the 1800s,
1880s, 90s, and early part of the
century there. And uh this is a a brown
ale, so it's going to be very dark. And
uh let's take a look at that. Whoa.
Wow. That is very mocha like. It's
actually pretty good. Not real bitter at
all. Not a bitter finish. Uh kind of
hoppy and really got a nice flavor. I
like that.
Yeah. 3.2. Two fluid ounces. One pint.
Yeah, it's really uh really pretty good.
I like that. Moose drool. I've had this
before, but I've never had the the big
brown ale like that in the big can. So, cheers.
So, I am in Alpine County and this is
the least populated county in all of
California. There's two people per
square mile
and the county seat is called Markleyville.
Markleyville.
Very small town. And they have the
Elorado National Forest, 768,000
acres of wildland that I'm in right now.
And this is where my story took place.
In 2005, October 16th of that year, John
and Gretchen, a married couple, mid30s,
came to this location just upstream from
where I'm at is the upper blue lake.
They parked in the same parking lot I'm
in. And they got their packs on, got all
their food, gear, got it all together,
and they went up this trail that's this way.
way.
to Granite Lake, two miles up the trail
and they're working their way up. It
took them a little bit longer than they
thought. It was some steep in some
sections and they passed this small pond
on the right and then work their way up
to Granite Lake. Beautiful lake. Kind of
a granite bowl around the uh the end of
it. Fish in there. And they took a break
there. had a nice time working their way
back down through this very thick forest.
forest.
They stopped again at this small pond,
sitting on a log, taking a break, having
some snacks, and John pulled out his
daypack, pulled off his daypack, and
pulled out his topo map. and he's
checking it out, looking at the whole
area, and he saw this evergreen lake,
which is south of here,
and he told Gretchen, "Hey, I'd really
like to go check this lake out. It
shouldn't take me too long. You're going
to Would you be okay staying here for
maybe 20 minutes?" She said, "Sure,
that's fine. Just don't be too long."
Uh, and she had some snacks she was
going to eat, and she was going to just
sit and take a break and read her book.
got his pack on and he worked his way
through this pretty thick forest. It's
very thick out here and he had a hard
time following these contours cuz it was
kind of steep and it kept kind of
pushing him down. And I looked at the
map and to get to this lake, it's called
Evergreen Lake and it's on a shelf that's
that's
above this kind of a couple of domes and
John was following the contours of these
domes and he needed to kind of pop
between them and come down to this flat
area and this is where this evergreen
lake is and then that just drops off
really steep. So, it's like a shelf up
here. And he couldn't find this lake.
So, he decided, I better turn around.
Gretchen's waiting for me. And this
forest is very thick and dark. It's a
little spooky. And he was comfortable
being off trail, but he was starting to
feel just a little spooked being off
trail. And then Grretchen being back 20
minutes or so in the wilderness.
He's going through the forest. There's a
lot of pine needle duff on the ground,
ground,
but there's areas that there's this
granite and then there's this kind of a
fine dirt and dust and then back into
some pine needles. And it had snowed the
day before.
This is midocctober and there was a
couple inches of snow and then it mostly
melted off but the ground was pretty
damp, pretty soft. And he came to this
section. And it was kind of an he called
it a natural pathway
going through the forest is what he
said. And he had been going through this
area. It was so thick and he was going
over logs and around trees and just
fighting to get through the forest. And
he thought this would be a great way to
get through the forest and make better
time. So he took a different route back.
and he knew if he just headed north, he
would hit the trail and then he could
find Gretchen.
Came to this stretch,
it's pretty flat
and there was no pine needles and he saw
footprints in the dirt. Two sets of footprints.
footprints.
The first set of footprints were about
11 in long, very humanlike,
but not human. You could see five toes
and this definite arch.
And he said they were about three and
three/4ers wide at the toe and the ball
of the foot that area. And then it
tapered down smaller, but they were
about 11 in long.
Clearly seeing these tracks going
through the forest, this natural
passageway. And then there was another
set of tracks at different locations on
these tracks. They were in superimposed
over the top of each other. And it
looked like the bigger tracks that he
found were following the smaller tracks.
