

ISSUE No. 57 | MAY 2025
WELCOME
If you’re new to CULTIVARE we welcome you! CULTIVARE is a monthly field guide for life and faith, brought to you by TEND. Each month we explore a specific “field” – a topic or theme through which we seek to cultivate contemplation, engagement, and deeper understanding. Our guiding questions are:
What are you cultivating in your life?
What fruit do you want your life to bear?
Each issue of CULTIVARE is structured into three parts:
Cultivate: Examines a specific “Field” or facet of life and offers questions to unearth and challenge our held perspective; along with concise kernels of truth which we call “Seeds.”
Irrigate: Explores the ways we nurture our understanding, which varies from individual to individual. We offer six means of irrigation: Art, Poetry, Profile, Film, Essay, and Books.
Germinate: Encourages practical ways to engage in becoming more fruitful and free in our lives.
Our name, CULTIVARE, in Spanish means “I will cultivate.” We hope each issue of our field guide will encourage you to do just that – cultivate new thoughts, actions, faith, hope, and fruitful living. We invite you to dig in and DIG DEEP!

FIELD
For we are partners working together for God, and you are God's field.
(I Corinthians 3:9)
Our theme this month is GENTLENESS. This is the fourth in our nine-part series on the Fruit of the Spirit found in Galatians 5:22-23: But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control; against such things there is no law (ESV).
What do you think of when you think of gentleness? Do you view gentleness as a strength or a weakness? A virtue or deficiency? Is gentleness something you are drawn to or something that makes you suspect?
In our day and age, gentleness is often discounted or dismissed. The fierce and fortified individualism so often valued by American culture can generate brash and bombastic words and actions – words and actions that can be intimidating and off-putting. In this cultural context, exercising our individual “power” or “strength” can often be viewed as necessitating being bold, boastful, and even berating.
Enter gentleness – the biblical and profoundly divergent view of power and strength reflecting the character and nature of God and (hopefully) his image bearers. The Cambridge Dictionary offers three definitions for Gentleness:
1. The quality of being calm, kind, or soft
2. The quality of not being violent, severe, or strong
3. The quality of not being steep or sudden
Think of those qualities for a moment. Imagine them in your life, in your community, in our world. What comes to mind? What do you imagine? What feelings are generated?
Gentleness is a fruit of the Spirit with deep connections to love, forgiveness, tenderness, and gracefulness. Think of the times you became aware of God pursuing you, gaining your attention, drawing you close. Often those times are marked by the gentle reminders of God’s love, forgiveness, and grace. St. Francis de Sales observed: “It is wonderful how attractive a gentle, pleasant manner is, and how much it wins hearts.”
We hope this issue will win your heart and mind to the power of gentleness. We are privileged to feature another original essay by Andrew DeCort entitled “Gentleness: Pure Power.” We profile two artists, Mary Cassatt and Richard Serra, who worked in two different centuries, and whose unique art illuminates the power and beauty of gentleness. And we spotlight an Academy Award winning film the whole family can enjoy along with a classic in children’s literature.
When we experience God’s presence, we often experience his gentle power. May we reflect that gentle power to others that they may know God’s love, forgiveness, and grace. May we heed the apostle Paul’s encouragement to all believers: “Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near (Philippians 4:5 NIV).” (DG)
***
A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.
(Proverbs 15:1 NIV)
He tends his flock like a shepherd: He gathers the lambs in his arms and carries them
close to his heart; he gently leads those that have young. (Isaiah 40:11 NIV)
Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart,
and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.
(Matthew 11:28-30 NIV)
Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit
should restore that person gently. But watch yourselves, or you also may be tempted.
(Gal 6:1 NIV)
***
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SEEDS
A handful of quotes to contemplate and cultivate into your life
A gentle spirit comes not from trying hard but from resting in the gentleness of Christ.
(Dane Ortlund)
Perhaps no grace is less prayed for, or less cultivated than gentleness. Indeed, it is considered rather as belonging to natural disposition or external manners, than as a Christian virtue; and seldom do we reflect that not to be gentle in sin. (George Bethune)
It’s so easy to laugh, it’s so easy to hate, it takes guts to be gentle and kind.
(Steven Morrissey)
In our rough and rugged individualism, we think of gentleness as weakness, being soft and virtually spineless. Not so! Gentleness includes such enviable qualities as having strength under control, being calm and peaceful when surrounded by a heated atmosphere, emitting a soothing effect on those who may be angry or otherwise beside themselves, and possessing tact and gracious courtesy that causes others to retain their self-esteem and dignity. Instead of losing, the gentle gain. Instead of being ripped off and taken advantage of, they come out ahead! (Charles R. Swindoll)
A strong nation, like a strong person, can afford to be gentle, firm, thoughtful, and restrained. It can afford to extend a helping hand to others. It’s a weak nation, like a weak person, that must behave with bluster and boasting and rashness and other signs of insecurity. (Jimmy Carter)
I think maybe God was trying to tell me that gentleness begins with strength, quietness with security. A great tree is both moved and unmoved, for it changes with the seasons, but its roots keep it anchored in the ground. Mastering a gentle and quiet spirit didn’t mean changing my personality, just regaining control of it, growing strong enough to hold back and secure enough to soften. (Rachel Held Evans)
If you have been brutally broken but still have the courage to be gentle to other living beings, then you’re a badass with the heart of an angel. (Keanu Reeves)
We are like a frightened bird before him, shrinking away lest his demand crush us completely. But when we eventually yield—when he corners us and finally takes us into his hand—we find to our astonishment that he is infinitely gentle and that his only aim is to release us from our prison, to set us free to be the people he made us to be. But when we fly out into the sunshine, how can we not then offer the same gentle gift of freedom, of forgiveness, to those around us? (N.T. Wright, Surprised by Hope)
Apologetics is a helping ministry…Done in an atmosphere of “we,” of mutual inquiry animated by generous love. We must not become overbearing, contemptuous, hostile, or defensive. Our apologetic needs to be characterized by gentleness. Only with gentleness will people be able to see, verify, and be persuaded to respond to what we have to say. (Dallas Willard, The Allure of Gentleness)

