How To Family Share On Steam

With Valve‘s Steam You can gift games to your friends on Steam. While it’s an interesting feature, you may also not the feel the urgency to buy games repeatedly for your next of kin. You can save a lot of money by just sharing your games library with them. This is possible, all thanks to the ‘Family Sharing’ feature on Steam.

However, you can’t simultaneously access a particular game with the shared user. Doing so will prompt the shared user to ‘exit’ the game or buy it instead.

So, in order to Family Share on Steam, either of the accounts, i.e. of the parent and the child, should have the Steam Guard enabled for secure verification processes, during login attempts. You may refer our guide further to know about all the necessary steps required to share games on Steam.

Objective 1: To Enable Steam Guard

  1. Log in to the account on Steam for which you want the game to be shared.
  2. Access the settings from the ‘Steam’ menu located in the left upper corner. You shall get a box enlisting all the necessary user preferences.
  3. In the ‘Accounts’ section, click on ‘View Account Details’ as highlighted in the image above. It shall redirect you to a page within the local steam browser.
  4. Scroll down to find ‘Account Security’. Click on ‘Manage Steam Guard’.
    steam guard
  5. The above step will lead you to a page enlisting several options based on which you want to receive the Steam Guard codes. Select the one desirable to you.
  6. Close and restart Steam on the same device.

Objective 2: To access the shared Steam Game library

  1. Login to the parent account from where you want to family share on Steam.Note: You can login to the parent steam account on ten different known devices. Especially relevant, only five steam accounts can access the parent’s game library.
  2. Log out from the parent account.
  3. Login back to the user with whom the games are to be shared with. Click on library located in the ‘Games’ menu.
  4. Now you shall be able to see all the list of games, in the library, owned by the parent.
  5. Click on any game from the parent’s library and hit the ‘Play/Install’ Doing so, shall reveal a message, asking you to request access from the parent account.
    family share on steam
  6. Click on ‘Send Request’. The parent then shall receive a mail to authorize the request. Ask him/her to do so by visiting the authorization link attached with the email.
    how to share games on steam
  7. You shall now be able to access all the games available in the parent account.

To allow other local accounts to gain access, the parent can authorize them in the ‘Family section’ available in the settings.

While the games have been shared, it is also important for the owner to monitor the users who have access to his her/her entire games library. Fortunately, Steam allows you to do so with the ‘Family View’ feature. It can be accessed again in the ‘Family menu’ located in the settings. To know more about the family view and how it works, you may visit the following link.

Note: Not all the games support the Steam family sharing feature. This is mainly because of issues related to subscription, licenses, third-party clients, etc.

How To Revoke Family Access?

You might want to revoke the library access for an authorized user. The steps mentioned below shall guide you on how to do so.

  1. Access the Steam settings in the parent account. Go to the ‘Family’ section.
  2. Click on ‘Manage other accounts’ to lead you to a page enlisting the list of all the authorized users, who have the right to access your games library.
  3. Click on ‘revoke’ for the user you want to abandon your library access.

Do you still have any queries on how to family share on steam? Then let us know in the comments section below. You may also watch the video below for a detailed walkthrough on the entire process discussed above.

How To Family Share On Steam , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

Game of Thrones Season 7 trailer gears up for all-out war

We’re now less than two months out from the return of Game of Thrones. If you’ve been watching this long, you’re no doubt excited for its return, but HBO has decided that you aren’t excited enough. To bring all of us to proper hype levels, HBO has released the official trailer for Game of Thrones‘ seventh season. The trailer doesn’t … Continue reading

Nokia 3310 released, but you shouldn’t buy this retro reboot

This week the folks at Nokia have released their most popular phone – or their most notorious phone – in a full retro reboot styling. That is the Nokia 3310, re-released with new technology inside a casing that looks much like the original device. The original device became synonymous with both being ubiquitous as a smartphone – the smartphone – … Continue reading

'How To Dance While Holding A Drink' Is A Both A Lesson And Cautionary Tale

Dancing is like pizza: everyone thinks they know what the best looks like, but there’s a good chance you were drunk at the time, and when you’re drunk it all looks good.

Comedian Randall Otis has all the moves you need to know to successfully drink and dance at the same time. 