And the bigger tracks were about 15 in long,
long,
6 in wide,
and the stride was about four plus feet
long. really wide. It did not have a
more of a definite arch. It was flatter.
And he said because of the softer soil,
they sunk in good 3/4 in or more. The
big tracks.
He took his 9 and 1/2 in size 9 and 1/2
shoe, put it next to it, and you could
see the difference. And he also pressed
down and he could barely make a dent in
the soft soil.
So he knew whatever this was was very
large with the big feet, literally big
feet. And right at that moment, he had
this not a aha moment, more of a uhoh
moment. Uhoh,
And he knew this area, especially that
time of year and especially how thick
this forest was, nobody's going to be
walking around in their bare feet with
all the debris, the pine cones, the
sticks, rocks. And then he thought about
Grretchen being by herself. And then he
had this kind of a panicky feeling come
over him like, I got to get out of here.
He didn't have a camera. And so he
thought, "Maybe,
maybe I'll come back and get some pictures,
pictures,
but right now I got to get out of here."
So he worked his way through the forest.
He didn't hear anything, but he was on
red alert, and he had this feeling of
possibly being watched. He just had this
kind of a chilling feeling.
finally gets to the trail, breaks through,
through,
and he didn't know which way Gretchen
was because it all looked the same. He's
thinking, "If I go left,
she's not that way, then I have to go
all the way back right." So, he thought
about it, and he just waited and
listened and he didn't hear anything.
And then he then he thought, I I got to
go to the right. I think it's to the right.
right.
He just found the trail. He just didn't
know which way to go to find his wife.
He goes down the trail. Sure enough, he
looks up ahead. He can see the pond off
to the left and he's like, "Okay." He's
kind of relieved. He keeps going past
the pond. He doesn't see Grretchen. He's
a little panicked. And then he looks off
to the right. And she's standing there
and she's looking off in the forest. And
then she turns around kind of startled
and she goes, "Honey, what are you doing?
doing?
And he said, "I don't know. I'm coming
back. I I just I couldn't find the lake.
Couldn't find this evergreen lake." And
um anyways, I'm glad I found you. And
she said, "No, honey. I I called you. I
was calling you."
She was yelling out his name. He said,
"I didn't hear you. I was just got off
back onto the trail just a minute ago. I
was hiking back from this." She goes,
"Well, I don't know what's going on cuz
I thought I heard you just in the forest
right over here." And I, she said, "I
was sitting on this log reading my book
and I heard
you, or at least what I thought was you
coming through the forest right towards me."
me."
And she said, "You were making a lot of
noise." And I thought, "Okay, well, he's
just working. He's coming through the
forest. She's going to be here any
second now.
And I said, "Hey, honey." And
And
what I thought was you suddenly stopped.
He goes, "That wasn't me. If you would
have yelled my name or said, "Honey,
I would have said, "Yeah, yeah, it's me.
I'm coming." And I was up that way. I I
came in from a different angle and I had
to walk down the trail to get you get to
you. She goes, "Well, I called called
out to you three times. I said, "Hey,
honey." And then I said, "John, John,
what are you doing? Get over here." And
then she said she heard whatever this
was. She could hear it kind of moving
around and then it quickly went the
opposite direction in the forest really
fast and it made a lot of noise and then
it was quiet again. And she said it
startled her cuz she thought, "Oh, maybe
that's a bear. I don't know." And so she
said, "The obviously wasn't you." And he
goes, "Honey, I am so sorry. I that was
not me. And I have something I need to
tell you that I found out there in the
forest, but I think it's best we just
get out of here now.
