Problem: Article: When a relationship ends, it's important not to deny or minimize the feelings of sadness that follow. You need to experience your breakup in order to get over it.  Grieving is a normal part of a relationship ending. Even if you know the decision was for the best, you will likely miss your partner in the days and weeks that follow the breakup.  Many people deal with such feelings by avoiding them. People may take up a big project or start socializing or drinking heavily. However, this is not a good idea. Ending a relationship, especially a serious and longterm one, is one of the most difficult emotional blows a person can endure in life. You need to be able to accept and face the pain to process the emotions you're feeling about the loss. Biology plays a factor in how we cope with breakups. Understanding your biological functions in the wake of a failed romance can help you better cope.  The human brain is wired for bonding, so the breaking of any bond is emotionally difficult. A breakup can be similar to drug withdrawal as the feelings of longing for another person remain even weeks after the relationship has ended. Areas of the brain associated with drug use are activated during romantic relationships, and so you're biologically wired to miss someone and feel regret or loneliness in the direct aftermath of a breakup.  Understand such feelings are temporary and, as time passes, they will lessen. While past relationships do affect how you function in current relationship, the acute feelings of pain lose intensity with time. Oftentimes, in order to justify or dismiss a relationship, people indulge in ruminating over things they disliked about an ex. Such negative thoughts do not help you get over someone. They simply increase the amount of time you spend thinking about an ex, prolonging the process of getting over someone. Instead, try to focus on the positives and look towards better prospects in the future.
Summary: Give yourself time to grieve. Understand biology plays a role in breakups. Resist negative feelings.

Problem: Article: It's located at https://www.pinterest.com/. If you're already logged into Pinterest, this will open your home page. If you aren't logged into Pinterest, click Log in in the top-right corner of the page, enter your username and password, and click Log in. You'll see this in the bottom-right corner of the window. Doing so will prompt a pop-up menu in the bottom-right corner of the window. If you haven't downloaded the "Pin It" button, you may receive a notification asking you to download it. If so, click Not now and click + again. There are two options here:   Upload a Pin - Allows you to upload a photo or video from your computer.  Save from a website - Allows you to search for pin-compatible posts on a website. Your process for doing so will vary depending on the option you selected:   Upload a Pin - Click Choose photo, select a file location, click on a photo or video, and click Open.  Save from a website - Type a link into the text field in the "Save from a website" window, click Next, and click Save in the top-right corner of the photo's icon. Doing this will add your selected item to the board in question.  You can also add a description to your uploaded item by clicking the text field below it on the left side of the page. You can click Create board to add your item to a new board.
Summary: Go to the Pinterest website. Click +. Click an upload option. Open the item you wish to pin. Click a board's name.

Problem: Article: Whether your teen is learning to drive a stick shift or automatic car, it's important that they get the hang of driving one specific car. This way, there will be no surprises the day of the test. Return to the parking lot for a few more sessions. This will help your teen's confidence and skills grow before they surrender to the call of the open road. You can practice for up to an hour if you're so inclined. Make sure to take a break or cut the lesson short if one of you needs it. A parking lot has the advantage of pre-marked parking spaces, so take advantage of them!  Tell your teen to pull up to line their passenger side mirror up with the boundary line of a space. Then, have them turn their wheel all the way to the side, and begin to enter the space. Once they're about halfway in, they can straighten the wheel and finish pulling in. Also called 3-point turns, K turns are useful for reversing directions in areas of heavy traffic. They're also tricky to get right, which is why it's great to do them in an empty parking lot.  Tell your teen to signal right, then pull all the way right. Next, encourage them to turn on their left-hand signal, then drive left a bit. Now tell them to signal right, then reverse. They should be near where they started, but facing the opposite direction. You can use the curbs in the parking lot to practice parallel parking, even if that isn't their intended function. This maneuver can require a lot of repetition, so don't let it psych your teen (or you) out.  Tell your teen to come to a stop, then check their mirrors. Have them turn on their turn signal on the right. Then encourage them to turn the steering wheel all the way to the right, towards the curb. Now, they should begin to reverse. Remind them going extremely slowly is okay, and encouraged--even experienced drivers find parallel parking difficult. Then, have them switch the wheel to the left and back up a bit more. Finally, your teen should straighten out their wheels completely and inch forward a bit.   Get out of the car and look at how close the curb is. If it's nearly touching the wheels, or a couple of feet away from them, have your teen try again! Your teen may not be a perfect driver yet, but that's why they're practicing with you. You may need to correct them, but make sure your comments are useful and constructive (e.g. “Pump the brakes,” not “slow down, we're going to die!”). It's easy to figure out where to correct (it will often happen when your teen doesn't seem to be paying attention), but we often take good driving for granted and forget to reinforce it. Here are some actions worthy of praise:  Correcting a mistake without being prompted. Considering right of way. Taking weather or light conditions into account.
Summary: Always practice in the same car. Build up to longer, trickier lessons. Ask your child to park perpendicularly. Practice K turns. Instruct your child to parallel park. Offer constructive criticism. Praise good driving.

Problem: Article: Chances are that most sites that list available proxies are also blocked at your school. Building a list at home will help you find more sites to use. A proxy site is a site that fetches the blocked website for you, and displays it through the proxy site. This means that the filter software never actually sees you going to the blocked site (YouTube), just the proxy site. Your search result should list quite a few sites that index available proxy sites. Your school's network administrators actively block new proxy websites as they appear, meaning that a large number of the sites you find will already not work. Grab sites from multiple different proxy lists. You just need to be able to access your list from the school's computer. If it is blocked, move on to the next site until you find one that is unblocked. youtube.com into the URL field. Click the button to open the site. A proxy will increase the time it takes for sites to load since the traffic has to be routed through the proxy server. This means videos will take longer than normal to play. Also, make sure that your proxy doesn't block scripts, or else YouTube won't load.
Summary:
Open a search engine on your computer at home. Search for "proxy list". Find a website that lists a lot of available proxies. Make a list of a dozen proxy sites to try. Email the list to yourself or write it down. Visit the first site on your list. Enter . Wait for YouTube to load.