Article: Take bites that are small enough to fit neatly onto your fork or spoon so you can chew it properly and won’t swallow oversized pieces of food. Use your knife to cut larger pieces of food into bite-sized portions so you can chew it more easily. Taking smaller bites allows you to really enjoy and savor each bite and will prevent you from overeating. Don’t drink any liquids 20 minutes before or after you eat your meal so your stomach can properly digest your food. Try drinking a glass of water or a beverage about an hour before your meal so you don’t get thirsty when you’re eating.  Drinking while you eat will dilute the acid in your stomach and flush the food through before it’s had a chance to be properly digested, which can cause gas, bloating, and intestinal discomfort. You won’t absorb all of your food’s nutrients if it’s flushed through your digestive system by liquids that you consume while you eat. Keeping your mouth closed while you chew is not only good manners, it keeps extra air from mixing with your food when you swallow, which aids in digestion and prevents intestinal discomfort and gas. Take a bite of food and keep your lips sealed together as you chew it and avoid talking with your mouth full. Taking your time as you chew your food will also help reduce the amount of air that you swallow. Sit down to enjoy your meal and to make it easier for you to focus on properly chewing your food. Avoid watching television, playing on your smartphone, or driving while you eat or you may not notice that you haven’t fully chewed your food before you swallow it. Eating on the go can also cause you to eat faster, which means you’re more likely to not chew your food properly and overeat. After you take a bite of food, place your fork and knife or your spoon on the table so you can focus on properly chewing your food and you aren’t tempted to take another bite too quickly. When you’re finished chewing and you swallow your food, pick up your utensil and take another bite before setting it down again. Setting your fork or spoon down after each bite is an easy way to force yourself to slow down while you eat.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Cut larger foods into smaller pieces. Avoid drinking water or other beverages while you’re eating. Chew with your mouth closed to reduce the air you swallow. Remove outside distractions so you can focus on your meal. Place your utensils down on the table after each bite.

Problem: Article: out of vegetables, coffee grounds, and other food waste. Collecting food waste from your kitchen is the easiest way to enrich your soil with lots of nitrogen. It will take several months for your compost to “ripen” enough for use. Start the composting process in early summer so it will be ready by the following spring planting season.  Some other ingredients to use include tea bags, old condiments, rotting bread, corn cobs, leftover nut shells, fruit rinds, and much more. In the case of shells (from shellfish, nuts, or eggs) and fruit pits, it’s best to smash them up with a hammer or another heavy tool before putting them in compost.  Avoid adding bones, cheese, meat, oils, or animal waste to your compost. The garden waste you create while manicuring your yard can still be put to good use! Before you sprinkle garden waste into your batch of compost, shred it up into small pieces by hand. Mix the garden waste into the rest of the compost to distribute it evenly. Spread the grass clippings across a towel for a few hours to let them dry before dumping them into your compost. Otherwise, the grass may rot in a wet mass and leave behind an unpleasant odor. Alfalfa meal is very strong; it heats up as it decays, and acts quickly. Because of this, you don’t want to add it deep into the soil or it could overload it. Alfalfa meal will provide the soil with plenty of nitrogen, as well as potassium and phosphorus. Legume plants are naturally much higher in nitrogen than other types of garden vegetables. As your legume plants grow, they will contribute extra nitrogen to the soil, making the soil richer and giving your other plants the nutrients they need.
Summary: Create compost Add leftover grass clippings and garden trimmings to your compost. Spread alfalfa meal on top of your soil. Plant legume seeds, like peas, alfalfa, and beans.

If you are interviewing for a specific position, then any behavioral interview questions will probably relate to common challenges that you'll face while working. The questions will prompt you to explain how your personal attitude and skill-set will apply to this new job.  If you are applying for a job that involves customer service, then you will probably be asked questions about past experiences handling customers. How have you dealt with angry customers? How have you gone out of your way to satisfy customers?  If you are applying for a job that will entail working in a team, then some of the interview questions may revolve around your past experience working in teams. How have you taken charge or helped balance a team?  If the potential job involves emergency response or high-pressure situations, then many of the behavioral interview questions will seek to understand how you behave under pressure. Think about times when you have reacted calmly and decisively to a high-pressure situation. Read over lists of the most common interview questions. If you are applying to a big-name company that fields a lot of applicants, then search online for the accounts of others who have interviewed for the same job at the same company. You don't need to rehearse and regurgitate a scripted answer. You only need to be able to reference examples that paint you in a positive light. Before the interview, make a short list of situations and projects from past jobs that might be relevant to this new position.  Try to remember the details. If you cannot clearly explain what you did in a situation, then you should not use that situation as an example. Consider sketching out potential answers beforehand. Again: no need to memorize them! Simply use the writing as a tool for exploring how a given situation relates to the new job.
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One-sentence summary --
Think about the situations that you might encounter in the course of this job. Study common behavioral interview questions. Prepare, but don't over-prepare.