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March 3, 2025 3 mins

March 23rd 2025

Yuriy describes how fear has evolved for the people in Ukraine, shifting from an abstract concept to a practical reality as they learned to live under the constant threat of shelling and missile strikes. Now, as uncertainty looms again, they find themselves gripped by a familiar yet paralyzing fear of the unknown, making it hard to find solace and hope in the chaos.

Yuriy's latest substack article: https://open.substack.com/pub/yuriymatsarsky/p/kurd-klux-klan?r=dzvo1&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

You can email Yuriy, ask him questions or simply send him a message of support: fightingtherussianbeast@gmail.com    You can help Yuriy and his family by donating to his GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-yuriys-family  

Yuriy’s Podbean Patron sign-up to give once or regularly: https://patron.podbean.com/yuriy  

Buy Yuriy a coffee here: https://bmc.link/yuriymat 

Subscribe to his substack: https://yuriymatsarsky.substack.com/ 

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TRANSCRIPT: (Apple Podcasts & Podbean app users can enjoy accurate closed captions)  

  

It's 3rd of March. 

It's strange how quickly fear evolves before the full scale war began. When the Russians were amassing troops at our borders, and their TV was filled with promises to destroy Ukraine in a matter of days, fear was vague- people, myself included, we are afraid of an abstract war. It was terror of something unknown and not yet fully understood. 

After the invasion began, fear transformed almost immediately. People became afraid of shelling, missile strikes and sought shelter from loud noises. Over time, even that fear changed. People learned to distinguish what was exploding and how far it was just by sound to know whether they needed to hide.

Our children in kindergarten can identify artillery calibers by sound and understand whether the artillery can reach them. Fear didn't disappear; it simply adapted, became more practical- more, if I may say so, functional. 

But now the same fear of unknown, that existed before the full scale war is rising again. Once again, we are faced with uncertainty. We don't know what comes next for us, our fate, the fate of our children, is being decided behind our back without our participation. We are treated like goods with powerful players want to sell for their own profit, and if no buyer is found, simply discard us. Discard living people. People who did not start this war, who never brought weapons to foreign lands, who are only defending their own . 

This fear keeps us awake at night, clouds our judgment, and makes it impossible to live normally. We all try to distract ourselves in some way. I, for example, have started to write about the Middle East on Substack again, but it does not help much. Uncertainty is a terrify thing. It's no coincidence they say that waiting for death is worse than death itself, and we don't even know what we are waiting for- for death, betrayal being sold out to Putin, or if we're just being scared for some incomprehensible purpose. But regardless, it's terrifying. 

Of course, fear has been with us all these years. But we had hope, the free world showed at us that we are not alone, that it stood with us. But now the free world is lost in confusion. And that confusion could come at the high price, not just for us, but for everyone else too. 

It's so strange, when the full scale war began. My daughter was 16, in just a few days, she will turn 20. The Russians stole her best years. War stole them. And the

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
It's 3rd of March.
It's strange how quickly fear evolvesbefore the full scale war began.
When the Russians were amassingtroops at our borders, and their TV
was filled with promises to destroyUkraine in a matter of days, fear
was vague- people, myself included,we are afraid of an abstract war.

(00:23):
It was terror of something unknownand not yet fully understood.
After the invasion began, feartransformed almost immediately.
People became afraid of shelling,missile strikes and sought
shelter from loud noises.
Over time, even that fear changed.
People learned to distinguish what wasexploding and how far it was just by

(00:47):
sound to know whether they needed to hide.
Our children in kindergarten can identifyartillery calibers by sound and understand
whether the artillery can reach them.
Fear didn't disappear; it simplyadapted, became more practical-
more, if I may say so, functional.

(01:09):
But now the same fear of unknown,that existed before the full
scale war is rising again.
Once again, we are faced with uncertainty.
We don't know what comes nextfor us, our fate, the fate of our
children, is being decided behindour back without our participation.

(01:29):
We are treated like goods withpowerful players want to sell
for their own profit, and if nobuyer is found, simply discard us.
Discard living people.
People who did not start this war,who never brought weapons to foreign
lands, who are only defending their own
. This fear keeps us awake at night, clouds our judgment, and makes

(01:53):
it impossible to live normally.
We all try to distractourselves in some way.
I, for example, have started to writeabout the Middle East on Substack
again, but it does not help much.
Uncertainty is a terrify thing.
It's no coincidence they say that waitingfor death is worse than death itself, and

(02:14):
we don't even know what we are waitingfor- for death, betrayal being sold out
to Putin, or if we're just being scaredfor some incomprehensible purpose.
But regardless, it's terrifying.
Of course, fear has beenwith us all these years.
But we had hope, the free worldshowed at us that we are not

(02:35):
alone, that it stood with us.
But now the free worldis lost in confusion.
And that confusion could comeat the high price, not just for
us, but for everyone else too.
It's so strange, whenthe full scale war began.
My daughter was 16, in justa few days, she will turn 20.

(02:57):
The Russians stole her best years.
War stole them.
And there is a danger that thisis only the beginning, that it's
not just three years of war, butthe first three years of war.
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