Mentally, physically, and emotionally. the court ordered dwight get psychological help. connie built a successful career as a radiologist. she even wrote a book on breast cancer screening. by 2016, dwight s spousal support had ended. so had the visits with his son. connie no longer had to see her ex-husband in court. but she and rick remained hypervigilant, especially about her son. you don t get to just say, let s go to the movies. you have to scan the parking lot. in early june, 2018, when rick saw the news about the shootings of steve pitt and the two paralegals at elizabeth feldman s law firm, he came to an undenial conclusion. i was certain who it was. it s dwight jones. his first thought was, he had to find connie. i immediately start to text her to call me. start calling her phone.
Not there, she s going to get killed? you really don t need to be doctor pit to come up with a determination of what would eventually happen. their worries only increase in 2013, when connie s final protective order against white expired. and he was able to legally purchase a gun. he told me he would wait until my defenses were down, and he would get me. by then, connie had started carrying a gun of her own. rick trained or how to use it. if and when the day came that dwight confronted her. prepared for it mentally, physically, and emotionally. she is trained for it. a court order that dwight get psychological help. there s no evidence he ever complied. instead, dwight isolated himself at his extended stay hotel for years. connie built a successful career as a radiologist. she even wrote a book on breast cancer screening. by 2016, dwight spousal support had ended. so had the visits with his son. connie no longer had to see her ex husband in court, but she and rick remained
It didn t take long to find proof without me and my colleague anna who has long hair, which is absolute not our visit with crowe for. we went up visit with crowe for. we went up to see if the car would go for her. ~ , , , for her. within seconds it swooped- for her. within seconds it swooped. the for her. within seconds it swooped. the talk i for her. within seconds it swooped. the talk of i for her. within seconds it swooped. the talk of the | for her. within seconds it i swooped. the talk of the town in this part of london. dozens of people with their own terrifying experience. i of people with their own terrifying experience. i knew the re terrifying experience. i knew they re attacking terrifying experience. i knew they re attacking people i terrifying experience. i knew they re attacking people but| they re attacking people but they they re attacking people but they were attacking women, women they were attacking women, women with long hair. i thought i women with long
There s a concern and focus on whether customers/deposits will feel okay about keeping their money and business with those institutions. we did, by the way, learn over the last several weeks that for the most part, deposits have not fled these regional lenders. there s speculation there s more down side to come. these things often create opportunities on the flip side. what are you watching for tomorrow? it s connected. the fed has to be hypervigilant, inflation and employment. those things can be at odds with each other. there s so much nuance and complication around what the fed has to do. by raising interest rates, you reduce the value of government and mortgage bonds that these banks hold. that could put undo stress on the banks. now at the same time, if these banks are under stress and
for this acute period tonight, we recommend going to sleep a little earlier if possible. sometimes reducing light in the environment in the evening is going to help promote sleep. and avid alcohol tonight. get up at the same time you would otherwise get up. if you re sleepy tomorrow, and you need to take a nap, little that to 15 or 20 minutes is so you don t prevent your brain from being able to fall asleep tomorrow night. and then it s important to be hypervigilant about protecting our sleep, which is so critical to brain health and total body health. do you have tips for parents? i have a 9-month-old. she s a great sleeper. any tips to get through this? i would avoid a the lot of activity in the evening and avoid light in the evening. and try to keep your child or baby on their regular sleep
Because these things have been shot down over frozen, arctic territory at the moment. it s kind of hard recovery effort is not gonna be as fast as we might want. i want to choose the idea that we re just being hypervigilant now. as opposed to their shifts way more unidentified flying objects now hovering over our airspace. thank you very much, helene cooper. i hope we re not even the same thing next week. pentagon correspondent, helene cooper. thank you so much. let s play a game. who said this? we re going to close the unproductive tax loopholes that allowed somebody to avoid paying their fair share. is it president biden or is that former president ronald reagan? the answer after the break. answer after the break fall asleep naturally, plus extended-release b-vitamins. wake up feeling refreshed. pure zzzs. sleep better. wake up your best.
Hypervigilant in this case. it sounds like the details of this are quite different from the other balloon, including that there s not really much of an indication that there were any communications going back and forth. the size of the balloon was far smaller. but i think they re trying to send a message that they know what s up there an they re going to take it down if it comes close to the united states. i think the white house also probably this is a bit of a guess they don t mind the narrative that they re shooting things down. i think a lot of americans parole got a jolt of patriotism last weekend to see f-22s flying out an shooting down a giant chinese balloon. i think that that s probably not a bad thing to tap into that a little bit. what do you think? well, i mean, look, they re clearly acutely aware of how it looked, right, and the way that it played from a political perspective. clearly when we were talking about this on your show a little bit earlier this week, the
The biden white house is probably very angry at itself for having mishandled this because when the mar-a-lago materials became so politically significant, that should have sparked an interest on the part of the president in what might have become interfiled in his vice presidential materials. under our current system how do we know that s not what this is? i mean, if the discovery was in november, the first discovery in november, might that be trying to be hypervigilant, going through materials, searching old offices, and lo and behold, here we are? yes or no on that? the national archives went to former president trump s team to request materials that were clearly not in washington but
Trauma is an experience which is very painful for many people, whether it s through war, whether it s through other experiences such as covid. these are highly stressful situations that people go through and they remain for a very long time. so the response is either fight or flight. and in my case, of course, through wartime afghanistan, i was in that mode fight orflight, and when i came to the uk as a, as a child refugee, although i was safe from the bombs, but the experience in my mind were there and my physiological response through being hypervigilant, seeing flashbacks of a sniper taking my head off or seeing the red buses on london streets turning into tanks. these are the symptoms and the signs of ptsd, post traumatic stress disorder. and they re not exclusively that i experienced, many refugees, many migrants or people who go through extreme circumstances, they go through that and the mind somehow
These are highly stressful situations that people go through and they remain for a very long time. so the response is either fight or flight. and in my case, of course, through wartime afghanistan, i was in that mode fight orflight, and when i came to the uk as a, as a child refugee, although i was safe from the bombs, but the experience in my mind were there and my physiological response through being hypervigilant, seeing flashbacks of a sniper taking my head off or seeing the red buses on london streets turning into tanks. these are the symptoms and the signs of ptsd, post traumatic stress disorder. and they re not exclusively that i experienced, many refugees, many migrants or people who go through extreme circumstances, they go through that and the mind somehow tries to suppress. it s a defense mechanism to bottle it up. and if we do look back to you as a five year old child and the extraordinary trauma you went through trying