And she said, "I agree. Okay, let's just
get out of here. I don't know what's
going on. I thought it was you. Maybe
it's a bear. I don't know." Oh, and then
they took off, went down the trail back
across this dam to get to the parking
lot, got in the car. It was sun was
going down. It's fall. It's October. The
sun goes down way quick. Once it gets
behind the mountains, it's just it's
kind of like getting dark, getting dark,
and it's like somebody turns turns a
switch and it's black. and they're
heading down the road that I came up and
going to the past the lower blue lake
and then the road that works around
towards 88 which is the Carson Pass
road. And as he got out of the area, he
started to tell her what he saw
along his
backcount hike off trail. And he told
her about the footprints and how it was
a bigger one, smaller one. And it looked
like this smaller one was in front and
and very large prints. And she was like,
"Oh my god." I I don't know what I
heard, but whatever it was, it was very
large when it ran away and it sounded
And that is our story from Gretchen and
John in 2005
2005
right here. and uh on this trail. Pretty wild.
In July 1983
1983
that summer,
just downstream from here between
Lower Blue Lake and Twin Lake, which
we're going to go to later and have some
dinner if we have some time.
Daniel was walking between the two lakes
looking for these old home sites. Now,
in the Northern California here in the Sierras,
Sierras,
you can occasionally find an old cabin
or own homesteads and sometimes even
entire towns from the gold mining days
or the homesteading era. and he was
looking for
He was between Twin Lake and Lower Blue
Lake. There was a ridge down there and
then the stream and then there's this
really thick brush. And he was walking
along there
and he heard this really loud whistle
He said it was ground level
behind him and to the left in the thick brush.
brush.
Startled him. He said it was really
loud. And he said it sounded like it was
from a mammal. He said it did not sound
like it was from a bird. It sound like
almost like something was trying to
mimic a bird.
caught his attention and at first he's
thinking, "Okay, maybe it's a hunter.
He's trying to warn me."
Uh, but then he thought it's July and
this is not hunting season and this is
doesn't seem right. But he decided to
call out and say, "Yeah, is everything
okay? Just hiking through." Expecting if
it was a hunter sitting there, they
would say something. It was dead quiet.
He said this sound, this loud sound,
this whistle was about just 10 feet into
the brush.
And he decided to investigate. He was
young 20s, 1983. He said he'd been
working out, running, and even boxing.
And he was in really good shape, and he
didn't fear much. And so he kind of went
in the brush looking around. He couldn't
get very deep into it. But whatever this
was was just
8 10 feet into the brush. And he said he
didn't hear any animals. He didn't hear
any birds in the trees. It was dead
quiet except for that whistle.
And he's moving through this thick brush
and it kind of closed up behind him
because he went in a ways
and he just suddenly had this panicky
feeling like
there's could be something really dangerous
dangerous
just a few feet in front of me. Maybe a
bear, maybe a mountain line. He didn't
know, but there was this feeling of
danger came over him. He immediately got
out of there, followed the stream back to
to
the lower blue lake, and he asked his
dad about the sound that he heard this whistle.
whistle.
Now, his dad had spent several summers
as a campground host at these
campgrounds for the PG&E. This area is
run by the PG&E. It's within the Elorado
National Forest, Pacific Electric and
Pacific Gas and Electric. And they
operate this for recreational purposes.
And then they got the dam there for
hydro and electricity and power. And
they have these campgrounds and day use
areas and picnic areas. He was a host
there. And he he told Daniel, he said,
"I'm really not sure what that was. That
does not sound like any bird or animal
that I know of.
But I remember about four years ago,
late August, this storm came in when I was
was
being a campground host. He was by
himself and this storm, the wind was
picking up
and it was night and he went outside to
secure the campsite.
Take the folding chairs, put them down,
put them under the picnic table, bring
the lantern in, get the cooler off the
picnic table, secure that, bearproof it
in the bear box.
And he said he heard some movement or
some noise in the forest, but because of
the wind, he didn't really pay attention
to it.
He's moving around. The storm's coming
in. He's always going to get wet at any
moment. And then he hears this sound in
the forest again. So he reaches inside
the camper, pulls out this flashlight.
It was a mag light, really long mag light,
light,
and he shines it into the forest. And he
can see these yellow whitish glowing
eyes looking right at him about 30 feet
back into the forest.
And he said it really spooked him,
startled him
because he knew the forest around this
campsite. He'd spent the whole summer
there and spent several summers working
in this area as a campground house. And
he knew there was no trees there and
these eyes were 7 8 ft high and it was
not an animal sitting up in a tree.
