Write an article based on this "Track how you feel. Consider how you communicate with each other. Think about when you argue with each other. Think about the personal boundaries in your relationship. Listen to how your partner talks about you in public. Determine how much you pursue your own goals. Ask yourself if you’ve been isolated in your relationship. Think about why you’re in the relationship."
article: As a result of enduring physical abuse and its counterparts, you might be feeling certain ways that are telltale signs that you are in an abusive relationship:   You still love your partner, but you want your partner’s abusive behaviors to change. You feel lonely, suffer from depression, powerless, ashamed, anxious, and/or suicidal. You feel embarrassed and you think people will judge you. You are struggling with alcoholism or drug abuse. You can’t leave because you don’t have any money and you’re afraid of what he/she will do if you do. You still feel your partner will change if you just love him/her enough. You believe that you need to stay with your partner because you made a commitment. You feel isolated from family. You feel trapped and there is no escape. If you try to leave, your partner will find you, and then it will get worse. You’re afraid your partner will hurt your children or your pets. You worry that your partner will get custody of your kids. You feel distrust towards domestic violence services or law enforcement because of their poor handling of the situation in the past (whether it’s perceived or true). If you can write down your feelings in a journal, try that. If you worry that your partner will see your journal, you may need to find another way to identify and sort out your feelings. This might be through talking with a friend, writing on a piece of paper and then throwing it away, When communicating assertively, people in healthy relationships communicate openly and honestly. This means that healthy couples can share their feelings with the other person. They don’t need to be right all the time, and they listen to each other in a loving, open, and nonjudgmental way.  Healthy couples don’t play the “blame game.” Each person takes responsibility for their behavior, their thinking, and their emotions, as well as their own happiness and destiny. They also take responsibility for when they make mistakes and do what they can to make it up to their partner (apologizing is a good start). Not everyone agrees all the time, even in the healthiest of relationships. Misunderstandings, miscommunications, and conflicts are dealt with promptly and assertively. Assertive communication maintains a level of kindness and respect within the relationship, as well as encourages cooperation in solving problems and issues.   There is a healthy amount of respect towards each other. Healthy couples are kind to each other. They do not name-call, put each other down, yell, or exhibit other signs of abusive behaviors. They support each other privately and in public. Because couples take full responsibility, they also work to improve the behaviors that aren’t working for the relationship. They try to be flexible and try to see things from their partner’s point of view. Healthy couples have personal boundaries and can express their preferences and needs. They use assertiveness to express boundaries in a kind and loving way. Abusers methodically test their partner’s boundaries, continually working to break down your boundaries until you are completely under their control. You start to accept their abuse and behavior. You accept their power over you. Your fear of being hurt or killed keeps you frozen in the relationship and under their control. Does your partner insult you in front of other people? Do they put you down and call you names?  Abusive partners often use derogatory comments to lower the other person’s self-esteem. Oftentimes, abusive relationships have one partner who doesn’t pursue what makes them happy. They mistakenly believe that making sacrifices like this is what people do when they love each other.  Think about whether your life centers around making your partner happy. Think too about demands that your partner makes that involve sacrificing your own goals. Isolating the victim is also often common in the beginning of an abusive relationship. An abuser might blame others for trying to break them up. They may also claim that they love you too much to share you with anyone else. It’s understandable why this would make a person feel special. That’s the abuser is counting on to draw you in and keep you tied to the relationship. They blur the lines of healthy emotional boundaries and rationalizes the erratic behavior. It’s easy to believe that your partner loves you so much that you make your partner lose his or her mind. This gives your self-esteem a boost. But it’s really often the first of many techniques an abuser will use to gain control over you. This self-esteem is short-lived, as the abuser employs a large number of tactics to gain control over the relationship. And, this control is the key to the nature of an abusive relationship. In a healthy relationship, each person takes responsibility for their own self-esteem. Each does his or her best to work on building a healthy self-worth.

Write an article based on this "Press and hold the Sleep/Wake and Home buttons. Hold both buttons until you see the Apple logo. Wait while your iPad finishes booting."
article: The Sleep/Wake button can be found along the top of the iPad, and is used to turn the screen on and off. The Home button is in the center at the bottom. The screen will shut off before the Apple logo appears. Continue to hold both buttons until you see the logo. Once you see the Apple logo, you can release the buttons and wait while your iPad finishes booting up. This may take a minute or two.

Write an article based on this "Familiarize yourself with common chord progressions in your genre. Practice identifying chords by sound. Determine whether the song is in a major or minor key. Identify the tonic (I) chord. Use the bass line as a guide to find other chords. Practice playing the chords in sequence. Put the chords and melody together."
article:
Most songs in Western music are built around a set of common chord progressions, built on the diatonic scale. Once you know which progressions are most common in the music you listen to, you’ll have a much easier time identifying them in songs you want to learn.  Diatonic chords are numbered with Roman numerals according to the position of the root note on the scale. For example, the I chord on the C major scale is the C tonic chord (C-E-G), consisting of the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the C major scale. Minor chords are written with lower case Roman numerals (e.g., i, ii, iv, etc.). One of the most common chord progressions in Western popular music is I-IV-V-I. Try playing common chords and really paying attention to what they sound like. Don’t just stick to root positions (where the notes played are the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes, or scale degrees, of the key)—practice listening to inversions, too (such as 3rd, 5th, 8th). Listen to 7th, diminished, and augmented chords as well as basic major and minor triads. The more you listen to the chords, the more familiar they will become.  For example, in C Major, the root notes are C, E, and G, while E, G, and C, are the 3rd, 5th, and 8th scale degrees, respectively, of the first inversion of C. Try quizzing yourself with a chord identification tool like this one: https://tonedear.com/ear-training/chord-identification Songs written in major keys tend to sound bright, upbeat, happy, or hopeful, while minor keys lend a gloomy, sad, or scary sound. The easiest way to determine whether a song is major or minor is simply to listen to the overall “mood” of the piece. While the chords in a minor key song will primarily be minor chords, there will likely be some major chords mixed in. The reverse is also true of major key songs. Once you’ve figured out the tonic chord, you will have a good foundation for figuring out the rest of the song. Most songs end on the tonic (I) chord, and many also begin there. The tonic chord should be the predominant chord throughout the song, and hearing it will give you a sense of completion or satisfaction. For example, “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star,” when played in the key of C major, begins and ends on a C major tonic chord. In most songs, the bass line is the harmonic accompaniment to the melody. The bass line tends to be built on the root notes of each chord in the song. This means that if you can figure out the notes of the bass “melody,” you can pinpoint the root of each chord and build from there.  For example, if you are listening to “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” in C major, you may identify the notes C, F, C, F, C, G, C in the bass line of the first 4 measures. These are the root notes of the chords for those measures. Once you’ve figured out the root notes, ask yourself about the quality of each chord. Does it sound major or minor? Do you hear tones other than the 1st, 3rd, and 5th notes of the chord (e.g., the 7th)? After you’ve figured out the chords, play them in order, following the rhythm of the piece. You may find it helpful to play along with a recording of the song to make sure that you have the timing right. Depending on the type of instrument you’re playing, this could mean playing the different parts together or playing the chords as accompaniment to a voice or a second instrument. Run through the song several times to make sure that your chord changes are timed correctly with the melody. For example, if you are playing the piano, you will probably play the chords primarily with your left hand while your right hand carries the melody.