Shop at a beauty supply store for your highlighter kit; some kits come with a cap with holes, hook, and brush, which are nice if you have shorter hair and would like evenly spread highlights. If you only want a few highlights in very specific places, you won’t need a kit with a cap. Regular highlighting or bleach kits will work fine. For medium to longer hair, choose a kit that comes with the bleach you need and a brush or other applicator that allows you to place your highlights exactly where you want them.  If you choose a kit that doesn’t contain an applicator or brush, or are using separate bleach powder and developer, just buy a dye brush at the same beauty supply store where you bought your kit. When buying your bleach powder and developer separately, make sure that you choose either a 10 or 20 volume developer, which are safest for use at home. For small, subtly blended highlights that don’t look extremely obvious, ask an employee to help you find a spool brush, the kind typically used for applying mascara or eyebrow gel. If you want your highlights to look natural, choose a blonde highlighting kit that will give you highlights a few shades lighter than your natural color. Auburn highlights are also a great choice, especially if you have dark brown or black hair. For more dramatically colored highlights like pink, purple, or any other color, you’ll need to get your highlights pretty light with bleach before applying the color. There are kits made specifically for those colors, or you can buy a light blonde highlight kit and then the colored dye separately. Using bleach and dye on clean hair can damage it, so the natural oils your scalp provide protection for the hair shaft. Your hair should also be dry when you begin highlighting it. You should avoid highlighting hair that has been chemically relaxed or permed. If your hair has been chemically treated in the past with dyes, you may want to consult a professional before doing your own highlights. Get out your supplies such as your cap and hook, foil, brush, bleach, and developer at your bathroom sink. Put away items nearby that might get damaged by the bleach. Put on an old T-shirt and have old towels handy to protect yourself from the bleach.  It's a good idea to purchase a hairdresser's cape to protect your skin and clothes from the bleach. You can find one at your local beauty supply store or online. If you’re highlighting long hair, you’ll also need strips of aluminum foil to separate your highlighted strands from the rest of your hair. If your kit calls for you to mix bleach powder and developer together, mix it together according to the instructions while wearing rubber or latex gloves. Try not to get any of the mixtures onto your skin. If you do get highlighting solution onto your skin, wipe it off immediately with a damp cloth. Choose a small strand of hair underneath your top layer of hair that will not be easily seen. Clip the rest of your hair away from the strand and brush bleach onto the strand, then rinse it off after 20 minutes. If your hair starts to break or become damaged, rinse the bleach off right away and do not apply this highlighting solution to any other parts of your hair.
++++++++++
One-sentence summary -- Choose a highlighter kit with a cap if you have short hair. Buy a highlighting or bleach kit and applicator brush if you have longer hair. Select a highlighting kit that will complement your hair color. Don’t wash your hair 2-3 days before highlighting it. Set up your highlighting station. Mix your powder and developer. Do a strand test.

Article: Epilepsy is a neurological disease that causes seizures. It mainly works on the nervous system. It more often begins in childhood, though it can come on in adulthood. Sometimes, it appears to be genetic, while other times, it is brought on by head trauma. In epilepsy, the brain's neurons don't send out proper signals. With epileptic seizures, the brain's neurons misfire. Neurons work through electrical signals. Because these signals aren't traveling in their normal patterns, it causes electrical chaos in the brain, which leads to seizures. Seizures are one symptom, but other behaviors can be symptoms. For instance, epilepsy can cause you to behave oddly. It can give you unprovoked emotions or cause you to feel strange things throughout your body. Just because you have seizures doesn't mean you have epilepsy. Non-epileptic seizures are not caused by electrical misfires in the brain, but they do look the same on the outside. These seizures are sometimes caused by stress. Provoked seizures can be caused by abusing substances like alcohol or drugs, but they can also be brought on by other body problems, such as low blood sugar, excessive trauma, or a very high fever. Seizures can range from generalized or grand mal seizures to partial or focal seizures and absence or petite mal seizures.  Generalized or grand mal seizures can cause your whole body to go stiff. The stiffness will often release into repeated movements. You may make strange noises or even stop breathing for a period of time. Sometimes, you may go to the bathroom while having a seizure. When coming out of a seizure, you may find yourself very confused and stay confused for part of a day. This type of seizure affects the whole brain.  Partial or focal seizures only affect a part of the body, as they only affect a part of the brain. However, they can also lead to confusion, though not always. They can cause similar repeated movements, but it will only be in one or two parts of the body. They can also cause strange feelings, such as suddenly feeling full.  Absence or petite small seizures are much smaller events. They generally lead to a person staring off into space or excessively blinking. Four main categories of epilepsy exist, idiopathic generalized epilepsy, idiopathic partial epilepsy, symptomatic generalized epilepsy, and symptomatic partial epilepsy.  Idiopathic generalized epilepsy is often genetic and usually the symptoms begin in childhood or young adulthood. This type of epilepsy often isn't paired with a brain abnormality, but it can cause a variety of seizures.  Idiopathic partial epilepsy can also be genetic, and it begins even earlier than idiopathic generalized epilepsy. This type of epilepsy is not as severe as other types, only causing minor seizures during sleep, and kids usually outgrow it.  Symptomatic generalized epilepsy is paired with trauma in the brain, usually caused at birth. In fact, "symptomatic" means that the epilepsy has a known cause; sometimes types of epilepsy in this category are called "cryptogenic" instead, meaning the epilepsy likely has a specific cause but the doctor hasn't figured out what yet. It often accompanies other neurological problems, such as cerebral palsy, and it can lead to a variety of seizure types.  Symptomatic partial epilepsy is the most common type to begin in adulthood, though it can also come on earlier. This type is also caused by some kind of trauma to the brain, leading to abnormalities, such as infections, strokes, or tumors. This type can be treated through brain surgery, which removes the part of the brain causing the problem.  The main named types of epilepsy fall into one of these categories. For instance, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome falls under symptomatic generalized epilepsy.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Know what epilepsy is. Know what happens. Look for the symptoms. Know the signs of a seizure. Understand the categories of epilepsy.