Startled him. And he never told anybody
about this. He didn't know what to say.
He didn't know what they would think and
what they would say. And so he just kept
it to himself. But he told Daniel,
"I think this may be related to what I
saw." And that's all he said about it.
And then Daniel, thinking that this was
a mountain line or a bear, and he
actually went into this brush trying to
investigate and look for it, had this
chill come over him like, "Oh my gosh,
this this thing is possibly very real."
And also that week while he was here,
he talked to a man from Chico,
California, who had been training as a
runner. And he was running in this area
along the dirt roads that go between
Twin Lake, upper and lower Blue Lake,
and then it works its way up to uh this
Lost Lakes.
He talked to this man and the man just
said, "I had this really strange occurrence
occurrence
one evening. I was running. It wasn't
dark yet, but the sun was going down."
He had a really strange occurrence. He
said he did not want to talk about it.
And then Daniel said the next day he had
left to return again to this area as far
as he knew. and they were going to stay
in contact uh by the phone. This was
back in the 80s, so this just phone
contact. And so that is our story from
Daniel who spent several summers here
with his dad as well. And then his dad
would spend the whole summer here. And
so this is quite an interesting area. We
got the Malamanet Wilderness
Wilderness
uh just right over here and the Lost
Lakes Plateau up here. And to the south
of here is these volcanic peaks I've
been checking out and this uh upper and
lower Sunset Lakes. Really cool country.
So, all right. So, now we're going to
hike back upstream to the upper blue
lake and work our way to the the Lost Lakes.
Okay, so here is upper and lower blue
lakes here and here. And we got to head
up here for the lost lakes. And that is
where our story takes place. And I am
running out of daylight. So see if we
Okay, so this is the first of the two
lost lakes. I found it. I had to come
over this saddle here and I was heading
to this peak off to my left. And this is
where our story takes place at this
second lake. I believe they were camped
in that flat area on the other side. And
so what I'm going to do because we're
running out of daylight and it's going
to be dark soon and I'm going to have to
navigate through the wilderness in the
dark, which is not a great idea if I get
off trail. I got some good lights and
stuff, lanterns, but I'm going to head
back to the saddle and work my way down.
I should get back to the truck before it
gets dark. We're going to go to the
campground, get some dinner going, and
now we'll do the story of the Lost Lakes
there. So, all right, let's get out of
All right, we got a bit of a breeze and
we still got some light left. And I am
going to be doing a campfire. We're
gonna do the last story and then we're
going to be doing dinner over the
campfire and on the tailgate and we're
having that Sasquatch Sasparilla. So,
That is the uh Milwaukee
little mini splitting mall. So that
thing is 26 oz.
Says right there that thing really works well.
Pine needles and pine cones. They work great.
So, August 1st of 2001,
Raymond and Jan got in their Chevy Silverado
Silverado
and made the trip out to the Blue Lakes.
They did this every year. This
particular year, they brought their friends,
friends,
Kelly and Don.
They went to the Blue Lakes
and they got to the end of the upper
Blue Lake and they took the road, the
four-wheel drive high clearance road up
to the Lost Lakes.
Very rugged. And this is where I had just
just
hiked up this road. I'm not taking my
Ford Maverick up this road. And uh it
was a good move. I worked my worked
myself pretty hard getting up this this
road and then I busted off the road and
I went up the ridge and worked around
and I got that view looking down at
these two lakes, the lost lakes. And I
assumed getting to the top of this
plateau I would see them like straight
out like they were just going to be
right there. And they weren't. It was
like up and over and then there was a
ridge and they were behind and down. It
was the mountains are way more rugged
than you think when you're looking at a
map. And so this is where
Raymond and Jan were going to spend the
week. And they did this every year. So
they spent the week late summer
and they came up this road
went to the between the two lost lakes
which are the headwaters of the West
Carson River.
Pretty cool. And that on the back side
of where these lakes are, it just drops
off dramatically and then the both the
lakes drain and then they form the
headwaters of the West Carson River.