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The DEA Misled Congress About Deadly Shooting In Honduras

WASHINGTON — The Drug Enforcement Administration misled Congress about a 2012 shooting in Honduras that left four innocent people dead, including a 14-year-old boy, according to a new report from the Justice Department’s internal watchdog.

A DEA agent in a helicopter gave an order to fire upon a passenger boat in Ahuas, Honduras, on May 11, 2012. The boat, which was carrying 12 passengers, had came into contact with a small motorized canoe that had been used for drug smuggling and commandeered by a DEA agent and two Honduras police officers. The police officers in the smaller boat fired upon the larger boat, and a DEA agent in a helicopter ordered another Honduran police officer to fire upon the boat. Four people were killed, and no drugs were found. Some initial reports suggested there was a firefight, but there’s no evidence that anyone in the passenger boat fired at the officers.

The Inspector General report found that Operation Anvil was poorly planned, that the DEA misled Congress and the public about the role the agency played in the operation, and that the post-shooting review was significantly flawed. The deadly incident was the subject of a 2014 investigation by The New Yorker.

Read the report here.

The report also focuses on two separate shooting incidents involving DEA agents in the months following May 2012. The Honduran police misrepresented the incident in both cases, according to the report. In one instance, Honduran police officers apparently planted a weapon on the scene of a shooting in which two DEA officers fatally shot a pilot who had been unarmed but made “furtive movement” and disobeyed commands to exit a suspect plane that had crash landed.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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NYC Pride Will Make TV History With 2017 Broadcast

If you can’t make it to Manhattan for the 2017 LGBT Pride March, fear not: you’ll be able to enjoy it from the comfort of your own living room. 

WABC-TV has announced plans to partner with NYC Pride and broadcast the 48th annual event live for the first time on New York’s Channel 7 June 25. The march, which takes place on New York’s Fifth Avenue, will also be streamed on WABC-TV’s official website

NYC Pride Managing Director Chris Frederick called the forthcoming broadcast “an unprecedented opportunity” for the LGBTQ community’s “collective voices to be heard.” Other Pride-related events, including the PrideFest street festival and the Pride Luminaries Brunch, will also receive WABC-TV coverage. 

“In a time when there continues to be an effort to roll back the rights of LGBTQ individuals, it’s important that we are visible,” he told HuffPost. “As a kid in rural Ohio, if I had the opportunity to turn on the TV and see a sea of rainbows, I might not have felt so afraid. We look forward to everyone tuning into the broadcast and we thank ABC for giving us the opportunity to show the events that helped spark the Pride movement.” 

WABC-TV’s President and General Manager Dave Davis echoed those sentiments in a press release, noting that Channel 7 “prides itself on being able to bring important, local celebrations of community spirit to as many people as possible.”

We couldn’t be more thrilled with this move. 

For the latest in LGBTQ news, check out the Queer Voices newsletter. 

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Donald Trump Has Come To NATO, But Which Donald Trump?

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BRUSSELS ― The Donald Trump who shows up at Thursday’s NATO meeting could be Candidate Trump, who said the alliance had outlived its usefulness and was costing the United States too much.

Or maybe the Trump who shows up will be the President Trump of April 12, who declared that NATO had done what he had asked of it, and was no longer obsolete.

Or perhaps the Trump who shows up will be the President Trump of last week, who told graduating Coast Guard cadets: “I will strengthen old friendships and will seek new partners ― but partners who also help us. Not partners who take and take and take. Partners who help, and partners who help pay for whatever we are doing and all of the good we’re doing for them.”

And there, in a nutshell, is the quandary facing the 27 other members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Which Donald Trump will appear Thursday afternoon when the leaders of the 68-year-old alliance’s member nations meet at the new headquarters just outside town, what he will say once he’s in the room behind closed doors, and most important, will those words carry meaning beyond Thursday? These are the questions leaders from Europe and Canada have and likely still will have even after Trump is winging his back to Washington aboard Air Force One.

“Quite a lot of people in Europe are probably saying: OK, we’ve seen what he’s said, we’ve seen what he’s tweeted. Let’s see what he says now,” said Ben Nimmo, a former NATO spokesman.