ART
Richard Serra
By Karen Kang
American artist Richard Serra (1938 – 2024) was known for grand-scale abstract minimal sculptures that were created for specific sites in various public and private spaces. In viewing the images, one wonders how Richard Serra’s steel sculptures suggest gentleness.
In a series of artworks, Serra shapes large steel panels into undulating ellipses and spirals that sit within established environments, many times in a suffocating manner with a sense of forcefulness and arrogance. An in-your-face kind of arrogance of man-made materials and man-made sculptures. But what lies below the first impression? Below the obvious associations to steel.

Experiencing his artworks in person, there is an intimate beckoning that entices one to follow the walls into, through and around. An external, physical journey that whispers truths of an interior landscape. To explore with a curiosity and greater openness with each step as one becomes shielded from outside judgments or forces. To absorb the complexity of the curves traveling up and down and front to back. To appreciate the stains of rusty orange on surfaces caressed by fingers and rain. The light imprints of oily flesh, air, and single drops that indelibly altered the steel forever. As the steel is forever changed, so is the traveler.
The poignant contrast of the gentle elegance Serra brushes with undeniable solid and cold material disarms and invites. In a similar manner gentleness presented in response to anger or strife disarms and invites reconciliation and love. The negative space between the steel plates undulates with a gentle energy that echoes of inner strength. The space between is where one finds the strength to stay in the vulnerability needed to grow and nurture the fruits of the spirit, the vulnerability inherent with transformation.


POETRY
To Sit Quietly
by Gunilla Norris
Inside me there is a place where I live all alone
and that’s where you renew your springs that never dry up.
To sit quietly and let it be,
to breathe and let the air arrive,
to rest in the moment
and know that it is enough—
This is the gentleness we are called to,
a surrender that holds more power
than any striving could.

