In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: When the ball handler tries to drive, or dribble hard towards the net, quickly shuffle backwards in your drop-step defensive stance. Stay low and move with them, trying to maintain your arms-length cushion to stay in the play. Be patient. Don’t try to reach or go for the steal unless the ball handler loses control or makes a big error. Start to angle your body more to the sideline as the ball handler dribbles. You want to use your body to block off their path to score, which means putting your back to the hoop and forcing them away from it. This will help you contain the ball handler until they make a mistake, or your teammates can come help. Use the hand closest to the ball to flick the it away with a short, fast movement, called a dig. Don’t reach in with the hand blocking the pass to bat at the ball—you may hit the ball handler’s arm and be charged for a foul. Only try a dig if the player is trying to drive past you and you have no way of containing them, or if they’re handling the ball loosely and you see an opportunity. A charge occurs when a defender is hit in the torso by the ball handler while standing still, or moving backwards or sideways, with both feet on the ground. To draw a charge, stay in your low defensive stance and let the offensive player dribble at you, instead of charging the ball.   Be careful when drawing a charge! You could be called for blocking if you’re moving towards the ball, don’t have both feet on the ground, or were hit on somewhere other than your torso. Move with the dribbler and stay in their dribbling lane to try to draw the foul. Stay very low and bend your forearm in front of your chest, keeping it strong and close to you to absorb some of the blow. Your upper body will naturally sway backwards, helping you to sell the call. by blocking the shooter’s vision. If you see the ball handler go up for a shot, put a hand up to their face to distract them and disrupt their view of the rim. This allows you to force a missed shot without fouling or getting fooled if the ball handler is actually faking. This is considered a better tactic than jumping and swatting at the basketball during a shot, which could result in a foul if you hit the shooter’s arm or, if they’re faking, gives them an open dribbling or passing lane.
Summary: Drop back if the ball handler tries to dribble towards the net. Force the ball handler to the nearest sideline. Try to flick the ball away during a dribble. Draw a charge foul if you can. Defend a shot

Increasingly the biggest problem for those who would rather keep their work and private lives separate is the proliferation of social media. People record all aspects of their lives and sometimes don't fully comprehend how accessible all of this information is to anybody who cares to look for it. The first step to tackling this problem is simply being aware of it and thinking about how your social media activity could reveal parts of your private life you'd rather keep out of the office.  If you want to maintain a professional image online and don't want to invite questions about your private life, avoid posting anything openly that could threaten this.  This includes text and comments as well as photos. If you want to keep the two elements of your life separate you need to do this outside of the office as well as inside it. Don't tweet or comment about your job or your colleagues in your social media accounts. You might consider setting up multiple social media accounts to keep the two areas of your life separate.  Consider connecting with work colleagues on professional sites such as LinkedIn, and reserve things like Facebook for personal friends and family. This will help you keep these arenas separate. It is possible to be active on social media without blocking your colleagues' friends requests, if you just want to use your online profile to keep in touch with friends. Think about how you can adjust your privacy settings so that you limit the amount of material you share with your colleagues.  You can control the amount of information about you that goes online and you can, to some extent, control who has access to it. But be aware that once something is on the internet it is not likely to disappear quickly. So much communication in our working lives and our lives outside work is conducted through email, that it can be easy for your work email and personal email to blend into one. You should be conscious of this and take steps to make sure you keep the two separate. Always use your work email for work and your personal email for everything else.  Set a time when you will stop looking at your work email in the evening and stick to it. Keeping these email boundaries will help you to avoid carrying your work around with you. Depending on your place of work you will have to develop a strategy for cutting off work communications that fits in with your job.  In most cases, you do not have a right to privacy in your work email. Your boss is usually legally able to read anything sent or received in work email accounts. Keep your personal matters in your personal email to avoid any sharing of information you want to keep private.
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One-sentence summary -- Be aware of your social media activity. Adjust your privacy settings. Only use your work email for work.

Problem: Article: What skills do you have that you could use while traveling? Some employers have seasonal work that you may be able to train for or do easily. Research online and you will find travel-based jobs for every kind of skill. Adventure outfitters and summer camps recruit guides in the off season. If you want to be a rafting guide in the USA, start looking for summer work in the autumn or winter.  Surf instructors in Costa Rica work during the winters. Make a travel plan and network with other guides who can provide job information. Resorts need staff for every activity they offer, so find out things you can do at your skill level. Traveling nurses are in high demand. Many agencies will hire nurses from three months to a year to work at hospitals around the USA. Some even offer housing. Search online for traveling nursing positions and contact the recruiters. Most websites list location, pay rate, and benefits up front. Airline pilots, flight attendants, cruise ship staff, and transportation employees such as truck drivers travel as part of their work. While some of these jobs don't allow for much time to explore tourist areas, travel professionals can find ways to get out and enjoy, too. Research the industry to see what kind of skills and training are required. There are many opportunities to teach English abroad. Most places require that you take their Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) training class before you can sign on. This may expensive, but once you have the TOEFL certification, you can teach in many countries. Agencies often help with job placement. Many tourist destinations have resorts, theme parks, and restaurants looking for waiters, housekeepers, and attendants. The highest seasons for family tourist destinations are when children are not in school. For other places, high season may be during the best weather or centered around holidays. Check around for vacation high season in the area where you want to travel.
Summary:
Get a travel industry job. Become an adventure guide. Get a job as a nurse. Become a travel professional. Try teaching English abroad. Get a service industry job.