Trump’s statements to date have already shown that he has neither the background nor the attentiveness necessary to appreciate why a strong alliance is in America’s interest, said Klaus Wittmann, a retired German armed forces general now with the Aspen Institute. 

“NATO he seems to regard like a private security firm: Only who pays will be protected,” Wittmann said.

We should ignore the more provocative statements … And don’t read the tweets.”
Defense analyst Bruno Lete

Others remain cautiously optimistic.

Norwegian defense minister Ine Eriksen Soreide said she recalled that when U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis met for the first time with his NATO counterparts in February, everyone was at the edge their seats, anxious to hear his message ― which, it turned out, was similar to that of previous defense secretaries.

“I think he delivered just brilliantly,” Soreide said. “Everyone went out of the meeting room very reassured. He has just jokingly sometimes referred to himself as the Secretary of Reassurance.”

And that, right there, might be the key that helps America’s European allies retain sanity through the Trump presidency, said Bruno Lete, a defense analyst with the German Marshall Fund of the United States in Brussels. He pointed out that Trump’s “America First” slogan notwithstanding, U.S. troops are now on the ground in Poland, a development that took place after Trump took office.

“So for us, that’s very comforting,” Lete said. “We should ignore the more provocative statements, stay calm, and look at the actions on the ground. And don’t read the tweets.”

Sharing the burden of defense 

The irony of a potential Trump-led pullback from NATO is that the United States was the driving force behind its creation at the end of World War II.

With the defeat of Hitler’s Germany came the westward advance of Stalin’s Soviet Union, which occupied much of Eastern Europe, including a portion of Germany, with no evident intention of leaving.

The lessons of World War I still relatively fresh, U.S. leaders decided to invest heavily in helping rebuild Western Europe, including Germany. It was the economic distress there, exacerbated by the penalties imposed on Germany by the World War I allies for its role in starting that war, that helped Hitler come to power in the first place.

In addition to the substantial economic assistance, and fearing continued Soviet expansion, the United States also left behind a sizeable military force in Europe.

“It was only after the Second World War, people realized, wait a minute, if we’re going to keep coming back every couple of years, maybe it will be better to keep troops here,” said Tomas Valasek, who until this spring had been Slovakia’s NATO representative and who now runs the Carnegie Europe think tank.

Key to the entire arrangement was the charter’s “Article 5,” which stated than an attack against one member would be treated like an attack on all, and bring a coordinated response ― a line in the sand meant to discourage the Soviets from pushing the Iron Curtain any farther west.

That status quo held for decades, until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the subsequent breakup of the Soviet Union. NATO members, including the United States, enjoyed a “peace dividend” by cutting defense spending.

What irked U.S. presidents for years, though, was that European nations cut their defense budgets proportionally far more than the United States did. The concept of “burden-sharing,” in which other NATO members would increase their own defense spending, was a U.S. priority long before Trump took office, and in fact became formalized in 2014.

That year, following the Islamic State terrorist group’s declaration of a “caliphate” ― in Syria, immediately adjacent to NATO member Turkey ― NATO as a group agreed that each nation would ramp up its defense spending to 2 percent of its economy by 2024. 

‘This is an older problem’

While Trump’s top military aides and national security staff know this history, it is unclear whether the president himself is fully aware of it ― or is aware of it beyond talking points he may receive prior to any given event.

Trump long complained that NATO was “obsolete” because it was created after World War II, because other countries weren’t paying enough and because it did not address terrorism. That critique ignored that the only time Article 5 has ever been invoked was on behalf of the United States following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington. NATO forces attacked al Qaeda and its Taliban hosts in Afghanistan, and troops from member nations remain there today.

Trump appeared to acknowledge the defense spending increases and the terrorism fight during the April 12 White House visit of NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg. Trump declared that the alliance was now doing as he had demanded, and that it was therefore no longer obsolete.

“We went from NATO is an obsolete alliance back in November or December, to NATO is no longer obsolete in April,” the German Marshall Fund’s Lete said. “So at least we made some progress, there.”

It did not take long, though, for Trump to revert to his earlier language. Barely a week later, with Italy’s Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni visiting, Trump again insisted that other NATO countries “pay their full and fair share for the cost of defense.” 

