INPUT ARTICLE: Article: You can find condoms at discount stores like Wal-Mart and Target as well as drug stores like Walgreens and CVS. These places stock a variety of general purpose condoms from popular brands like Trojan and Durex.  Look for condoms near the store’s pharmacy or personal hygiene area. Depending on the store, expect condoms to cost between $2 and $6 for a box of 3. Though you can get generic condoms at discount and drugs stores, adult shops may be your only option for finding unique or whimsical contraceptives. In addition to purely functional varieties, adult stores offer a wide selection of fun condoms with differing textures, colors, tastes, and scents. Normally, adult shops charge significantly more per condom than discount or drug stores. In certain cities and towns, you can acquire free or discounted condoms from your doctor’s office or a local health center like Planned Parenthood. Some places keep their condoms in an open area where you can take as many as you need. For others, you may have to request the condoms directly. Check websites like http://condomfinder.org to locate free condom distributors near you. If you’re in high school or college, check with your campus’ health center, dorm office, or counselor’s office to see if they offer free condoms. Though not all do, many schools give out free contraceptives in hopes of reducing unwanted pregnancy and the spread of STDs.

SUMMARY: Buy general purpose condoms at a discount or drug store. Purchase specialty condoms at an adult store. Pick up free condoms from a local health organization. See if your school offers free condoms.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Tap the Snapchat app icon, which resembles a white ghost on a yellow background. The Snapchat camera will open if you're logged in. If you aren't logged in, tap LOG IN, enter your username (or email address, or phone number) and password, and tap LOG IN. Swipe right over the Camera page to do so. You should see a list of recently snapped friends appear. Scroll down until you find the name of the person to whom you recently sent a snap. Swipe from left to right across your friend's name to do so. Type in a message, then tap the Send button. It will pop up in the bottom-left corner of the chat window, just above the text box. If you see the Bitmoji appear, your friend is currently online and reading your chat.  If your friend doesn't use Bitmoji, you'll instead see a smiley face icon appear. The face will turn into a blue dot after a few seconds. If the Bitmoji (or blue dot) doesn't appear, your friend is either offline or not responding to your chat.
Summary: Open Snapchat . Scroll over to the Friends page. Find your friend's name. Open your friend's Chat page. Send a message to your friend. Wait for your friend's Bitmoji to appear.

Wait to see if any results pop up. If the email is associated with a social media account or website, it is likely to be valid. Go to the search bar at the top. Paste in the email address. Click on the magnifying glass. Look for any Facebook accounts that are associated with that email address. If you find one, it is likely to be valid.
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One-sentence summary -- Type the copied email address into a Google search query. Sign into Facebook.

Q: Both LED and low-pressure sodium bulbs are very energy efficient for the light they produce. Low-pressure sodium bulbs produce a very warm light that does not heavily affect the atmosphere. It's vital when choosing LEDs that they are reduced in brightness/lumens, fully shielded, and are a warm (yellow or amber) correlated color temperature (CCT) of 3000K or less (2700K is preferable). The key is to limit blue and green light emissions. Use reflectors outside to help light any pathways. This saves you from purchasing a whole row of lights to brighten the same pathway.Always opt for the more directed, lower light options where possible to avoid excess glare. Bulb caps and shields ensure the light does not emit straight into the sky. These range from “non cutoff” all the way to “full cutoff” lights. Full cutoff shields prevent the largest amount of light "bleeding" among the shields. This helps prevent stray light from entering the atmosphere. Light reflecting off of the ground, even at night, provides plentiful light for night activities. These lights only turn on when they sense movement in their field of view. These can be placed on garden paths, near garages, around dark spaces and even in hallways. By turning on only when useful to someone, the lights pay for the investment rather quickly. If you have family members who need to use the bathroom frequently, these lights are more energy efficient than leaving one on all night.
A: Install LED or low-pressure sodium bulbs. Direct light to where it is needed. Purchase lights with bulb caps and shields. Aim your outdoor lights downward. Install motion detector lights.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Suppressing memories, like thought substitution, has been proven to help people forget negative memories. Your negative memories are usually linked to "triggers" that remind you of what you saw and how you felt. If you can force yourself to ignore the memory when it comes back into your head, you might be able to break these "episodic" links and let go. Cognitive scientists divide memories into two patterns: episodic and semantic. Episodic memory is experiential and subjective, while semantic memory is factual and objective. When you see something horrible online, it triggers an immediate and viscerally negative reaction, and it is linked in your episodic memory to things that remind you of what you saw. By forming new associations with these triggers, you may be able to gradually "forget" what you saw.  Episodic memory is our mode of remembering specific things that we've experienced. These memories are usually tied to the emotional context of what happened. Thus, the memory of this horrible thing that you saw might be linked to triggers that continually bring back the image. Semantic memory is a more structured record of facts, meanings, ideas, and observations about our external world. Our brains tend to store this knowledge independently from our personal experience. Semantic memory does not usually include the emotional context. If you came across an especially horrific thing online, there's a good chance that the image pops up in your head from time to time. Try to catch your thoughts and turn them around. You can do this in two ways: you can "let go" of the thought by confronting it and coming to terms with it, or you can "suppress" the thought by pushing it deeper into your mind. When your mind turns to a dark place, try to consciously turn your awareness toward brighter things. You can look up or you can look down.

SUMMARY:
Try to push down the memory whenever it emerges. Understand how memory suppression works. Practice letting go.