Q: Once you’ve tested to see how interested a girl is in hanging out by making open-ended invitations, you may be ready to make specific plans. Ask her to hang out at a certain time doing a certain activity. Never pressure her to make a decision, but try to make specific plans. Say:  “Do you want to go to this concert next weekend?” “How about lunch tomorrow?” “Wanna go to the football game on Wednesday?” Trying to make spontaneous plans can seem like added pressure, but since they’re so last minute, the sting of rejection may be lessened. It’s totally understandable if someone can’t drop what they’re doing to hang out. Strike up a conversation with the girl you want to hang out with and say something like:  “Do you want to grab some coffee?” “Hey, are you hungry? I was about to grab a bite to eat. Do you want to go with?” “The weather is awesome! Let’s go for a bike ride!” If you really want to hang out with a girl, you should make the process as simple for her as possible. She could have a busy schedule, so give her choices on times, days and things-to-do. Tell her about something you’d like to do that sounds cool and talk about different days you could get together. Vary the activities you suggest in case she wants to do one thing more than the other. Say:  "This new movie looks so funny. Could you watch it Thursday or Saturday? There's another good movie coming out too, I think." "A street festival is going on next weekend, but I think some food trucks are going to be at the art's district this weekend." "My favorite band is coming to town next month! There's a new sushi spot opening soon too."
A: Make specific plans. Make spur-of-the-moment plans. Give her options for times and activities.

Q: Leave it running until it's very hot and you see and feel steam. This method will steam more than your face - you'll get a full-body steam treatment. Just like you would for a full-fledged facial steam, it's a good idea to cleanse your face of dirt and makeup before you begin steaming it. There's no need to use a towel to direct the steam to your face, since you'll be standing a column of steam trapped in by the sides of your shower. Let your face steam for about five minutes, then turn the heat down to a milder temperature to finish your shower. To enhance the results, you can use a drugstore face mask or a scoop of raw honey to cleanse your pores while you're finishing up your shower. Put it on after you finish steaming your face, then rinse it off at the end of your shower. When you finish your shower, pat your skin dry and apply toner, then moisturizer to your face. You might want to apply moisturizer to the rest of your body, too, since the hot steam can cause your skin to dry out.
A: Turn on the hot  water in your shower. Rinse your face while it heats. Stand with your face in or close to the steam for about 5 minutes. Put on a mask while you finish your shower. Apply toner and moisturizer.

Q: If you find a photograph in a book that you want to mention in your research paper, provide a citation to the book as a whole, rather than the photograph specifically. Follow the APA citation method for the type of print publication where the photograph appears. For a book, you'd use the basic citation for a book. If you found the photograph in a magazine or journal, you'd use the appropriate citation format for that medium. When you discuss the photograph in your paper, you can include anything else you consider necessary that wouldn't have been included in the basic reference for the book where the photograph appears.  For example, if the photographer is important, you might mention their name: "The photographs of Ansel Adams give viewers a better understanding of how the western United States looked before modern development." You may also want to include any information about the photograph that differs significantly from the publication information about the book itself. For example, you may find a photograph you want to reference that was taken in 1924, but the book where the photograph appears was published in 2015. Include the photograph's date in your text. When you cite a photograph in text, your parenthetical citation references the book's author and the year the book was published. Treat a photograph like a direct quote and include a page number. For example, an Ansel Adams photograph in a 2015 book by Paul Smith might have the in-text parenthetical citation "(Smith, 2015, p. 24)."
A: Reference the work in which the photograph appears. Provide additional details in your text. Include the page number in in-text citations.

Q: Open your legs, and bend your knees slightly. Your feet should be planted roughly the same distance apart as your shoulders, and your back should be straight. Keep your posture loose. You won't be standing still for very long. Start with your right foot. Lift it straight up a little ways off the ground and return it, finishing with a small skip-step backward.  To perform the skip-step, let your foot hit the ground and bounce back up slightly, kicking it a few inches back rather than popping it up again. To keep your balance, you will have to hop a little bit, which is also a part of the dance. Practice going back and forth from your right foot to your left and back again, until you feel like you can keep up a rhythm easily. Now that you're comfortable with the movement, you'll need to learn a simple pattern. The dance is performed in sets of four steps that alternate back and forth.  The pattern is as follows: right foot, left foot, right foot, right foot, followed by the opposite. This means you step and skip once with your leading foot, once with the other foot, and then twice more with the leading foot. After that, switch your leading foot and repeat.  On the last two steps in each set, you'll find it's difficult to skip-step, since it naturally puts your weight onto your other foot. Do what Psy does and just keep your foot light, instead of taking a full skip-step on these steps. Don't kick back on them. Practice this RLRR, LRLL pattern until you can keep a rhythm doing it.
A:
Get a proper stance. Learn the steps. Learn the pattern.