Place your griddle or frying pan over medium heat and allow it to warm up. If you're not using a non-stick pan, add a tablespoon (15 ml) of cooking oil to the pan as well.  When the oil is warm, pick up the pan and swirl the oil around to coat the pan. You can use butter to cook the pikelets, but butter has a much lower smoke point than oil, and even medium heat will be enough to burn it. Pikelets are traditionally quite small, and each one only requires a tablespoon (15 ml) of batter. Drop one tablespoonful of batter into the hot pan for each pikelet, leaving room between them for expansion. Cook the pikelets for about a minute, until bubbles begin to form and pop in the surface of the batter. When that happens, flip them over and cook for another minute or so, until both sides are golden brown. Remove the cooked pikelets from the pan and transfer them to a plate. Cover them with a clean tea towel so they stay warm while you cook the remaining batches. Continue cooking the pikelets until all the batter is gone.
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One-sentence summary -- Preheat the griddle. Cook the pikelets. Keep cooked pikelets warm.

Q: People who have kleptomania face a hard reality. They have to deal with the anguish of their disorder but also the very real possibility of being arrested and jailed. They should talk to a doctor if they can’t stop shoplifting. Most people who have kleptomania don’t seek treatment because they are afraid of being turned in, but the truth is that health care professionals usually do not report thefts to the authorities.  Talk to a psychologist, psychiatrist, or therapist for help and advice. Or, discuss the problem with a general practitioner and ask for help or a referral. If the person is a loved one, encourage him or her to get help. Explain that you are concerned for the loved one’s well-being and that there are effective ways to treat kleptomania. Be clear that you understand they cannot resist through willpower alone. There are no tests like X-rays or bloodwork to diagnose kleptomania. Doctors will instead do a complete examination of the patient’s medical and personal history, though tests may be involved to rule out certain physical causes like brain injury. Instead, expect a range of questions about family and personal history, behavior, and other medical conditions.  The doctor may ask about what sort of situations trigger episodes or review a list of situations to see whether they lead to an impulse to steal. The doctor may also ask about the impulses themselves and how they make the patient feel. There might be more detailed psychological questionnaires, too. The fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, or DSM-5, lists kleptomania as an impulse control disorder with a number of specific criteria. To diagnose kleptomania, a person will need to display these criteria to the exclusion of other possible causes. Officially, at least, these criteria are what will decide whether a person can be diagnosed with kleptomania. People who have kleptomania will have engaged in a pattern of stealing behaviors for a few months or even several years.  The person has a “recurrent” inability to resist the urge to steal things, which aren’t needed for personal use or for monetary gain. The same person experiences feelings of increasing tension immediately before a theft. They also feel pleasure, gratification, or relief after the theft. The person doesn’t steal for revenge or out of anger or as a result of a hallucination or delusion. Finally, the behavior can’t be explained by some other mental condition like a conduct disorder, manic episode, or an antisocial personality disorder. The condition may present along with other conditions, such as ADHD, post-traumatic stress disorder, or alcoholism, so it may not be the first diagnosis that someone receives. Try to be patient as you seek help for a loved one with kleptomania. If you think you may have kleptomania, then share your suspicions with your doctor and/or therapist.
A: Talk to a doctor. Expect a range of questions. Assess according to the DSM-5. Keep in mind that diagnosing kleptomania can be complicated.

Article: Sun exposure can temporarily brighten skin by giving you a tan, but in the long term it is extremely damaging. Letting your skin burn or get tan all summer long can lead to wrinkles, spots, and the possibility of skin cancer.  Apply sunscreen to your face before you leave the house, even during the winter. Use sunscreen on your neck, shoulders, chest, arms, and everywhere else that tends to get more exposure. When you're wearing shorts or going to the beach, make sure you cover your legs, too. Leaving makeup on your face overnight is hard on your skin, because you're allowing chemicals to seep in all night. By morning your skin has completely absorbed the makeup, and it's probably the worse for wear. Use makeup remover and rinse off the traces with cool or lukewarm water every night before you go to bed.  Don't scrub makeup off your face, since this can cause it to get irritated and damage the skin. Use a good makeup remover and dab it with a towel instead. Try this trick for removing eye makeup: dab a cotton swab soaked in makeup remover on your eyelashes and around your eyes. The makeup will wipe right off. Skin toughens in response to exposure to chemicals, extreme temperatures, and abrasive materials. Keep your skin soft and sensitive by taking these precautions:  Wear gloves during the winter to keep your hands from getting chapped. Protect the rest of your body with appropriately warm clothing. Wear gloves when you're cleaning with strong chemicals. Protect yourself from callouses by using knee pads, thick work clothes, and the proper safety equipment when you're working under harsh conditions.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Use sunscreen every day. Don't wear makeup to bed. Protect your skin from harsh elements.