Problem: Article: Don't rest on your laurels - continue to work out every day, even if it's just to maintain the progress you've already made. A strong, healthy body makes every other aspect of life easier. You'll have more energy to work, play, and love like a man.  Enjoy your new strength and athleticism, but don't let it go to your head. Don't boast or show off unless it's in good humor - doing so is a sign of desperation for others' approval, not of confidence. Pay attention to what you put into your body. Count your calories and avoid unhealthy foods. Stubborn close-mindedness often gets mistaken for manliness. In fact, it's far manlier to actively seek out new experiences - you can't strive for personal growth if you never step out of your comfort zone. Always try new things, provided you do so safely. It will broaden your horizons. You'll begin to learn what you like and what you don't like. You'll discover skills you didn't know you had. You'll be more interesting to your friends and sexier to women.   Be open to relationships with new kinds of people. Talk to everyone - you may find that people with different perspectives on life can inform your own opinions. Take on new responsibilities at work and at home. Even if, for instance, you discover that you're not the best at paying your household's bills, you'll learn the process, which is a gift in itself. "Manly" isn't an easy thing to be. It's a quality marked by hard work and struggle. Teddy Roosevelt, one of the manliest men to ever live, had to work hard for years to overcome his poor health and achieve manliness. By overcoming obstacles, you move closer to the manly ideal. Tackle life's difficulties head-on!  Often, the biggest challenges can come with the day-in, day-out grinds of sustaining a career and a home life. In this case, the challenge may be something as simple as going to bed earlier so that you can wake up to take your child to school. Just because these challenges aren't glamorous doesn't mean they're not hard! Seek new challenges out. If your career and home life aren't challenging, make new challenges for yourself! Sign up for a marathon You're not the only manly man in the world - eventually, you'll find yourself in competition with someone who's also confident, strong, and self-assured. Give it all you've got - a genuine competition is a great chance to test the manly skills you've worked hard to develop. Even if you don't win, you'll learn, and you'll be better-prepared to succeed the next time you find yourself locking horns with another alpha male.  If you win, be a gracious winner. Shake his hand, look him in the eye, and never gloat. Reflect on the qualities you possess that led you to victory, as well as the ones that made victory more difficult. If you lose, lose like a man.  Never  give up before the competition is over, even if your odds seem slim. Don't whine or make excuse for yourself. Instead, try to find out why you lost so that you can devote extra practice to these areas, No man is perfect - even the manliest men make mistakes and experience great difficulty. Adversity is no reason to quit. Strive for the confident, strong manly ideal even when it eludes you. Remember, no one is born manly. It's something that must be eked out through hard work, struggle and sacrifice. When in doubt, remember that some of the manliest people ever had their own periods of darkness. Here are just a few examples:  John Wayne, once the epitome of American Masculinity, struggled through three marriages and a cigarette addiction that gave him cancer. Still, he kept his manliness to the end. Long before he was Rocky, Sylvester Stallone was a desperate, struggling young actor. For three weeks, he was homeless, sleeping in the New York Port Authority bus station until he got his first starring role - in a porno. He didn't become well-known until years later. Mr. T. had a very rough life before he found fame. Raised in one of Chicago's roughest housing projects and expelled from college after only one year, he worked as a bouncer and bodyguard for years before landing his first film role.
Summary: Stay at your physical peak. Foster your curiosity. Challenge yourself every day. Enjoy competition. Above all, be the best man you can be in every aspect of your life.

Problem: Article: The receiver should fit into one of your computer's USB ports. You can typically find USB ports, which are thin, rectangular slots, on the sides of laptops and on the front of desktops' CPU boxes. Plugging in the receiver before turning on the mouse will allow your computer to install any drivers or software needed to use the mouse. To do so, you'll typically flip the mouse over and remove a tray on the bottom, though some mice instead have their batteries in a compartment in the back of the mouse.  If you haven't used the mouse in several months, consider replacing the batteries even if they were new when you inserted them. Some mice, such as the Apple Magic Mouse 2, require charging instead of new batteries. This typically involves manipulating a button on the bottom of the mouse, though you may need to look for the On/Off switch on the side of the mouse. If you can't find the On/Off button, consult your mouse's manual. This button's location will vary based on your mouse's developer, but you'll usually be able to find this button either between the two mouse buttons or on the mouse's side. Some mice come listed as "plug and play", meaning that you don't need to manually connect them or download any software. Once you see the cursor begin to move on-screen, your mouse is connected. If your mouse doesn't start moving, try turning it off and then back on. If applicable, you may also want to change the USB port into which the receiver is plugged.
Summary: Plug in your mouse's receiver. Make sure that your mouse has batteries or is charged. Turn on your mouse. Press your mouse's "Connect" button. Move your mouse around to test the connection.

Problem: Article: It’s usually near the bottom-right corner of the screen in the same vicinity as the clock. Look for the blue and white open box icon. If you don’t see the icon, click the upward-pointing arrow to expand additional icons. A menu will appear.  It’s the second icon at the top of the window. This signs you out of Dropbox. A login screen will appear in case you want to sign in to another account. To re-link your Dropbox to Windows, click the icon, then enter your login information to sign in.
Summary:
Click the Dropbox icon in the system tray. Click the gear icon in Dropbox. Click Preferences…. Click Account. Click Unlink This Dropbox….