PROFILE
Mary Cassatt
By Bonnie Fearer
Gentleness—a quality that connotes kindness, tenderness, softness—is rare to find in a person, and perhaps even more rare to find in their work. We have chosen to profile artist Mary Cassatt for that reason; her work embodies a quality of gentleness that changed the art world, and influences artists to this day.
Born in 1844 in Allegheny, Pennsylvania to two accomplished parents who viewed travel as a crucial element of education, Mary Cassatt was exposed from an early age to art and culture. Although her parents did not support the notion of their daughter becoming a professional artist, Cassatt began studying at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts at age 15. Bored with the limited instruction and frustrated with the male-dominated culture that blockaded her advancement, she longed to study the old masters in Europe. Her parents, likely thinking that this might be a phase that would pass, helped to sponsor her move to Paris in 1866.
In Paris, Cassatt found inspiration, and a mentor—Edgar Degas. Deeply influenced by his work, Cassatt evolved from a regimented studio-style artist to become an Impressionist. At the time, Impressionism was a new movement in art that emphasized light, shadow, and soft “impressionistic” brush strokes. Cassatt threw herself into her painting, refining her unique style as one of Impressionism’s few female artists. Meanwhile, her father, still very much opposed to her pursuits of art as a profession, cut off financial support, likely thinking that she would soon come to her senses. But Cassatt knew this was her path, and now she knew she needed to make a living on her own through her paintings. Yet…Cassatt lived in a man’s world. As such, she found her work praised privately and ignored publicly. Again and again, she applied for gallery shows, only to find that her works were sidelined in favor of male counterparts whose work was often inferior.
Cassatt was forced into straightforward self-promotion, and her dogged determination to be taken seriously as an artist was often interpreted by her male colleagues as too bold, or even brash. Under the circumstances, perhaps “gentleness” was a luxury she couldn’t afford, but her paintings tell a much different story. Ironically, for one who chose against a domestic life in favor of her art, Mary Cassatt was magnetically drawn to the quiet scenes of the daily life of women, most notably those of mothers and their children. The softness of her color palette, and the tenderness of the scenes she depicted are all infused with a sense of gentle trust and security.
For example, in her painting “Emmie and Her Child” (see below), we see a young child sitting on his mother’s knee. The young child is perfectly relaxed as he gazes out at something off-canvas. He rests his right hand on his mother’s chin, almost as an unconscious gesture assuring him of her presence. His left hand is placed on his mother’s hand which encircles his waist. It is a picture of tenderness without sentimentality. The ease and security evoked by this painting is that of a gentleness borne of love and trust.

Cassatt’s work was not limited to mothers and their children, but all her works are imbued with the same quiet, gentle quality. Probably the most recognizable of Cassatt’s paintings is “The Child’s Bath” (see below), in which a mother is washing her child’s feet while the child rests on her lap. Again, the gentleness portrayed here is palpable as both mother and child look down at the basin of water during the simple act of bathing.

Mary Cassatt lived her whole life knowing she wanted to be an artist. She was, however, born into a time that created towering obstacles for women artists. Her ambition fueled her, and her confidence steadied her, but she was not allowed, personally, the gentleness she depicted in so many of her paintings—a quality that has drawn generations to her beautiful work.

FILM
Each month we recommend films focused on our theme
Feature Film
Babe
(1995)
When a new pig named Babe comes to Hoggett farm, he’s quickly met with the harsh realities of farm life: feral dogs who attack sheep, sheepherding dogs who terrorize their charges, a manipulative housecat, and the ever-present danger of being eaten by the farmer and his family. Instead of hardening himself to cope, Babe continues his way of kindness, courtesy, and respect toward others. Instead of dominating the sheep, he talks with them gently. His gentleness draws ridicule from humans as well as his fellow farm animals who view his kindness as naivete. Gentleness is revealed to be the only way for Babe to break through the bitterness, pride, and stubbornness of the sheep. Directed by Chris Noonan. Rated G. Nominated for seven (7) Academy Awards including Best Picture. Available on various streaming services.
Watch the trailer here
Documentary Film
Children Full of Life
(2003)
Children Full of Life follows the life and teaching of Mr. Kanamori, a 4th grade primary school teacher in Kanazawa, Japan. He gives his students lessons on what he considers to be the most important principles in life: to be happy and to care for other people. His lessons include discussion around teamwork, community, the importance of openness, how to cope, and the harm caused by bullying. Children Full of Life was awarded the Global Television Grand Prize at the 25th Anniversary Banff Television Festival, the festival's highest honor and the first time Japan took the top prize.
Watch the entire film here
Short Film
Homeless Pay for Haircuts with Hugs
(3 minutes)
Bushnell Park in Hartford, Connecticut, has all the typical city park sights, all the typical city park sounds. But there's one sight, one sound, one story here that is truly unique. Steve Hartman reports for CBS News.
Sermon
The Power of Gentleness
Tom Holladay
Jesus said, “Blessed are the gentle, for they shall inherit the earth.” According to him, there is power in gentleness! But how do gentleness and strength go together? In this message, Pastor Tom Holladay explains how you can strengthen your relationships by choosing gentleness over control.

