Article: Open and honest communication is a cornerstone to a happy and romantic relationship. Telling your partner exactly how you feel, including your likes and dislikes, will increase clarity between you two, and help maintain overall happiness. Spend at least five minutes per day checking in with each other about the status of your relationship. Talk about how certain situations made you feel or how you would like to see some things happen differently. When you communicate with your partner, try to frame things positively. For example, if you did not like that your partner said you would attend their work event without asking, instead of saying “Don’t make my decisions for me," say something like, “I love to support you in your job, however I would really appreciate it if we could discuss going to social events before you RSVP.” Create small acts of kindness that let your partner know you are thinking about them when you are apart. Your partner will appreciate the effort and will feel your love in your absence. Other acts of kindness could include sending love texts while at work, writing “you are beautiful” on the mirror, packing their lunch the night before, or cleaning the house. Appreciation adds value to your partner and to your relationship. Express the physical, personal, and professional attributes that you value in your partner to make them feel loved and respected. Focus on the positive qualities, such as their hair, humor, or selflessness. Your partner is not perfect and you knew that going into the relationship. Accept that they might not put away dishes, or that they run chronically late. Do not try to change your partner; instead, focus on promoting the good things about them such as their intelligence or ability to light up a room!  Become aware of your own flaws and recognize you are not perfect to help you accept your partner’s flaws. Be respectful of your partner and their flaws. If they are chronically late, respect that it is their decision to be late, but allow yourself to be on time.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Communicate often and honestly. Leave love notes around the house for your partner to find. Be appreciative of your partner. Accept your partner for their mistakes and flaws.

Problem: Article: Give it some time to get used to its new surroundings - about three or four days at least. Never rush your budgie. It will adapt on its own.  Stay close to the cage. Talk to it sweetly and quietly as you wait for it to adjust but do not try to handle it. It will get used to you in the course of a few days or weeks. Keep the bird in quarantine for four weeks if you have other budgies. Once you are sure that the bird is free from disease, bring the cages closer without mixing the birds. Your new budgie will slowly familiarise with these new friends. Avoid loud noises and screams. Your budgie is likely to be stressed by this new environment. Name your budgie. Say it often, especially when you feed it, so that it get used to its new name. Your budgie might be overwhelmed if there are too many people around. Bring your family members once at a time and make them repeat its name. Let your household feed the bird to gain its trust.  Be careful if you have another pet, especially a cat or dog. Cats and dogs are natural predators and they are likely to find your budgie suitable for their next meal. Keep the cat or/and dog in another room at all times to avoid any unnecessary stress. Dogs are also likely to get excited, and may accidentally or purposefully hurt your bird. Their bark can also frighten the budgie. Check that your children treat the bird with respect. Little children can get overexcited when they have a new pet. Always make sure to be in the room when they look at the bird. Don't let them hit the cage or try to grab the budgie. Put your hand in the cage after a few days. Just place it there and don't move it for some time. Repeat this for some days, to allow your budgie to get used to you.  When the budgie seems okay with your hand, place your finger inside the cage. Then push it slightly against your budgie's chest. This will encourage it to climb on your finger. Do this for some days. Feed your budgie from your finger. Dip your finger in water and put some millet grains on it. The water will make the millet grains to stick on your finger. Place your finger near the budgie's mouth and it will eat them if it's grown used to you. After doing this a few times, hold the budgie gently in your hand. Do this briefly at first, then extend the time. Eventually as it becomes used to its new environment, start interacting with it more and more and eventually it will know you are a friend and not a predator. If you rush things, the budgie may start being a little anxious and afraid. This will cause it to fail to bond with you. Remember that the bird is fragile given the strength of a human hand and therefore requires that you handle it with care.  Always remember to teach people new to birds how to handle and properly play with this delicate little creature. Never kiss your budgie, human saliva is toxic to budgies and they might carry easily transmittable diseases.
Summary: Make sure that the budgie is comfortable on arriving at its new home. Introduce your household progressively. Seek to win the budgie's trust. Don't handle the budgie too much during its first two to three weeks. Always treat your budgie with love and kindness.

After you’ve covered the entire cake with white frosting, use the pink and blue frosting to garnish the cake. Pipe it on in whatever shapes you like, such as flowers, dots, or stars.  If you don’t have a piping bag, you can put the frosting in plastic bags, snip off the corner, and pipe simple dots and swirls with it. You can also use blue and pink chocolate candies to decorate the cake.
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One-sentence summary --
Decorate the cake with the pink and blue frosting.