They had their camp set up between the
two lakes with their friends. They each
had tents. They had a fiveman tent and
they uh uh Jan and Raymond had a fiveman
tent and their friends had a little bit
smaller of a tent, but still tents you
They were there for about 10 days and
they enjoyed being up there. It was just
kind of their place and particularly
late in the summer
where during the week there was no one there.
there.
Raymond went around the backside of the
first lost lake
Was casting some lures out looking for
for some trout.
and he had this feeling something was
off. He kept fishing, moving a little
bit, was on the opposite side of the
lake from where his wife was and where
And he casts another time and then he's
got this feeling of being watched. He's
looking around. He doesn't see anything.
They had seen no other vehicles there. None.
None.
And again, it's a very rugged road
coming up. And there's people down at
the upper Blue Lake and the lower Blue
Lake campground, but they're about
84,000 ft up.
8,400 84,000 8,400 8,400 ft in elevation
He's continues to move around the lake
casting and finding these little rockout
crops and stepping out and casting and
he's still got this feeling that
somebody's kind of keeping an eye on
him. He just he's never had this before.
He never felt this feeling.
And then he's about to cast and he casts
out. He starts reeling and he looks over
to his left. Because he had moved, he
could see a little different angle and
on the same side of the lake, but off
into the trees,
he thought he saw
these shoulders and this head
silhouette in the trees in the darkness
of the trees.
He's looking at it. It didn't move.
And he's thinking, is that like a large
human? What? What is that? And he's
staring right at he sees this silhouette.
silhouette.
And then he's not sure what he's looking
at. He's thinking, maybe
maybe that's just a,
you know, his imagination kind of
piecing together like a tree and a tree
trunk and some different things going on
in the forest. and he looks back towards
his line as he's reeling up. He's ready
to cast again. And before he casts, he
looks back over and now that silhouette
that he saw in the forest
over about 60 yards or so on the east
side of the lake is gone.
He's a little shaken up. He's not sure
what the heck is going on. He's staring.
He's looking. Am I seeing things right?
was not sure what he's really looking
at, but whatever he thought he saw
before was now gone.
He didn't feel very comfortable, so he
reeled up his lure and worked his way
around the opposite side of the lake
from where he saw this thing. Went back
to camp.
And he doesn't say a word about what he
saw because he's really not sure what in
the heck he actually saw.
and he didn't want to startle Jan
and get her kind of nervous about
there's maybe somebody prowling around
the forest and who knows what this
person's up to. But they saw no other
vehicles up there. And people that go up
there to go camping,
they drive up that road and then they
So that night they had their dinner.
They had a campfire.
Everything was quiet. And he thought,
"Okay, well, maybe I just saw something.
Maybe I imagined some shapes in the
forest. I don't know.
I didn't hear anything. I just thought I
saw something and then it was gone. I
don't know."
They have a campfire and then they have
a really nice time with their friends
and it's just the the fourth night of
their week and a half stay. They're
going to be there for 10 days.
and for whatever reason, Jan
Jan
wakes up at 2:35
a.m. Just wakes up kind of stressed, not
sure what's going on.
And she didn't hear anything. She just
woke up,
picks up the flashlight, checks her
watch. This is 2001.
And then she sees the dog, their cocker
spaniel, Sadie, and he's sitting there
with his paws out and he's staring right at
at
Jan. Big eyes, floppy ears, cute little dog.
dog.
And normally every night the dog was
just pretty wore out and he was just
laying there just out just out like a
light. But this particular night he was
just staring at Jan.
And she was like, "Okay." She's looking
It's 2:30 in the morning
and then she hears some movement just to
the south and east of their tent. This
is a fiveman tent, big walled tent. You
can walk in it, stand up in it, and they
could she could hear something
over towards the lake, but it was had to
be 10 12 feet away. Just some something
moving around.
She waited and she listened
and she had the flashlight off at that point
point
and she's looking around. The dog starts
And right then she heard footsteps come
closer to the tent. Something walked
on two feet. The distance from 12 feet
to about three or four feet from the
tent, just a few feet away from where
she was laying on the air mattress.
