Q: Hot showers can dry out your skin and strip it of its natural oils. Taking warm showers will help you keep your back moisturized. Hold the loofah in your left hand and reach over your right shoulder to scrub the upper right section of your back. Then, put the loofah in your right hand and reach over your left shoulder to get the other side of your upper back. If you're having trouble reaching your upper back, get a loofah on a stick so it's easier. Hold the loofah in your right hand and reach behind yourself to scrub the lower right side of your back. Switch hands and scrub the lower left side of your back with the loofah. Try a loofah on a stick if you can't reach your lower back. Make sure you rinse off all the body wash on your back so it doesn't dry out your skin. Dry off with a towel first. Then, rub body lotion into your upper and lower back. Moisturizing your back right after you take a shower will prevent your skin from getting dry and flakey.
A: Take warm showers instead of hot showers. Put body wash on a loofah and scrub your upper back with it. Scrub your lower back with the loofah. Rinse your back off. Moisturize your back when you get out of the shower.

Q: You may want to check the packaging or your recipe, if you are using one, for temperature recommendations first. Either of these may instruct you to use a different temperature, which affects how quickly your sausage and any other ingredients cook.  The temperature settings and cooking time can also change depending on your oven. Oven cooking is a simple way to warm large, uncut sausages indoors.
A: Preheat the oven to 375 °F (191 °C).

Q: You can use a blank sheet of regular paper or a patterned piece of paper. But make sure it measures 11 inches on one side. Use the long end of the piece of paper and fold a half inch wide strip. Rip or cut the strip.  If you are doing traditional origami, you will fold and rip the paper. You want the strip to be a half inch wide and 11 inches long. To do this, bend one end of the strip, close to the top so the strip looks like a ribbon, with two ends and a loop. The short end should be over the long end. Don’t scrunch the paper as you pull the knot tight. Keep the paper smooth. You should now have a pentagon shape, with one short end sticking out and one long end sticking out. Valley fold means fold the paper towards you. Tuck the short end into the pentagon so it does not show anymore.  You should be able to do this without scissors, but if you left your short end a bit too long, snip it shorter with scissors. Start over with a new strip of paper if you have to snip off more than a ½ inch on the short side. Valley fold the long end along the edge of the pentagon. It should fall across the front of the pentagon. Valley fold the long end along the pentagon again. Use the edge of the pentagon to line up the fold. The pentagon should get fatter and fatter as you flip and fold. Tuck this short end into the pentagon, just like you did with the first short end. You should now have a perfect little paper pentagon. Hold it lightly with your fingers along two of the edges. Push four of the edges with the tip of your thumbnail. The star should begin to inflate.  Rotate the star and push on the remaining side to completely inflate the star. Enjoy your mini origami star!
A: Take a piece of 8.5 x 11 paper. Cut a half inch wide strip. Make a knot close to the end of the strip. Finish tying the knot by slipping the long end through the loop. Flatten the edges of the knot. Valley fold the short end. Flip over the strip. Flip over the strip again. Continue flipping and folding the long end. Stop folding once you have an end that is too short to fold. Inflate the star.

Q: For educational videos, sites such as TeacherTube ,SchoolTube ,and safeshare.tv offer alternatives to YouTube. These sites are often unblocked by school networks, as the content is monitored and is all educational.  If your teachers use any alternative services, use those to reduce the risk of being caught on web monitoring services. Use one with an SSL certificate. To tell if a website has an SSL certificate, its URL should say https rather than http, or there is a green padlock icon next to the URL. This allows encryption to prevent being caught if the internet you are using is monitored. Look for the video hosted on a site other than YouTube. There's a chance that this site will not be blocked by the network. Be careful when visiting unknown sites, as some contain viruses and other malware.
A:
Find an alternate portal. Search for your video using a search engine.