ESSAY
Gentleness: Pure Power
By Andrew DeCort
The soul is highest, noblest, and worthiest
when it is lowest, humblest, and gentlest.
(Julian of Norwich)
For just a moment, imagine that you have access to great power. In fact, go all the way and imagine that you enjoy godlike power – the power that created the universe and can outlive death. What might spring out of you and into your relationships and world?
Gentleness is the Apostle Paul’s surprising answer. When the empowering presence of God suffuses our lives, gentleness springs out of us and spreads between us (Galatians 5:23).
This was delightfully divergent theologizing. Gentleness wasn’t valued in the Roman Empire. Paul’s original audience lived in Galatia, an imperial city that worshiped the war god Sabazios. As I mentioned in a previous essay, Sabazios was pictured on horseback trampling his enemies; domination was his proof of power. Even in Paul’s Hebrew scriptures, God’s presence was often imagined as overwhelming and terrifying.
But Paul’s encounter with the executed-yet-alive Jesus profoundly altered his vision of God. He went on to write that gentleness is the fruit of God’s Spirit. It’s a sure sign that God is present and at work in us.
Importantly, Paul isn’t referring to the passivity of a pushover or naive niceness. Gentleness is love’s nonviolent power nurturing compassionate presence within us and between us, even amidst distress. The gentle can respond to trouble with tenderness because they are tethered to love. They resist becoming hardened and harsh; they remain grounded in behaving like we’re actually beloved and worthy of care. Brother Lawrence, a 17th century war survivor and French mystic, said that practitioners of God’s presence become “infinitely far from all harming.”
Gentleness (prautés) appears sixteen times in the New Testament. Strikingly, the word is always used in contexts of stress. It’s paired with volatile emotions like grief, fear, envy, and rage. Gentleness is presented as the Spirit-empowered way of engaging polarized identities, answering insults, facing threats, and suffering injustice (Colossians 3; 1 Peter 3). Paul contrasts the use of weapons and waging war with “the gentleness of Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:3-4). With playful irony, he writes that gentleness is how we “fight the good fight of the faith” in defiance to violent rulers like Pontius Pilate (1 Timothy 6:12). Lest we privatize this God-embodying virtue, Paul addresses politics and urges, “always be gentle toward everyone” (Titus 3:2). This was delightfully divergent theologizing indeed. It still is.
Across the ages, loving parents stand out as exemplars of this nonviolent power that God wants to cultivate in all of us. Mothers possess the particularly fierce strength to carry and nourish another life within their own body for most of a year. They do so amidst exhaustion, nausea, and unrelenting responsibility. Then they deliver this life into the world through excruciating pain. As this grueling miracle unfolds, a healthy baby often cries out with piercing distress and becomes a flailing incarnation of total dependence. No mammal is born with as much vulnerability as we are – powerless to move, feed, clean, or protect ourselves. In the wake of this holy ordeal, many parents understandably experience depression, rage, and other complex emotions. To a newborn baby, a parent’s power is godlike and could be crushing.
And still, loving parents choose to hold their babies close to their bodies. They struggle to soothe and sustain them through waves of distress. They strive to create the safety in which their child’s ever-evolving humanity can unfold with care. Few scenes capture gentleness like a parent transferring their newborn into trusted arms. All throughout a child’s formation, loving tenderness attends to nerve-wracking challenges and sometimes heartbreaking tragedies. In the end, parents’ labor looks to another bittersweet handoff: releasing an independent human into a harsh world who, hopefully, grounds their own fierce power in nonviolent love with and for others.
My 85-year-old friend Tom McDowell recently told me about how he survived the atrocious evils of American racism and learned to practice gentleness even under extreme pressure. As a child in Mississippi, Tom witnessed his grandfather, Rev. Isaac Simmons, get lynched by six white men. They wanted his land and were willing to kill for it. Then Tom saw his father get tied to a tree and beaten bloody. Years later, he himself got jailed with Ralph Abernathy, Dr. King’s mentor. They weren’t attacking or abusing anyone; they were in Washington, D.C. peacefully marching for civil rights. How did Tom survive these brutal injustices and persist in his nonviolent power? Tom told me, “My mother kept us and guarded us and prayed for us. My parents never taught us prejudice and always taught us forgiveness.”
It’s hard to imagine a purer power, this gritty gentleness instilled by loving parents to overcome evil and participate in transforming it for good. Paul alerts us that this is the organic evidence of God’s presence alive in us, not the arrogance and aggression so entrenched in culture. Without gentleness, there is no God.
Perhaps it was Mary’s mothering that inspired Jesus to speak this prophetic wisdom at the beginning of his divergent movement and then to trust it even unto death: “Blessed are the gentle, because they will inherit the earth.”
Gentleness is our divine birthright and everlasting vocation.
***
Andrew DeCort is the author of Blessed Are the Others: Jesus’ Way in a Violent World (BitterSweet Collective, 2024) and Reviving the Golden Rule: How the Ancient Ethic of Neighbor Love Can Heal the World (IVP Academic, forthcoming). He founded the Institute for Faith and Flourishing, co-leads Prophetic: The Public Theology Fellowship, and writes the newsletter Stop & Think.