The president seems to have come to office with a zero-sum view.”

Trump has also repeatedly raised the issue of getting “back payments” from other countries. “I asked one simple question, I says is everybody paid up?” Trump said in an interview with Time magazine earlier this month. “These countries haven’t paid for years. Haven’t paid a fair amount for years. Billions, and billions, and billions and billions of dollars. And we’re paying. We’re paying for it.”

Talk like that frustrates Wittmann, the former general and German liaison to NATO. “To talk about ‘debts’ or ‘owing’ to the U.S. or to NATO is sheer nonsense and shows that he does not understand the system at all,” Wittmann said.

Carnegie Europe’s Valasek said Trump’s inability or unwillingness to see a broader benefit of European and global stability worries NATO leaders, particularly from smaller states in central and eastern Europe who were once on the Soviet side of the Iron Curtain. “The reason they worry is obvious. The president seems to have come to office with a zero-sum view,” he said. “There is only so much they can do to change President Trump’s mind.”

Valasek said that as the decades have passed and the memories of World War II have faded, it was inevitable that Americans would come to question the need for a military presence across the Atlantic. “This is an older problem. Trump has exacerbated it by having a zero-sum view of almost any transaction, not just foreign policy,” he said.

Perhaps out of necessity, current defense officials from NATO partners offer a more optimistic view. Norway’s Soreide pointed out that President George W. Bush was also deeply disliked and mistrusted in Europe because of the Iraq War ― and yet the NATO alliance did not ultimately suffer.

“It’s working out fine,” she said. “I think that in tumultuous times in the world, where things are turned a bit upside down as compared to what we are used to, we need to make sure that these working relationships that we’ve had for decades, they go on, and they are good, and they are solid, and we find a way to work the way we have done before.”

And that needs to happen, she said, even with Trump in the White House. “Regardless of if there is a Twitter feed that can be upsetting sometimes,” she said. “We still work on the issues that bind us together.”

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Evan Pricco Curates 'What In The World' At Urban Nation In Berlin

A new exhibition in Berlin’s neighborhood of Schöneberg epitomizes one of the central schisms that has vibrated through Street Art and graffiti for years: the question of where to draw boundaries between these two scenes.

Each may have been born in the margins of society but are now evermore commingled. Debates aside, everyone agrees that once in the gallery space, street become fine art after all. “The graffiti and Street Art movements – they have all these tentacles and they can be non-linear,” Evan says as we walk down a subterranean parking ramp to see a low, long outdoor mural by Sweden’s EKTA; an abstract series of roughly square patches that closely emulate the sewn panels he has suspended from the ceiling inside the gallery.

As Editor-in-Chief of the San Francisco based art magazine Juxtapoz and curator of this “What in the World” show at Urban Nation’s project space, Evan Pricco is well aware of the landmines that can explode when one is negotiating the terminologies and practices of sundry sub-cultural art manifestations that have bubbled to the surface in the last decades and which now often melt with one another inextricably.

“The graffiti and Street Art movements – they have all these tentacles and they can be non-linear,” Evan says as we walk down a subterranean parking ramp to see a low, long outdoor mural by Sweden’s EKTA; an abstract series of roughly square patches that closely emulate the sewn panels he has suspended from the ceiling inside the gallery.

Speaking of the tentacles, he continues, “It can be starting points to end points – it can be end points to starting points. There are all of these different cultures that grew out of that 1970s-80s set of counter-culture art movements.

“I think the people that I really wanted in this show are kind of on the periphery of that. They clearly dip their toe into those movements, are clearly influenced by them. Their practice doesn’t necessarily fit in with what is going on in Street Art and graffiti but also its informed by it.”

To introduce a new crop of artists to Urban Nation that haven’t been shown here yet, Pricco choses some of Europes street/mural/conceptual artists who emphasize color and mood, an expansionist approach that he welcomes at the magazine as well. Not surprisingly, the range reflects some of the same interests you’ll find flipping through the influential art publication; old school graffiti, commercial illustration, comic book history, abstract fine art, political art, some lowbrow, some conceptual. There is even Grotesk’s newsstand, the actual one that he designed and constructed with Juxtapoz that sat in Times Square in October 2015.

