In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: If your extended family is too large for you to see everyone on either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, use Boxing Day to include them in your holidays. Have a formal holiday feast or keep true to the more relaxed spirit of Boxing Day and have a simpler get-together. Popular food served as a Boxing Day meal includes leftover Christmas turkey served as sandwiches or another full meal, or alternately a cold ham or roast beef served as a buffet to minimize prep and cooking. In the UK and Canada, many restaurants welcome large parties for Boxing Day carveries, or buffets serving roast meats carved to order. If you’ve already checked family off your list of holiday duties, feel free to make Boxing Day a time to spend with friends instead. Go to a sporting event or watch one at the local pub. Or just hang out together at someone’s home. Put the formality of the holidays behind you. Host a potluck where everyone’s free to get rid of their leftovers. Make it a pajama party if you want to make it even less formal and more inviting. Tune into the football marathon on TV, zone out, and be merry. Since sports and exercise are such a large part of Boxing Day, stay in the spirit and have the whole family get some exercise. Use this extra time together to go for a long hike through the woods or walk through the streets. Take the young kids to see this family-friendly piece of lively theater based on fairy tales, which is traditionally performed on Boxing Day. Sing along with the musical numbers and interact with the performers onstage.
Summary: Visit family. Spend time with friends. Keep it casual. Go on an outing. Attend a pantomime.

Problem: Article: Since clots block your blood flow, blood builds up behind the clot. This excess blood will cause swelling in the area around the clot.  Swelling is often the first symptom that you will notice. If your arm or leg is swelling but you haven’t injured yourself, then you may have a blood clot. In some cases, swelling can be severe in size. Blood clots can cause pain in the location of the clot, or, as in the case of heart attacks, which are caused by blood clots, displaced pain. The pain may feel like a cramp or charley horse. Unlike with a cramp, you will also experience other symptoms such as swelling and discoloration. Any blood clot can cause this type of pain, but it’s especially common with DVT. The pain will be severe and not relieved by over-the-counter pain killers. The skin around the swollen area may also have a reddish or bluish discoloration that looks like a bruise that won’t go away. If discolored skin is coupled with swelling and pain, then you should seek immediate medical attention. Blood clots cause your skin to be warm to the touch. Place your palm against your skin to feel the temperature. Compare it to the temperature of your forehead to determine if the skin over the potential clot feels warmer.  While the warmth may radiate just from the swollen part of your body, your entire limb could be warm.  In some cases, your skin may feel hot to the touch, rather than just warm. This symptom can be caused by all types of blood clots, including DVT, heart attacks, strokes, and pulmonary embolisms. You may not be able to lift your arm, walk, or speak. If you experience this symptom, you should seek medical care immediately.  At first, you may feel clumsy or like your legs are heavy. You may have difficulty speaking or lifting your arms. A blood clot in your lungs is called a pulmonary embolism. While they share many of the symptoms of blood clots in other parts of your body, they also include a few specific symptoms involving your lungs. Blood clots in the lungs usually have a sudden onset, so you may feel okay but then have symptoms. If you have any of these symptoms, you should call emergency services immediately:  A bloody cough. Lightheadedness. Excessive sweating. Chest pain or tightness. Difficult or painful breathing. Rapid or irregular heartbeat. with F.A.S.T. Blood clots are the most common cause of strokes. They often cause headaches, dizziness, trouble seeing, lightheadedness, and trouble walking. Since it’s important to get treatment quickly, you can use the acronym F.A.S.T. to easily identify a stroke.  Face- Look for one side of the face drooping. Arms - Check if the person can raise their arms and keep them up. Speech - Is the person’s speech slurred or strange? Time - If you notice any symptoms, act quickly and call emergency services. You’re more likely to develop a blood clot if you have risk factors for one. Knowing your risk factors could help you and your doctor determine if your symptoms could be a blood clot. This is particularly important in the early stages when your symptoms may not be that serious. Common risk factors include:  Obesity, pregnancy, smoking, surgery, and prior history of stroke. Prolonged sitting or rest, pulmonary embolism, DVT, and heart failure. Hiatal hernia, peripheral artery disease, polycythemia vera, and heart arrhythmias. Factor V Leiden, family history of blood clots, arteriosclerosis/atherosclerosis, and antiphospholipid syndrome. Certain medications, such as oral contraceptives, hormone therapy, and some breast cancer medications.
Summary:
Watch for swelling, especially in an arm or leg. Notice if you have pain in your shoulder, arm, back or jaw. Look for patches of discolored skin. Feel to see if your skin is warm. Watch for sudden weakness or numbness in your arm, leg, or face. Recognize symptoms of a blood clot in your lungs. Identify a stroke Know if you have risk factors.