Dog is still growling.
Got the flashlight off. Her husband,
Raymond, is sound asleep. He's a sound sleeper.
sleeper.
And she's listening very intently,
thinking, "Okay, it's a bear. It's a
mountain line. They're they're a family
of hunters, so they know all the animals
in the forest. They've hunted and
they've done this for years. And she
just does something's not right.
She's just about to turn the light on
and just yell like, "Hey, who's out
there?" Something. Just something. Just
anything to kind of let her presence
known and just kind of make a little stand.
stand.
And she waited and waited and she was
just about to do that. And then she
heard this extremely loud
Really loud and freaky.
Just a few feet away from her wall tent, just
just
outside of the tent. The dog, Sadie,
immediately starts barking and going
berserk, going nuts.
Raymond wakes up and he's disoriented
and he's like, he thought initially that
Jan was screaming because he heard this
scream. He woke up to the scream and it
sound like a woman screaming bloody murder.
murder.
She turned on the light and she says,
"Honey, there's something outside
and she's shining the light." She just
the tent wall like I don't know what
good that's going to do. And he's going,
"What in the hell is going on?" And she
said, "Just listen. Just shut up and
listen." And they're listening. And they
can hear this thing
start running by the tent and running
through the trees. and it was heading up
the road.
Raymond was going, "What is going on
around here?" She goes, "No, there was
an animal or something outside."
Right then, she could hear their friends
unzipped the tent
and then some movement over in their
tent. They were about 20 feet away.
And then about 30 seconds later, he
comes over. He goes, "Are you guys okay?
What's Did you guys hear that? And she
goes, Jan goes, yeah, I heard that. I
heard that. And then Raymond said, yeah,
I heard it as well. And he goes, I'm
smelling something really horrible out
here. Really rotten. There's some
horrible smell. And they could all hear
this thing running up the road that they
had come in on.
And it as it faded out, they could hear
the gravel and the rock as this thing
faded out and was now quiet. The dog is
still barking. He slowly starts settling down.
down.
They got out of their tent and then they
Rayman said,
"I didn't tell you guys this, but I
thought I saw possibly a bear or
something in the forest. I'm not sure
what it was." And then it was gone. I
don't know. I didn't want to alarm
anybody cuz I wasn't really sure what I
actually saw.
They had come up to this area for years
and they had never had anything like
And they all concluded that being that a
family of hunters that this had to be something
something
unusual or in the realm of paranormal or
or a Bigfoot or Sasquatch because it was
not bobcat, mountain lion, a bear, or
anything they could think of.
and they
spent the rest of their trip, nothing
else happened for the additional six
days while they were there. And they
left and they always remembered that one
night. It was August 1st, 2001 in the
lost lakes of the uh Elorado National
Forest, which is I was just up there
just about an hour ago. So,
and the sun is going down. It's pretty
much on the other side of the ridge
here. And so, we are going to get dinner
Cheddar smoked sausage. We're going to
cook that on the hot dog stick over the
fire. And then the rest we're going to
have uh waffle fries
and bushes maple and cured bacon beans.
That's a giant giant can there. Check
that out.
I'm not going to eat all that. And uh
and then we got these artist artisano
sausage rolls that we'll be putting the
sausage on. Smoked cheddar sausage. So,
uh, yeah, that's that's what we're doing
I am good to go with these the waffle
fries. These are great for breakfast, too.
too.
All right, let's get that good old beans.
beans.
A campfire stable.
There we go.
Just got to reheat them. That's the good
news about the beans. Just a little
reheat. Waffle fries.
Little ketchup. the old uh Sasquatch
All right, you guys. Thank you for
watching. That was a lot of fun. I'm
really enjoying uh getting out and doing
some uh late season,
camping, cooking, and and hiking. That
was a great hike up to that Lost Lakes.
Beautiful country up there. If you guys
like what I do, like and subscribe. You
guys know how to do all that stuff. And
I really appreciate you guys. And I
appreciate you watching. And uh we'll
see you in the next one. As always, keep
And always remember, whatever doesn't
kill you will make you stronger.
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