generic checklist disaster, these are the chemicals most common, let s check him off the list, what is way more complicated than that. i heard heart-wrenching pain from actual people, to your point carey, who have been going through something that they never imagined. and then the trauma of not knowing whether your water is actually safe to drink. not knowing whether air is actually safe to breathe. despite what the government, whether at the state level or the federal level, is telling you. because you see all these animals dying. not only that, i heard other symptoms tonight. i heard them describe, they still vomiting, some of the people in town are still vomiting. a lot of them are getting bloody noses. i hadn t heard that symptom. they re going to the hospital cause there s such strong bloody noses. i do know those still happening until tonight. i will just stay, i think it would ve been yet another scandal for the ceo not to have shown up to something that cnn
a lot of people are listening. but generally education education to potential victims out there but also education in terms of policy and courtrooms. where often again, women either do not bring it to a courtroom because they are afraid because they self blame. or they get blamed in the courtroom because it is not understood. that in fact freezing is probably the most common thing to happen to a woman during a sexual assault. that is because the flight or fight response is basically moved into a freeze response because the woman does not see a quick exit to the situation. and because she fears escalate the violence against her as this person said she feared. until i think, lawyers understand this and judges understand this, basically the public at large it is hard to make a shift.
when they re hearing the trains and are having these emotional responses, what can they do about that? and what does that mean? sure, it s called retraumatization. someone who s survived a trauma is potentially gonna have something that makes them feel exactly like they did in the moment of that original trauma. i grew up in a small town downriver from east palestine, it was a steel town with lots of train tracks. when i was in east palestine yesterday, i was talking to people about that experience. they were saying how they hear every whistle now. growing up in a town like that, you don t hear the trains really on a day-to-day basis. it just becomes part of the the noise around you. so, they are. they re hearing it. they re having a freeze response. they have a physical response to that. there are things they can do, there are things that the local community has put in place with a lot of attention and support from us since the night of the