Primarily from Europe and raised in the hothouse of the 1990s epic graffiti scenes that enthralled youth in many EU big cities, this group of 7 artists each has moved their practice forward – which may lose them some street cred and gather new audiences.

Included are Berlin’s Daan Botlek, Sweden’s EKTA, Ermsy from France, Erosie from the Netherlands, Hyuro from Spain, Serge Lowrider from Switzerland and Zio Ziegler from the US. If you speak to any of them, you may find the commonality is the freedom they actively give themselves to pursue an autonomous artistic route not easily categorized.

Lowrider is clearly in love with the letter-form, as is the graffiti tradition, but he steers sharply toward the calligraphic practices of crisp sign-painting and inverting the pleasantly banal messaging of advertising from an earlier era. Perhaps the tight line work overlaps with tattoo and skater culture, two creative brethren frequently in the mix in graffiti and Street Art scenes.

Hyuro uses a figurative symbolism heavy with metaphor and a color palette that is too understated for the flashy graphics that many associate with today’s mural festivals, yet she’s built a dedicated following among Street Art fans who admire her poke-you-in-the-eye activist streak. Daan Botleks’ figures wander and cavort amidst an abstractedly shaped world calling to mind the shading of early graffiti and the volumizing pointillism of Seurat after some wine.

Painter Jeroen Erosie emphatically will tell you that he was in love with graffiti when he first did it on the streets as a teenager – and for many years afterwards. But he says he ultimately bristled at a scene that had once symbolized freedom to him but had become too rigid and even oppressive in its rules about how aesthetics should be practiced by people – if they were to earn respect within the clan.

At Saturday nights opening along Bülowstrasse with the front doors open to the busy street and with the sound of the elevated train swooshing by overhead, Erosie explained with a gleeful certainty his process of deconstruction that led him to this point. “I removed one of the pillars of graffiti from my work and I liked the result, the change. So I started to remove more pillars, one by one,” he says, describing the evolution that transformed his letter forms and colors into these simplified and bold bi-color icons that may call to mind Matisse’s cut outs more than graffiti bubble-tags, but you’ll easily draw the correlation if you try.

The Project M series of exhibitions over the past three years with Urban Nation, of which this is the 12th, have featured curators and artists from many backgrounds, disciplines, and geographies as well. The myriad styles shown have included sculpture, stencil, wheat paste, collage, calligraphy, illustration, screen-printing, decoupage, aerosol, oil painting, and even acrylic brush. It has been a carefully guided selection of graffiti/Street Art/urban art/fine art across the 12 shows; all presented respectfully cheek to jowl, side by side – happily for some, uncomfortably for others.

The ultimate success of the Project M series, initiated by UN Artistic Director Yasha Young, is evident in just how far open it has flung the doors of expectation to the museum itself. When the house opens in four months it will be a reflection to some extent 140 or so artists who pushed open those doors with variety of styles emblematic of this moment – converging into something called Urban Contemporary.

“What in the World” indeed: this show is in perfect alignment with the others in its wanton plumbing of the genres.

“I was trying to find people that are not part of the regular circuit – and I don’t mean that in a negative way but I mean there is kind of a regular circuit of muralism and Street Art right now – but I was looking for people who are really sort of on that periphery,” Pricco says. “Also because they are coming from these different parts of Europe, which to me sort of represents Juxtpoz’ reach, and they all kind of know each other but they’ve never really met – they all kind of bounce off of each other.”

Brooklyn Street Art: This grouping sounds anathema to the loyalty that is often demanded by these scenes – particularly the various graffiti scenes in cities around the world. You are describing an artistic practice that has a sort of casual relationship to that scene.

Evan Pricco: Right. And I think all of these artists have these graffiti histories but they weren’t completely satisfied with that kind of moniker or label. So it is slightly expanding out now. And then there’s something about them that makes me think of crafts, especially with Serge who is more of a sign-painter. I felt that all of these people approached their work in a way that felt very craft-oriented to me, and I really appreciated that. That’s kind of what I wanted to show too.

