Q: Your mourning friend may need help with a variety of tasks the first several days or weeks after a loss. One important and often heartbreaking task is planning a funeral or memorial service for the deceased. Offer your assistance in any way that you can on such a difficult task. Even if you don't make any decisions, your presence may comfort your friend. Immediately after a devastating loss, everyone your friend knows may be trying to contact him. Volunteer to act as a gatekeeper, relaying certain information to the outside world of extended family, friends, and co-workers. Doing this can shelter your friend from some of those overly optimistic platitudes while giving the family privacy. If your friend lives alone, or the loss left her home alone, offer to stay with him. He might feel uncomfortable sleeping in his home alone or may just be comforted knowing there is someone there to talk to. Everyday tasks might fall to the wayside after a serious loss, but these things will still need to be done. Ask your loved one what chores or errands need to be completed. Make a checklist and get started ticking off items. Common chores might be paying bills, picking up groceries, sending off or bringing in mail, and cleaning up the home. Just be sure to check first. Your loved one may not want certain personal items touched or rooms disturbed. He or she may want things left how they were before the person died. A great way to help out your friend and her whole household is to coordinate with other friends or relatives to set up a meal train. Doing this minimizes the need to have to prepare meals during this time of grief. Below are a few tips to organizing a meal train:  Ask your friend if it's okay for you and others to prepare some meals for her Find out about any food allergies or intolerances Ask everyone involved to be specific in what they will be preparing/bringing Offer suggestions to others who are involved, such as buying a restaurant gift card or picking up groceries that include easy-to-fix frozen meals or sandwich/salad ingredients It might be challenging for your loved one to manage his children or pets after a significant loss. Offer to look after them by picking up the children from school, helping with homework, and making sure they get a warm meal. Take any dog(s) out for a walk and feed the pets as needed.
A: Offer to help with the memorial. Answer and make phone calls. See if your friend wants you to stay over. Assist with household chores or errands. Organize a meal train. Help with any children or pets.

Q: Click the Start button (Windows logo) at the bottom-left corner of your screen or press the ⊞ Win keyboard key. This will bring up the Registry Editor app in the results. It's a collection of blue blocks icon. Doing so will provide administrator permission to open the Registry Editor. Each folder in the registry is arranged in alphabetical order. To navigate to "RunMRU":  Expand the HKEY_CURRENT_USER folder by clicking {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/1\/1e\/Android7expandmore.png","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/1\/1e\/Android7expandmore.png\/30px-Android7expandmore.png","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":460,"bigWidth":"30","bigHeight":"30","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>I edited this screenshot of an Android icon.\n<\/p><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Fair_use\">Fair Use<\/a><br>\n<\/p><\/div>"} to the left of it. This folder and each subsequent folder are in the left-hand sidebar. Expand the Software folder. Expand the Microsoft folder. Scroll down and expand the Windows folder. Expand the CurrentVersion folder. Expand the Explorer folder. Its contents will appear in the right-hand pane of the Registry Editor window. Simply click and drag your mouse up the left side of the main Registry Editor window to highlight these items. You should be able to see the Run history item names in the "Data" column. You'll see Delete at the bottom of the drop-down menu; clicking it invokes a pop-up window. If you're using a laptop with a trackpad, use two fingers to click instead of right-clicking. Doing so will clear your Run history. You will likely see an error window appear that says "Unable to clear all Registry items"; regardless of this message, your Run history will be clear the next time you check it.
A: Open the Start menu. Search for regedit in the search box. Click "regedit". Click Yes when prompted. Navigate to the "RunMRU" folder. Click the "RunMRU" folder. Highlight everything in the "RunMRU" folder except "Default". Right-click a highlighted entry, then click Delete. Click Yes.

Q: If a doctor treated you for an initial chlamydia infection, get retested for the disease in approximately three months and at regular intervals thereafter. This will help ensure that the disease has left your system and that you are no longer contagious.  Continue testing for sexually transmitted infections with each new sexual partner. Recurrence of chlamydia is very common and is often treated with the same course of antibiotics. If infection recurs after a follow up test that showed no infection, this is a new infection. Avoid using douches if you have or have had chlamydia. These products kill good bacteria and raise the risk for infection or recurrence. The best way to treat chlamydia is to avoid getting it. Using condoms and limiting the number of your sex partners will minimize your risk for contracting the disease or having a recurrence.  Always use condoms during sexual contact. Although condoms will not eliminate your risk of getting chlamydia, they will reduce your risk.  Abstain from any sexual intercourse or sexual activity, including anal and oral sex, during treatment. Abstinence can help avoid reinfection or passing the STD to your partner.  The more sexual partners you have, the higher your risk of getting chlamydia is. Try to limit the number of partners you have to decrease your risk, and always use condoms with your partners. Certain factors can increase your risk of getting chlamydia. Being aware of them can help you reduce the likelihood of contracting the disease.  If you are under 24 years of age you are at a higher risk for the disease.  If you’ve had multiple sex partners within the past year you are more likely to get chlamydia.  Inconsistent use of condoms can significantly increase your risk of getting chlamydia.  If you have a history of sexually transmitted diseases, including chlamydia, you are at an increased risk of contracting the disease.
A:
Get tested regularly for chlamydia. Don’t use vaginal douching products. Practice safe sex. Be aware of the risk factors.