Summarize the following:
Use a rock or other small, blunt object to the end of your arrow with duct tape. You may also wish to wrap the entire end of the arrow in duct tape to reduce damage caused by impact. This end should be the heaviest, as it allows the arrow to travel further. Fletching is the material at the end of the arrow which helps guide it as it flies. If you don't know how, here's how to fletch arrows. Take a knife and cut a slit at the end without the arrowhead to make the nock. This will help the string guide the arrow.

summary: Attach your arrowhead. Attach your fletching. Nock the arrow.


Summarize the following:
If you know what to look for, it's not hard to tell when someone is lying to you. Knowing how to recognize when the person is trying to deceive you can clue you in to how serious the issue is. Get to know how the person looks and acts in a normal, non-stressful situation, and contrast this with how they act when you think they may be lying. After a while you should be able to read the person's body language well enough to have a grasp on when they're not telling the truth.  Check out the way the person acts when you ask their birth date or hometown. Now compare that behavior to how the person acts when you ask a more difficult question, like whether they slept with your boyfriend or fudged numbers on a work document. If the person is telling the truth, they shouldn't show signs of stress when answering the more difficult questions. Forget what you've heard about lack of eye contact being an indication that someone is lying; in fact, many liars deliberately make eye contact because of this myth. When people lie they unconsciously exhibit other physical signs of stress. Look for these signs:  A fake smile that engages only the mouth, not the eyes. A higher-pitched voice than normal.  Dilated pupils. Very slow blink rate (and rapid blink rate when the lie is over).  Antsy foot movements, like toe-tapping or shuffling.  Face touching, like repeatedly covering the mouth, eyes or nose. Many people lie about a few subjects that make them extremely uncomfortable - usually their past bad behavior or something that makes them embarrassed. If the person in question tends to consistently lie when asked about a certain topic, you may just want to back off and stop pressing that particular issue. However, if the person's lies seem to have no rhyme or reason, with no pattern you can make out, you've got a bigger problem on your hands.  If someone lies every time you ask them about why their father is always absent, or why they never finished high school, or why they refuse to speak to a certain person, the answers to those questions might well be classified as none of your business, anyway. Unless you're in a committed relationship with someone, you aren't entitled to knowing every detail about someone's life. If, on the other, hand the person seems to tell lies just for the heck of it, even when asked questions about seemingly unimportant topics, they might be a compulsive liar. Since their lying doesn't follow a pattern, it will be a lot harder to sympathize with the person's intentions for hiding the truth. It never feels good to be told a lie, but some lies are more harmful than others. Before you stage an intervention, figure out how the lies are affecting the liar, you, and other people who may be involved.  Is the person merely protecting themselves from saying too much? Maybe it's not that big a deal. Is the person lying to manipulate other people? Do people make decisions based on what the person says, not realizing they've been lied to? This is a problem that needs to be addressed. Is the person lying to get away with bad behavior, like stealing, cheating or hurting someone? This behavior has a severely negative effect. Some people actually enjoy the act of lying more than they enjoy telling the truth. It can be like an addiction, evoking a small high each time a lie is told. Brazen liars who have gotten away with lying for a long time might start to lie as a way of life, rather than out of perceived necessity. Compulsive liars are tough to crack, since they need to treat lying like any other addiction. Pathological liars tell exaggerated lies that are so far from the truth that they're often glaringly obvious. They often believe the lies they tell, and they'll tell you a completely absurd story with a poker face so earnest that you can't help but take it as truth. Pathological liars have a psychological disorder. Unfortunately, because they think they're telling the truth, you won't be able to talk them out of lying. Still, it's worth confronting them to determine whether a wake-up call will set them on the path to getting help.

summary: Recognize when the person is lying. Look for patterns in the person's lies. Determine whether the person's lies are harmful. See if the person gets pleasure from lying. Look for signs the person is a pathological liar.


Summarize the following:
If something comes out, throw that tissue away and get a new one. Stick only the covered part up your nostrils. Try to cover with the rest of the tissue. Keep picking just as you do in private. Be careful not to accidentally rip the tissue, as this will reveal all and you will have to obtain another tissue. Wash your hands.
summary: Go to the nearest tissue box and blow. Cover your index finger with the tissue. Swivel the index finger around once in nose. When you are done itching, discard the tissue and its contents.