Brooklyn Street Art: Each of these artists appears to have a certain familiarity with the art world that is outside a more strict definition of street culture – graffiti and Street Art and their tributaries. Would you say that you could see a certain development of personal style in this collection of primarily European artists that might be due to exposure to formal art history or other cultural influences?

Evan Pricco: Good question, and that could be the case for a few of the artists in the show, but I think the characteristics of each artist in the show is more of a result of the world getting smaller and influences and boundaries just blurring. You can see it Ermsy’s pop-culture mash-ups, or Erosie’s exploration of lettering and color; it’s not really about one place anymore but a larger dialogue of how far the work reaches now than ever before.

Erosie and I were having this conversation this morning about this, this idea of access and influences being so widespread. And that is exactly what I wanted to do. “What In the World” is sort of a nod to not really having to have boundaries, or a proper definition, but a feeling that something is happening. Its not Street Art, its not graffiti, but its this new wave that is looking out, looking in, and finding new avenues to share and make work.

Brooklyn Street Art: From comic books to politics to activism to abstract to sign painting, this show spans the Hi-Low terrain that Juxtapoz often seeks to embrace in many ways. Is it difficult to find common threads or narratives when countenancing such variety?

Evan Pricco: We have been so fortunate with the magazine that we have been able to expand the content in the last few years, and the threads are starting to connect solely based on the idea that the creative life is what you make of it. There may not be a direct connection between Serge Lowrider and Mark Ryden, but there is a connection in the idea of craftsmanship and skill and how one goes about applying that skill in the art world. That is always wanted I wanted to help bring to Juxtapoz – this idea that variety in the art world is healthy and finds its own connections just in the fact that it exists and is being made.

Brooklyn Street Art: Many of these names are not household names, though some have ardent fans within more narrow channels of influence. What role does a curator play by introducing these artworks/artists to a new audience and what connections would you like a viewer to make?

Evan Pricco: First and foremost, these are some of my absolute favorite artists making work right now. I do have the advantage of traveling a lot and meeting different people and seeing their process, but I really wanted to bring together a group that I hadn’t personally met but admired and communicated with from afar.

I was thinking about this when I walked by Hyuro’s wall this morning. Her work is incredibly strong, and it has this really fascinating way of being a story and narrative from wall to wall while remaining fresh and really site-specific. Her work here just blew me away; its so subtle, has this really unique almost anonymous quality to it, but has a ton of thought and heart in it.

Really it would be great if the audience sees this and finds her other work, and starts seeing this really beautiful story emerging, these powerful political, social and economic commentaries. So really, I want that. I want this to be a gateway of looking at work and artists and then jumping into their really fantastically complex careers.

Brooklyn Street Art: Urban Nation has invited curators from around the world and Berlin during these 12 “Project M” shows, each with a take on what “art in the streets” is, how it has evolved, and how it is affecting contemporary art. What makes this show stand out?

Evan Pricco: I really do think what makes it stand out is that it represents all the things Juxtapoz stands for; Opening up an audience to something new and different. I think there is an aesthetic that the Project M shows have had, which I like, but I didn’t want to repeat what everyone had done before.

This is most definitely a Juxtapoz show; I mean our damned Newsstand that Grotesk designed is right in the middle of the space. But that is like this “representation” of the print mag, and all the walls around it are the avenues the magazine can take you; sign painting, textiles, graffiti, abstraction, conceptual art, murals, comics, politics. … So maybe in that way, the fact that the magazine is 23 years old and has covered such a big history of Lowbrow, Graffiti and other forms of art, this is a nice encapsulation of the next wave and generation.

“What In the World: The Juxtapoz Edition” presented by Urban Nation will be on display through June 2017. 

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Trump And Melania Hold Hands In Sistine Chapel, Observe 'Last Judgement'

President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump are in Rome, Italy as their third stop in their first international trip as POTUS and FLOTUS. 

After an early morning meeting with Pope Francis, 

On Wednesday, the pair was photographed in St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City:

The couple also visited the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City, with one particular photo featuring Trump and Melania embracing as they looked upon Michelangelo’s controversial painting, “The Last Judgement.”  

“The Last Judgement” features Jesus Christ in the moment preceding when the verdict of the Last Judgement is decided ― a moment in Catholicism where a soul is sent to heaven, purgatory, or hell.

