Q: Clothes lying around on the floor, bed, and hanging over chairs can make even a clean room look dirty. Collect clothes from around the room and sort them into a dirty and a clean pile. Place dirty clothes in the laundry hamper. Fold and put away clean clothes. When you're busy with work, school, and other things, it can be easy to let garbage pile up in your room. Go around the room with a garbage bag and pick up wrappers, food, old papers, and any other trash you find around the room. When you’ve collected all the garbage, empty your bedroom garbage bin into the bag and take the bag down to wait for collection day. Keeping plates, cups, and old food in your room can attract bugs, cause spills, and make your room messy. Collect anything that belongs in the kitchen and take it downstairs to the sink or dishwasher. Items to watch for include: Strip the comforter, sheets, and pillow cases from your bed. Throw all washable linens into the hamper and take the linens to the laundry room for washing. If you can do a load of laundry on your own, wash your linens in the washing machine using your regular cycle. Otherwise, leave the linens for an adult to wash. Grab a fresh set of linens for your bed, or wait until yours are washed and dried. Pull a fitted sheet over the mattress first, followed by the top sheet and any blankets you regularly use. Put the pillow cases back on the pillows next, then place the pillows on the bed. Lastly, pull the blanket, comforter, or duvet up and over the pillows.   Make your bed daily. You don't have to redo the fitted sheet and pillow cases, but you should redo the top sheet and blankets. Change out your bedding every couple of weeks. If it is very hot and you are sweating a lot, you may need to change your bedding more often. Bedroom desks are magnets for messes because that’s probably where you read, do your school work, and spend time on the computer. To tidy up your desk: Your night table is probably a dumping ground for anything you’re doing right before bed, like reading, listening to music, taking off accessories, and other stuff. Clean off your night table and put away anything that doesn’t belong there. To keep your room looking clean and neat, store common bedside items, like tablets and books, inside the drawers of your night table rather than on top of it. Keep the top of the night stand for some simple items, like a lamp or a single picture. Your dresser may also be a dumping ground for books, toys, accessories, jewelry and knick-knacks. Put jewelry back in a case or drawer, return books to the shelf, toss out garbage and junk that’s accumulated, put makeup back in the vanity or makeup case, and put accessories and other objects back where they belong.  Keep your dresser organized. Make sure that your clothes are neatly folded; don't just stuff them into the drawer. Every so often, it would be a good idea to completely clear out your dresser. Separate out the items you no longer use, and put everything else back into the drawers. Closets tend to be where you throw everything that you don’t want to deal with right away, and now it’s time to address all those things. Tidy up your shoes, hang up clothes, throw out junk, and organize the shelves. Use a duster or damp microfiber cloth to dust corners and wall joints, the ceiling fan, light fixtures, shelves, where the wall and ceiling meet, and all the furniture in your room. As you dust, pick up objects that are obstructing your work, such as a lamp on the dresser, and dust underneath them. Use a vacuum to suck up dirt and dust from a carpeted floor, or use a broom or vacuum to clean up a tiled or wood floor. Use special attachments on the vacuum to clean the corners where the floor and wall meet, the baseboards, and other cracks and crevices. Don’t forget to move furniture so that you can clean under and behind the bed, dresser, and desk. Spray the mirror with window cleaner, or with a solution of one part vinegar and three parts water. Use a clean microfiber cloth to wipe the mirror dry. Repeat with all the interior windows in the room and any dusty or dirty picture frames. Keep your window cleaner handy so that you can clean your mirror as needed or whenever it gets dirty. This is especially useful if you have nosy pets or kids.
A: Pick up clothes from the floor and bed. Collect and take out garbage. Clear away plates and utensils. Wash your linens. Make the bed with fresh linens. Clean up your desk. Organize your night table. Organize your dresser. Organize your closet. Dust everything. Vacuum the floor. Clean the windows and mirrors.

Q: This should bring down the swelling, as it slows down blood flow to the area. Either apply ice directly to the pimple or cover it in a thin layer of gauze or towel. Some makeup experts claim that eye drops, at least the ones that reduce redness in the eyes, can be helpful in reducing redness and signs of irritation in acne. Drop a few eye-drops onto a cotton swab and apply as necessary onto the pimple(s). Because cold also helps reduce inflammation in acne, place the Q-Tip soaked in eye-drops into the freezer for an hour before applying. The cold Q-Tip will soothe as it reduces inflammation. Antihistamines suppress the swelling effect in the skin tissue of people. Most of these remedies can be ingested in pill form, but some can be consumed as tea or used as a topical agent. These should offer a reduction in redness. Natural herbal antihistamines include:  Stinging nettle. This may sound weird, because touching nettles in the wild can produce a rash not unlike small pimples. Some doctors, however, recommend taking a freeze-dried preparation of stinging nettle, which is known for its ability to reduce the amount of histamine the body produces.  Coltsfoot may be effective as a natural antihistamine. Europeans have a long history of using the plant to cure skin conditions. The leaves can either be ground up into a paste or coltsfoot extract can be ingested in pill form. Basil may also work as a natural antihistamine. Heat a couple sprigs of basil leaves up under some steam and apply gently to the hives. Basil may help reassure the body that the foreign agent causing the hives is not something it should be fighting.
A:
Put ice on the affected area. Use eye-drops on the affected area. Try some natural antihistamines.