BOOKS
Each month we recommend a book (or two) focused on our theme
NON-FICTION
Gentle and Lowly:
The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers
By Dane Ortlund
Christians know what Jesus Christ has done—but who is he? What is his deepest heart for his people, weary and faltering on their journey toward heaven? Jesus said he is “gentle and lowly in heart.” This book reflects on these words, opening up a neglected yet central truth about who he is for sinners and sufferers today.
FICTION
The Book of the Dun Cow
By Walter Wangerin
The timeless National Book Award-winning story of the epic struggle between good and evil.
“Far and away the most literate and intelligent story of the year … Mr. Wangerin’s allegorical fantasy about the age-old struggle between good and evil produces a resonance; it is a taut string plucked that reverberates in memory” —New York Times
“Belongs on the shelf with Animal Farm, Watership Down and The Lord of the Rings. It is, like them, an absorbing, fanciful parade of the war between good and evil. A powerful and enjoyable work of the imagination.” —Los Angeles Times
CHILDRENS
The Story of Ferdinand
By Munro Leaf
A true classic with a timeless message, The Story of Ferdinand has enchanted readers since it was first published in 1936. All the other bulls would run and jump and butt their heads together. But Ferdinand would rather sit and smell the flowers. So, what will happen when our pacifist hero is picked for the bullfights in Madrid? This new edition contains the complete original text of the story and the original illustrations by Robert Lawson.

