One of the symptoms of a full bladder (and bowels) is lower abdominal pressure and tightness, which can feel uncomfortable or ticklish if touched, palpated or probed by a doctor during a medical exam. Having to go to the bathroom urgently can also make you very anxious or nervous, which can heighten ticklishness. Therefore, empty your bladder (and bowels) before heading to your scheduled medical exam.  Avoiding caffeine, a diuretic that triggers frequent urination, for a few hours prior to the exam is also beneficial in this regard. Going to the bathroom prior to a gynecological exam is especially important because the bladder and urethra may be pressed upon directly. Being too cold causes shivering, which is your body's method of warming itself up. However, while you're chilly and shivering, your muscles are either contracting or at least under more tension, which can trigger ticklishness when touched, poked or prodded more easily. Thus, dress appropriately for your medical exam and plan for the office being a little too cool.  If the office is exceptionally cool, ask the doctor or nurse if the temperature can be turned up for your exam. If you have to wear an examination gown or robe, ask the doctor what you can leave on to remain warm — such as your socks, underwear, undershirt, etc. While your doctor is palpating various parts of your body to figure out what's wrong with you, distract your brain a little by rubbing or lightly pinching another part of your body, such as your hand. Distracting your brain by giving it different sensations to process is an effective tool to help reduce pain, sensitivities and even ticklishness.  While your brain is focused on processing the rubbing or pinching sensation that you're creating, it will have trouble registering the doctor's touch (palpation) as ticklish. Even just rubbing your fingers together might be helpful, or scratching the side of your leg. Apply enough pressure to your skin that it's not lightly ticklish, but not too much to cause pain.
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One-sentence summary -- Go to the bathroom before the exam. Keep yourself warm. Rub or pinch your skin while being examined.

Q: Here you discuss your findings, advantages and limitations of your experiment, and suggestions for further research. Here you have to discuss connections between your results and results of supporting studies, the use of specific design, participants, biases, analysis and data collection. Also discuss ethics and suggest improvements in further research. whether the hypothesis was demonstrated as correct or wrong. Then you should do references.
A: The Discussion is a very important part. In the last paragraph make a small conclusion where you should sum up everything you have written and give your final stand on the results:

Article: Have an assistant hold the light fixture up to the ceiling while you connect the wires from the light fixture to those hanging out of the junction box.  Connect wires according to the directions provided with the light. Usually, this means connecting black to black and white to white. Wrap the exposed ends of the wires together.  If there is not enough exposed surface on each wire, you may need to use wire strippers to peel back some of the wire insulation.  Screw on wire nuts/connectors to cover the exposed connections and secure them tightly. These should be provided with the fixture, but if not, can be purchased cheaply at any hardware store. Find the ground wire on the pendant light. Depending on your wiring, you'll either wrap it around a ground screw located in the junction box or attach it to a protruding ground wire.   The ground wire is usually either a green wire or a bare copper wire.  If you have a ground screw, tighten the screw to hold the wire in place. Push or fold the wiring up into the junction box, making sure that all wires remain secured together with the wire nuts. Your new fixture should have come with a bracket and/or mounting screws needed to firmly attach the pendant light to the junction box. This will vary depending on the style of light you are installing. Follow the manufacturers instructions. Attach the canopy of or base of your light to the mounting screws or bracket. This process will also vary depending on the style of pendant light you are installing, so it's a good idea to check your directions before you start.  In some cases, the process is as aligning your mounting screws with some small holes in the fixture, and turning the fixture about a quarter turn. In other cases, you'll have to screw the fixture into a mounting bracket. Screw a light bulb of the correct voltage and size into the pendant light fixture. Your light should now be functional. If your light does not function, turn the power back off and check your wiring. If your fixture has a trim, a cover, or any other remaining parts that still need to be installed, install them now, and make any final adjustments to the light's height.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Attach the power wires. Attach the ground wire. Secure the wires. Install the mounting bracket and/or mounting screws. Hang the light. Install a bulb. Turn the power back on. Complete installation.

Article: A few different bright colors will give you the best results. You can use up to four different colors.  You can select a set of colors to create an ombré effect. If you pick colors that are a similar hue but with different shades, you can fade from one to the other. You can also go from one hue to another that's next to it on the color wheel, for example yellow to orange.  Other types of string, such as yarn, can work for hair wraps. Just make sure whatever material you're working with is colorfast. You don't want the dye to run the next time you shampoo your hair. It should also be fairly thin to keep your hair wrap from being too bulky. Thinner braids work better for hair wraps than thicker ones. Make sure your braid is very tight.  Picking a strand closer to your face will have a bigger impact than one further back. If your hair doesn't hold braids well, you can secure it with a small hair tie at the bottom. If you already have your hair in braids or dreadlocks, you can add a splash of color by selecting one or more strands to wrap individually. You will need four separate strings that are roughly two- to-three times the length of your hair. Remember that it's much better to start with too much thread than too little. You can always trim off the excess at the end, but you can't add length to string that's too short. You can always position the knot lower on the braid if you want your hair wrap to start further down. Overhand knots are the simplest knot you can tie:  Make sure all four strings are parallel and bunched together so they can be treated as a single string. Loop the strings behind the top of the braid. Make sure that your braid is positioned in the center of the strings so that each end is equal. Take the right end and loop it back around the braid to the left. Start by crossing over the front of the braid and pull the end under and through the loop back towards the right. Pull both ends in opposite directions to tighten. Make sure your knot is very tight when making a hair wrap.  Once the knot is complete, each string you started with will be divided in half. Before starting your wrap in earnest, you'll have twice as many strings to work with. For example, if you began with four strings, you should now have eight individual strands hanging from the base of your wrap.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Get some embroidery floss. Pick out a small lock of hair and braid it. Measure out and cut appropriate lengths of thread. Tie the threads around the top of the braid using an overhand knot.