Q: What happens if you break up?  If you have divulged private information to them, particularly that is work related, consider how this might be used against you in the future.  Though your partner may be loving and amazing, know that breakups can bring out the worst in people and could potentially threaten your job. Don’t tell them anything that could damage your career. When you two are together away from work, as much as possible, avoid talk about business.  Work to keep your professional and romantic lives as separate as possible.  This will prevent your life from being solely about work and will help you have a better time with your partner. Since your professional and romantic life is now so heavily intertwined, it will be important to maintain those friendships and hobbies that are completely separate from both.  Keep up with your friends and spend time with them regularly.  Enjoy your own hobbies apart from the relationship. Continue to read, dance, ride horses or do whatever else you enjoy, as well.
A: Consider the worst case scenario. Don’t talk about work on dates. Maintain your own friendships and hobbies.

Article: Depending on its developmental stage, a baby bird may need your help or it may be practicing important life skills and your "help" would actually interfere with this natural process. A nestling is a pink, newborn bird who has not yet grown any flight feathers, while a fledgling is more like a toddler: fledglings have grown some of their adult feathers and are beginning to practice the skills needed for survival as an adult, including foraging for food and flying for short distances.  If you see a nestling on the ground, it has probably fallen or been kicked out of its nest by its parents. You will need to place it back into its nest.  A fledgling, on the other hand, may have flown to the ground and is probably practicing important skills like foraging for insects. You should not attempt an immediate rescue of a fledgling bird, but instead observe it from a distance (inside your house if possible) to see if the parents are nearby. In some cases, the fledgling will practice living on the ground, hopping around for days or even weeks! Keep children and pets away and let it be. When you find a baby bird on the ground, look up in trees or bushes directly around where it was found. It most likely fell or blew out of its nest. If you locate a nest, look inside for other baby birds of the same type to be sure that you've found the right nest.  You may be worried that the mother bird won't care for its baby if it has been handled by humans, but that is actually a myth. Most birds have a poor sense of smell, so they won't pay much attention to your smell.  Put on gloves or use a tea towel or infant blanket to very gently pick up the baby bird. This protects the bird from your germs and also protects you from pecks or scratches as well as mites that live on wild birds. If the nest has fallen out of the tree and is nearby on the ground, you should gather as much of it as you can and place it into a plastic container that is about the same size of the original nest. If there is no nest material or very little, you can add shredded paper towels. You will need to secure this new nest into the tree. Drill a  couple of holes in the bottom of the container for drainage, then nail the plastic container up in the closest tree. Very gently place the nestling inside the new makeshift nest (using gloves or a small blanket or towel to lift the bird). Birds come and go from their nests, and the parents may  have seen you fussing around their baby and might be staying away out of fear you'll return. If you don't see a parent bird immediately that doesn't mean that the parent bird isn't coming back. If no parents have been observed after a day, it may have been abandoned and you will need to get it to the proper authorities to care for it. Nestlings require a very specific diet depending on their species, and most baby birds who die have been taken in by well-meaning people who try to feed them but effectively poison them instead by giving them the wrong diet. It is also illegal in the United States to attempt to raise a wild animal without a license. It's very important to contact someone who is trained to deal with a baby bird. If there is no rehabilitator close by (or if they are closed, for example on the weekend) and the parent birds have absolutely abandoned the baby, that is the only time you should attempt to feed and care for a nestling. Consider this: if you make a wrong guess at the species or dietary requirements of the bird, you may kill it. Only risk feeding it if it is definitely going to die without your intervention. Remember, birds can go 24 hours without eating, so avoid feeding it unless absolutely necessary.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Notice if the baby is a nestling or a fledgling. Return a nestling to its nest. Make a makeshift nest if the nest has fallen. Wait at least a day. Call a licensed wildlife rehabilitator immediately.

Q: Currently, the best ones for this are Sitemodel.com, Facebook, Instagram and Tumblr. Set up professional looking accounts and use them only for site modeling. Keep your personal accounts separate. Some site models like to make up entirely new names, or even just last names, to protect their privacy.  Upload an awesome profile picture to each of your accounts to get you noticed.  Download all of the corresponding apps to your mobile phone, as well, so that you can interact and upload photos while you're on the go. For your own safety, keep personal information to a minimum on your site modeling profiles. When you first start your accounts, be sure to add plenty of friends to get the ball rolling. Definitely add site model agencies. However, avoid adding people randomly and then never interacting with them. Cultivate relationships through these social media platforms and engage with your audience. Spend time commenting on other peoples' posts, photos and etc.  Once you've got a healthy amount of friends and followers, your visibility will be raised significantly. Friends, fans and followers will start coming to you at that point. Be sure to continue interacting with them as much as possible. Think of these interactions as part of your job as a site model. Website editors and bloggers are the people on the lookout for site models, so do your homework and find out the names of people associated with some of your favorite sites. Add them as friends and start following them. “Like” and comment on their posts and you'll catch their eye.  Once you do catch the eye of editors and bloggers, they will start “liking” and commenting on your photos, too. Editors and bloggers tend to have large followings on social media platforms, so when they start interacting with you, it will make you more visible to all of their fans and followers. For instance, if you took ten pictures of yourself doing the same pose and wearing the same clothes, just add the best one out of the lot. Don't upload all of them.  Make sure you upload photographs with a variety of different looks, moods, backgrounds and poses. Site model agencies are all looking for something different, so uploading visually diverse photos will get you more widespread attention.
A:
Create social media accounts dedicated to site modeling. Engage with your followers, friends and fans. Network with editors and bloggers. Avoid uploading a lot of photos that look too similar.