Write an article based on this "Tap on the icon on your home screen to open the game. Organize into teams of two. Choose a deck. Read the deck description and tap Play. Put the back of the phone against your forehead. Tilt the phone down if you guess the word correctly. Tilt the phone up if you can't guess the word. Continue guessing cards until the time runs out."
article: After the app has been downloaded and installed, it should create an icon on your home screen. Tap on the icon to open up the program so that you can start the play the game. If more than two people are playing, have everyone split up into teams of two. One player will guess the word on the screen while their teammate will provide clues to them. The goal is to guess the word that appears on the tablet without looking at it. Each time that a person guesses the word on the screen correctly, they receive a point. Rhyming is not allowed. In Heads Up! there are a variety of subjects that you can choose from. Talk to your friends and determine which subject everyone likes the best. Decks include celebrities, movies, animals, accents, and characters. There are new decks regularly being added to the game, such as the Chinese New Year edition. Once you tap the deck you want to play, you'll be brought to a brief description of what kind of clues will be in the deck. Talk to other people who are playing with you to determine if this is the topic you'd all like to play before starting the game. This description will also give you brief directions on the rules of the game. Decide who wants to go first, then have them put the phone against their forehead, with the face of the phone facing out so that their teammate can see the word. After a countdown, the game will begin. Putting the phone on your forehead will make sure that you can't see the word, but that your teammate can. If you are using a tablet, you can put the tablet in front of you instead of placing it on your forehead. Your teammate will see the word and try to provide clues without saying the word directly. The person giving the clues should signal when you've gotten the word correct. Once you do, tilt the phone down so that the face of the phone points towards the floor. This will record your point. If you're totally stumped and aren't sure what the word is, tilt the phone upwards to skip the card and go on to the next one. This won't count against your score, but you won't get a point for the card. You have 60 seconds to guess all of the cards in the deck for your turn. Try to guess as many words as you can before the time runs out. Once the timer goes down to zero, it will tally up your points. After you have guessed the words in your deck, it's your teammate's turn to guess the word and your turn to hold the phone. Whoever scores the most points at the end of the round wins.  You can play as many rounds as you want. If you are playing with more than 2 people, you can combine the points on each team, and whichever team gets the most, wins.

Write an article based on this "Understand it’s not all about sex. Acknowledge the difference between gay love and pedophilia. Learn about different religious attitudes. Fake it till you make it."
article: You don’t ask your straight friends about their kinks and fetishes, because it’s none of your business and shouldn’t affect the way you think of or treat them. Whether or not you “get” what a person does in the bedroom with other consenting adults shouldn’t influence whether you feel you understand them as a human being. Sex is a very small part of what being LGBT means to most LGBT people, and you shouldn’t fixate on it. It is an all-too-common misconception that gay people are a danger to children. Fortunately, this belief is waning; in 1970, a national poll found that 70% of Americans saw gay people as dangerous to youth, while in 1999 only 19% of heterosexual men and 10% of heterosexual women held such beliefs. Gay and lesbian people are people who are attracted to and/or form sexual and/or romantic relationships with adults of their same gender; many child molesters, on the other hand, are not oriented toward a particular gender so much as a particular age. In a 1978 study of 175 men convicted of child molestation, none of them identified as gay. A similar study in 1992 found that only 2 perpetrators of child sexual abuse out of the 269 surveyed were gay. Many studies along these lines have been conducted, and all have failed to find any correlation between being gay and committing child abuse. Many people who harbor homophobic views do so on religious grounds. There are, however, a number of religions and religious sects that are accepting of LGBT+ people. These include the United Church of Christ, Unitarian Universalists, Quakers, and Reform and Conservative Judaism. For other groups, such as Buddhists, Hindus, Sikhs, Lutherans, Presbyterians, Methodists, and Episcopalians, it is still a matter of debate, with some followers in favor of acceptance, and others against it. Even within faiths such as Catholicism, Islam, and Orthodox Judaism, one can find individual believers who interpret their faith in various ways. Your faith is your business, and you are free to believe what you want. This should not, however, lead you to treat people with disrespect or cruelty. Leave the judging to God. This process does not happen overnight, and even with the best of intentions you may still find yourself uncomfortable with or confused by gay people. This will change with time if you continue to work at it. In the meantime, however, the most important thing is to treat gay and lesbian people with as much respect and dignity as you would do for any other human being. If you do this regularly, you will probably find your understanding of gay and lesbian people evolves naturally and that they are ultimately the same as any ordinary person.

Write an article based on this "Ask your doctor whether a C-section will be risky for your baby. Evaluate the risks for you. Don’t get a C-section for convenience."
article:
Many babies are born without complications during a C-section; however, there are risks that should be considered. These include:  An injury during surgery. This does not happen often, but it is possible that the baby could be injured by the surgical instruments as the doctor cuts through the uterus. Ask your doctor if this is likely to be a significant risk for your baby. Minor cuts occur in about 2% of C-sections. Transient tachypnea. This occurs when the baby’s breathing rate is too fast for the first several days of life. It is more likely after a C-section. If your baby may be having trouble breathing, call emergency responders immediately. Respiratory distress. Babies born by C-section before 39 weeks old are more likely to have lungs that are not yet fully mature. This puts them at a higher risk for breathing problems. Women who undergo a C-section have a longer recovery after birth than women who give birth vaginally. You are also at a higher risk of complications, including:  Excessive bleeding. Women who undergo C-sections often lose more blood than women undergoing vaginal deliveries. An injury during the surgery. Occasionally the bladder or another nearby organ may be nicked when the doctor cuts through the abdominal wall. If this occurs the doctor may need to do additional surgery to repair the injury. If you have had prior C-sections, ask your doctor about these risks. They increase as the number of C-sections you’ve had increase. A bad reaction to the anesthesia. Tell your doctor if you have previously had any problems with anesthesia. In addition, if you experience bad headaches when you sit up or stand after the delivery, tell your doctor. This may be a reaction to the anesthesia. Blood clots. You are at a higher risk for blood clots in your legs or pelvic organs after a C-section than after a vaginal birth. Ask your doctor what they recommend for preventing this. Your doctor may also recommend that you walk as soon as possible after the birth to help prevent clotting. An infection. The most common areas for infections are the incision or in the uterus. Monitor your incision for signs of infection such as swelling, redness, increasing pain, and discharge coming from the wound. Go to the emergency room if you have signs of a uterine infection, such as a fever, pain in your uterus, or a bad smelling discharge coming from your vagina. Some people request a C-section because they want to be able to choose a date that is convenient. This is not recommended, both for your health and for the health of your baby. In addition, if you plan to have more children, you would have a higher risk of complications during future pregnancies. This may include:  Problems with the placenta. Risk of the scar rupturing during a future vaginal birth.