Despite that, the embrace between the first couple is quite nice to see. Both Trump and Melania’s religious beliefs aren’t completely clear, but affiliations aside the moment they’re sharing in the photographs is poignant. And after several days of hand-holding fumbles, they appear to be taking in the Vatican’s history with grace and emotion.

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How To Make The Most Of A 3-Day Weekend

The weather is finally heating up in many areas of the country, just in time for Memorial Day. A season of lake trips, barbecues and sunny days is on the horizon. So, to spend the first long weekend in front of the television would be almost criminal. 

“If we don’t plan our weekends, they just kind of go by,” Phoenix-based productivity expert Nicole Bandes told HuffPost. “Be intentional with the time you’re going to have for the three days.”

The key here is balance. You certainly don’t have to plan each moment of the long weekend. But making time for a few activities can leave you recharged and happier once the holiday has passed.

Here are some expert and research-backed ideas on how to make the most of your Memorial Day Weekend while improving your wellbeing in the process:

1. Enjoy a staycation.

Sure, adventures like camping can be fun, but they also require a lot of work to plan. This may lead to feeling the opposite of relaxed, Bandes said. (Unless, of course, you are a hardcore camper and you wait all year to go. You do you!) 

Instead of tackling a big trip, she recommends trying activities that are close to where you live. For example, visiting a local winery, going to the zoo or checking out a nearby waterfront are all low-effort ways to recharge your batteries. 

2. Tackle a big project.

A three-day weekend is a great opportunity to tackle the “never-quite-get-to” projects, Bandes said. This could come in the form of painting a room, clearing out the garage, working on the car or finally getting around to organizing your closet using the Konmari method (which comes with its own added wellness perks).

3. Host a group gathering.

Invite family or friends over for a meal over the weekend. A meal-centric hangout with your crew can bring some perks: Not only are there psychological benefits to baking for other people, research shows that being around a best friend can help lower stress.

4. Take a digital detox.

Some research suggests that too much time on your devices is correlated with more negative thoughts, anxiety and depression. 

Bandes recommends putting your phone away for a few hours or even half a day. It’ll pay off: unplugging every so often can increase focus, lower stress, increase sleep quality and help you think more creatively. 

5. Volunteer for a worthy cause.

Carve out some time this weekend all in the name of generosity. 

A 2013 study found that people who volunteer are more likely to improve their overall wellbeing and life satisfaction than people who aren’t altruistic. Giving and unselfishness is also associated with having a lower risk of early death, a stronger marriage and decreased depression

6. Catch up on sleep.

Schedule in some rest. An estimated 1 in 3 American adults are not getting enough sleep on a regular basis, according to a 2016 report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Good sleep makes your memory sharper, improves mood and focus and literally clears your mind: Neurological science shows that proper sleep clears toxins which build up in the brain

7. Plan your next vacation.

The happiest part of vacation isn’t necessarily the vacation itself: Research shows wellbeing boosts with the anticipation prior to leaving. Use a couple of hours over the three-day weekend to get yourself pumped for the next big trip you’d like to take. Search for locations, places to stay, how much it will cost and what you might need to save in order to go.

8. Go dancing.

Busting a move isn’t just fun ― it’s actually really good for your health. Dancing contributes to a healthy heart, improves stamina, strengthens bones and muscles and keep illnesses at bay.

You don’t have to be Fred Astaire, either. Turn up the beats in your living room, grab your partner, kids or go for it solo. You need little more than your favorite song to do something good for your body, and let’s be real, just let loose. Here are some happy tunes that can help get the dance party started.

9. Optimize your back-to-work-plan.

Many people feel stressed out by their workload after a few days out of the office. It’s actually a major reason Americans say they don’t want to take off in the first place. But streamlining your tasks can help you feel empowered walking back into work, rather than anxious.

Set aside a little time to get organized the day before you head back into the office. List high-priority tasks to take care of first thing so you can hit the ground running ― and refreshed.

Because truly feeling refreshed is the whole point of enjoying a long weekend. 

“From a productivity standpoint, [you want] to be able to do a thorough recharge,” Bandes said.

Recharge and refresh? Challenge accepted. 

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