DIG DEEPER
Practical suggestions to help you go deeper into our theme
1. QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION
Devote some time and thought to these reflective questions on our theme:
a. When did you personally experience the power of gentleness in your life?
b. How did that experience affect you?
c. Who in your life best exemplifies the fruit of the spirit of gentleness?
d. Do you view God as a gentle God? Why or why not?
e. How can you actively practice gentleness in your daily interactions?
f. In what areas of your life do you struggle to be gentle?
g. How can you cultivate more gentleness in your thoughts, words, actions?
2. THE DEMISE OF GENTLENESS
Perry Glanzer writes in the Christian Scholar Review: “Gentleness is absent from our societal imagination because we have neglected our identity as image bearers created by God. Rather than acknowledge the reality of the God whose image we bear, we attempt, instead, to cultivate virtues in our own image, placing ourselves as gods.” Read Glanzer’s entire article here:
3. GENTLENESS IS A STRENGTH: GO SOFTLY, SLOWLY, AND SWEETLY
In this article from Psychology Today, author Ryan M. Niemiec offers wonderful examples of gentleness and encourages greater engagement on the topic of gentleness by researchers and practitioners. Read his entire article here: View Now
4. MUSIC VIDEO: WITH GREAT GENTLENESS
Watch and listen to the song “With Great Gentleness,” written and sung by Sandra MacCracken. View Now
5. PRAYER FOR GENTLENESS
Gentle and Lowly Jesus,
While You walked this earth You restrained Your divine power for the benefit of our eternal salvation. I praise You for how compassionate You are, tender with the littlest lambs, full of grace toward all.
Lord, in this world that values power over gentleness, and influence over meekness, I struggle to even want to be gentle. It makes me feel weak. But You, Jesus, were gentle, and You call us to be gentle; so, renew my mind. Help me to think Your thoughts and to reflect Your kind and tender heart toward all.
Lord, I want my gentleness to be known to all, my conversations to be full of grace, and my presence to exude humility and kindness. That sounds so different from who I am today, but I know that if anyone can do it, You can. So, I trust You to continue producing Your fruit in my life as I rest in You. AMEN

ROOTED
But blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord,
whose confidence is in him.
They will be like a tree planted by the water
that sends out its roots by the stream.
It does not fear when heat comes;
its leaves are always green.
It has no worries in a year of drought
and never fails to bear fruit.
(Jeremiah 17:7-8 NIV)
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FIELD NOTES
Images used in order of appearance:
1. FIELD: Helen Frankenthaler, Mountains and Sea, 1952. On extended loan to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. https://www.frankenthalerfoundation.org/artworks/mountains-and-sea/details/all
2. SEEDS: https://www.fosteradopt.org/blog/stories/the-power-of-advocacy-three-stories-of-hope/
3. ART: Image 1: Photo by Paul Morse, Famed American artist Richard Serra pictured with one of his steel sculptures at the Geffen Contemporary, Los Angeles Times, March 27, 2024. https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2024-03-27/richard-serra-sculptures-la-southern-california
Image 2: Richard Serra. MoMA installation, 2007, New York, NY. https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/14/installation_images/2253
Image 3: Richard Serra, Band. 2006. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles. https://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/richard-serra-band
4. POETRY: Amrita Sher-gil, In the Ladies Enclosure. 1938. National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi, India.
5. PROFILE: Image 1: Photo of Mary Cassatt, Alphonse J. Liébert & Co., Paris, Mary Cassatt, c. 1867. Private collection. https://www.clarkart.edu/Microsites/Women-Artists-in-Paris/About-the-Artists/MARY-CASSATT
Image 2: Mary Cassatt, Emmie and Her Child. 1889. Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, KS.
Image 3: Mary Cassatt, The Child’s Bath. 1893. Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
6. FILM: https://www.rotoscopers.com/2020/10/14/opinion-babe-looking-back-25-years-later/
7. ESSAY: Jonathan Bachman (Reuters), Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge, July 9, 2016. Photo taken during a Black Lives Matter protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The image features Ieshia Evans, a nurse and mother from Pennsylvania, standing resolutely in a before a line of police officers in riot gear. Her calm demeanor and peaceful defiance amidst the tension of the protest made the photo an iconic symbol of civil resistance.
8. BOOKS: Ferdinand Hodler, The Good Samaritan. 1875. Kunsthaus, Zürich. https://www.artbible.info/art/large/1098.html
9. DIG DEEPER: Sirgathelioness. https://www.boredpanda.com/animals-lion-hugs-keeper-caregiver-viral-video-sirgathelioness
10. ROOTED: Duane Grobman, Donaldson’s Farm, Kaiwaka, New Zealand, 2023.
TEAM CULTIVARE: Duane Grobman (Editor), Greg Ehlert, Bonnie Fearer, Lisa Hertzog, Karen Kang, Eugene Kim, Greg King, Olivia Mather, Andrew Massey, Rita McIntosh, Jason Pearson (Design: Pearpod.com)
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