Q: Address the email to your Gmail address. Send it.
A: In your AOL account copy-paste your email contacts into one large email. Select and copy-paste your contacts from the email into Gmail's contact address book.

Article: Once you've got the basic movement mastered, you need to learn how to move in and out of the trick with some smooth movements, instead of just clearly setting up the trick before your audience's eyes. Your fingers should be on the side of your arm facing your audience and your thumb should be on the other side of your arm, where it is visible only to you. You can wiggle your fingers a little if you want to make it dramatic and also draw the audience's eyes away from your thumbs. Hold your left thumb up, away from your hand. As soon as your left thumb is covered, pop your thumbs into position. You will be making the switch behind the cover of your fingers, bending your left and right thumbs and bringing them together, knuckle-to-knuckle.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Learn a little finesse to hide the process from the audience. Hold your right hand over your left forearm. Slide your fingers down the length of your forearm in a smooth movement. Cover your left thumb with the fingers of your right hand.

Problem: Article: Go to https://www.facebook.com/ to open your News Feed if you're already logged into Facebook. If you aren't already logged into Facebook, enter your email address (or phone number) and password first. Scroll down through the News Feed until you find a post on which you want to comment. If you want to post a status using emoticons, you'll instead click the status box near the top of the News Feed page. It's in the far-right side of the comment box if you're leaving a comment. Doing so prompts a drop-down menu.  If you're creating a status, you'll see the smiley face in the lower-right side of the status box. On posts with large numbers of comments, you'll first have to click Comment below the post. In the drop-down menu, find an emoticon that you want to use and then click it to insert it into your comment or status.  You can view specific groups of emoticons by clicking one of the tabs at the bottom of the drop-down menu. Select as many emoticons as you want to use. This will create your comment with the emoticon(s) included. If you're writing a status, you'll instead click the blue Post button.
Summary: Open Facebook. Find a post to comment on. Click the smiley face icon. Select an emoticon. Compose the rest of your comment and press ↵ Enter.

INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Surrounding the egg with cereal can be a surprisingly effective way of distributing the force of the impact. For best results, choose a "puff" type cereal over something with flakes. These puffs contain a decent amount of air and make better cushions.  Wrap the egg around with wet paper towels. Place the egg in one plastic bag and surround it with a puffed rice cereal. Fill four other small bags with the same cereal but do not put any eggs inside. Place all the bags inside of a larger resealable bag. Make sure that the bag with the egg in it is in the middle and all the other bags are packed around it from all sides. Packing material is designed for the specific purpose of protecting fragile items from bumps and blows. If you have enough of it, this material can also protect a raw egg from breaking after a nasty tumble.   The simplest way to approach this is to get heavy-duty bubble wrap. Carefully wind the bubble wrap around the egg anywhere from two to five times, creating a thick cushion. Tie the ends of the bubble wrap with rubber bands to prevent the egg from slipping out through the top or bottom. If you do not have bubble wrap but do have other packing materials, like packing peanuts, inflated plastic packing packets, packing paper, cotton balls, or crumpled newspaper, you can use these materials to cushion the egg, as well. Spread a thick layer of your chosen packing material inside a box that is at least four to eight times larger than the egg. You should use enough material to fill the box halfway. Place the egg in the center of this cushion, then gently cover it with enough packing material to fill the rest of the box. Close the box and seal it with tape before the drop. These airy, soft foods can be used like cereal or packing materials. The basic idea is to surround the egg with enough of a cushion using these foods to reduce the force of the impact the egg faces once it lands.  The exact container you use does not necessarily make a difference, but there are a few things you should keep in mind. Make sure that the container is large enough so that you can cushion the egg around all sides, just in case the egg lands on its side instead of on the top or bottom of the container. You also need to make sure that you have enough marshmallows, popcorn, or similar soft food to fill the container completely. If not, the egg might move around inside. Marshmallows and popcorn both work so well because they contain so much air. You could try other types of food, as well, but the food you choose should either be very soft or very airy. Fill the container halfway with marshmallows. Place the egg in the center of your marshmallow nest, then carefully fill the rest of the container with marshmallows, as well. Make sure that the entire container is filled but do not press down on the egg as you pack the container. . If you can keep the egg floating in water during the drop and upon impact, the force of the impact should distribute itself evenly throughout the water and have very little effect on the egg itself.  Place the egg inside of a tin can, plastic box, or other durable container. This container should be about five times as large as the egg. Fill the rest of the container with water and add a handful of salt. The egg will float better in salt water than in normal water. Make sure that the entire container is filled with water and that it is well sealed before you drop it.

SUMMARY: Use cereal. Wrap the egg in packing material. Try marshmallows or popcorn. Let the egg float

Q: If home treatments do not help your headache, see your doctor. She can rule out underlying conditions and formulate a treatment plan for you.  Your physician will zero in on the correct diagnosis and exclude competing diagnoses in an attempt to pick the correct therapy. She will determine the need for additional testing at this appointment, which may include but is not limited to a blood pressure check, additional cardiovascular review, blood work, head imaging, and more. Depending on the severity and type of headache you have, your doctor may prescribe you a powerful pain reliever as well as a preventative medication to help stave off further headaches.  Your doctor may give you prescription pain relievers including sumatriptan and zolmitriptan.  Your doctor may give you preventative medications including metoprolol tartrate, propranolol, amitriptyline, divalproex sodium, and topiramate. Many of the preventative medications are especially effective on migraines because they counteract blood vessel constriction or the painful dilation stage. Some antidepressants may also help prevent extremely bad headaches. If you suffer from cluster headaches, oxygen therapy is considered to be one of the best treatments. You will inhale oxygen through a face mask, and your headache may be relieved in as little as 15 minutes. Oxygen therapy is most effective when used right at the start of a headache. You must resume treatment when another headache begins. There are other, more rare treatments you may want to discuss with your doctor. These include botox injections and  transcranial magnetic stimulation.  There are some studies showing that Botox, which is the Botulinum toxin type A, can help relieve and prevent bad headaches. Discuss this with your doctor should your headache not improve with standard therapy. Transcranial magnetic stimulation uses electric currents to stimulate nerve cells in the brain, which may help minimize the pain associated with headaches as well as their recurrence.
A:
Consult your physician. Ingest prescription or preventative medications. Try oxygen therapy for cluster headaches. Consider other treatments.