Share.

17 Comments

  1. How absolutely brain dead do you have to be to go โ€œyou know what Iโ€™m bored letโ€™s vacation in an active war zone.โ€

  2. Im originally from Spain moved to the US as a teenager, the fact that everything,everyone, every shop, bar, deli you name it it shuts down like lights off barred windows giving the sense "if you dare even knock before 4pm you will be shot, not a kill shot but none the less a bullet wound" See in Spain dinner is at 1 or 1:30pm and it's followed by a nap or siesta as it's called there. Everyone there thinks that the entire country shutting down is not weird, well when you become not only Americanized but being from New York i became SUPER Americanized and went back to spain and the entire siesta business makes no sense to me and should be abolished, this may be the #1 reason that our economy is in the World's shitter! You got the gift! I wanna see you on Netflix

  3. Ukraine on the first days of the war: "I am in danger"
    Ukraine now: "I'm not in danger, Skyler. I AM the danger! I am the one who KNOCKS"

  4. Ukrainians are very brave and resilient. Spoke to my friend a few days ago. He is taking are of elderly mother right now. Her shoulder is broken from the fall and beside that she have hard time walking. They live in Kiev. When Iโ€™m asking how are they, what can I help them with? He tells me not to worry! These people live without electricity, running water and heat for days at the time – and HE TELLS me not to worry and that they are ok. He said, our ancestors lived like that whole their lives and we can to for a bit. Itโ€™s a minor problem in the whole scheme of things, our solders are in much more dire conditions on the first linesโ€ฆ And russians want to overtake these people – NEVER! Thank you for your support and help! ๐Ÿ™๐Ÿป๐Ÿ™๐Ÿป๐Ÿ™๐Ÿป

  5. After a while, In the west you keep doing your thing when the alarms go off. In the east you keep doing your thing when you hear a missile flying and after you hear it landing ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™€๏ธ human beings get used to everything

  6. Remembering at very-very beginning I stuck in village right on the frontline in the middle between two hills with one side of conflicts and another – no power, no gas, winter, 1 store are closed, 1 are bombed and suddenly few trucks with food for sale arrived. I bought 2 25 kg bags of groats, cigarettes and carry all this back. Suddenly, hear whistling of artillery shell, falling down to snow and in 100 metes from me exploding shells. I crawled with that bags to drainage ditch and sit there till all became silent. Then stand and continue walk to home.
    And things like this happens 6 or 7 times. I have no idea what can scared me after all this.

    On job interview on question about my stress-tolerance I could answer – I'm Ukrainian who lived on borderland near frontline during whole war

Leave A Reply