Write an article based on this "Choose a topic or message for your infographic. Gather data that supports the topic of your graphic. Make a flow chart of how you would like to visually present your data."
article: Your infographic need to convey information that educates its readers about a topic or persuades readers to agree with a message. For example, perhaps you want to impress upon a high school gym class the benefits of exercising regularly. Using an infographic to show them statistics regarding teenage obesity and weight loss is an effective way to convey the importance of regular exercise.  Infographics can use both graphics and statistics to illustrate the message you'd like to communicate. Infographics can have many uses outside of generating business revenue. Non-profits, universities, and individuals can benefit from infographics, in addition to companies. Without suitable data, your infographic will only show 1 person’s opinion. Fortunately, you can find reliable data from online sources. For example, for an infographic about the benefits of high-school exercise, you could find data about teenage obesity and ways it can be decreased. The following are good places to find statistics:  Use Google’s public data crawler at: https://www.google.com/publicdata/directory. Visit Chartsbin.com. You can access tables and charts filled with statistics from around the world, such as hunger, marriage, crime and disease numbers. Try StatPlanet for more worldwide statistics. Go to government agencies, such as the US Bureau of Labor Statistics or the EPA to get reliable civic statistics. Read trade journals and scientific studies to get other types of study-based data. Because the infographic will be primarily visual, think of a way that you can structure the data so one point leads logically to another. For example, you could open with a statistic about teen sedentary lifestyles. Below that, present 3 or 4 possible solutions (e.g., joining a sports team, cycling, and community fitness programs hiking), with their respective success rates at lowering teen obesity.  You will have a better idea of the template or style that will work best if you sketch out several images, statistics, and headings in on a piece of paper. You can draw a crude sketch at this point, since it doesn't need to be anything fancy. Keep brainstorming new flow charts until you find one that looks effective.

Write an article based on this "Find yourself and define yourself on your terms. Don't be surprised if some of your values seem to conflict. Avoid fixating on the past Never stop looking for your own strengths. Relax"
article: Oscar Wilde once said with his usual wit: Be yourself; everyone else is already taken. As humorous as this might seem, it's a basic summation of the truth. Yet, you can't be yourself if you don't know, understand, and accept yourself first. It should be your primary goal to find this out.  Find the time to learn upon what you value and take time to consider what makes up the essence of who you are.  As part of this, contemplate your life and choices. Try to think about what kinds of things you would or wouldn't like to do, and act accordingly; finding out through trial and error helps more than you might think it does. You can even take personality tests, but be careful to only take what you want from them so that you do not let such tests define you. Instead, ensure that the defining you do is based on your own terms and is something you feel absolutely comfortable with. You may feel self-conscious, but over time if you are around the right type of people for you, they will accept you for who you are. This is a natural result of taking on broad values from a variety of sources, including culture, religion, mentors, inspiring people, educational sources, etc. What does matter is that you continue working through these conflicts to resolve what values feel most true to yourself. Just because your values seem to conflict doesn't mean you necessarily have to abandon them. Consider it all a part of a dynamic you. You cannot be shoved into any box or pegged. You have values for all different aspects of your life, so it's natural they be different. and not letting yourself grow. One of the most unhealthy approaches to being oneself is to make a decision that who you are is defined by a moment or period of time, after which you spend the rest of your life trying to still be that person from the past rather than someone who is still you but grows with the passing of each season and decade. Allow yourself this space to grow, to improve, to become wiser.  Allow yourself to forgive past errors and past behaviors you're not so proud of. Work on accepting mistakes and choices you've made; they're done and in the past. You had your reasons for them and the decision made sense at the time, so instead of harnessing yourself to past mistakes, allow yourself to learn their lessons and continue to grow.  Look for people around you who proudly proclaim they are no different than they were the day they turned 16 or 26 or 36, or whatever. Do these people seem flexible, easygoing, happy people? Often they are not because they are so busy insisting that nothing has changed for them ever, that they're incapable of taking on new ideas, learning from others, or growing. Growth into every new age and stage of our lives is an essential part of being true to ourselves and to being emotionally healthy and whole. Over time, these may change and thus, so may your definition of yourself, but never let up in focusing and refocusing on them. They more than adequately balance out your flaws and are the principal reason for not comparing yourself to others.  Comparison leads to resentment. A person filled with resentment cannot focus on the mantra of "be yourself" because they are too busy hankering after someone else!  Comparison leads also to criticism of others. A life filled with criticizing others stems from low self-esteem and a need to pull others off their perches that you've placed them on. That's both a way to lose friends and respect, and it's also a way of never being yourself because you're envy-struck and spending too much time on admiring others for their characteristics and not on yourself. . Stop worrying about the worst that could happen, especially in social situations. So what if you fall flat on your face? Or get spinach stuck in your teeth? Or accidentally head butt your date when leaning in for a kiss? Learn to laugh at yourself both when it happens and afterward.  Turn it into a funny story that you can share with others. It lets them know that you're not perfect and makes you feel more at ease, too. It's also an attractive quality for someone to be able to laugh at themselves and not take themselves too seriously! If people make mean or insensitive judgments, don't take it personally. That's their loss, not yours.

Write an article based on this "Bring the water to a boil. Stir in the soup base. Allow the broth to cook for 1 minute. Add in the noodles. Cook the noodles for about 2 minutes. Fan the noodles. Add the noodles back to the broth. Serve the ramen."
article:
Pour 2½ cups (590 milliliters) of water into a saucepan. Place the saucepan on the stove and bring the water to a boil over high heat. Tear open the seasoning packet that came with your ramen. Pour the contents into the boiling water and give it a stir. This ensures that the powder dissolves completely and that the water is hot enough for the next step. Gently press down on the noodles with a chopstick or a wooden spoon so that they sink into the water. You may have to hold them down for a little bit. Do not break the noodles in half or stir them. They will separate on their own. You can also cook the noodles separately in a pot of boiling water. Once they start to break apart, pull them out of the broth using a pair of chopsticks or tongs. You can also pour the broth into a serving bowl through a strainer. This will help stop the cooking process and prevent them from turning limp and soggy. You can use a hand-held fan, a little electric fan, or even a stiff piece of paper or a folder. Another alternative would be to rinse the noodles under cold water. At this point, you can add some tasty toppings, such as an egg, meat, or vegetables. Some toppings should be added at the last minute, after you've already poured the ramen into a serving bowl. Pour the ramen into a large, deep bowl. If you added a pouched or fried egg into the pot, consider scooping it out with a soup ladle, then placing it back on top of the ramen, after it's already in the bowl. At this point, you can also add other toppings, such as cooked meat.