conflicts in europe. and it is very important once the conflict is over, and even as it goes on, to understand what it is about. to understand what lessons we learn from it. and probably there are other ways to look at that. but i think that history offers one of the most effective ways of framing and understanding, because history brings in experience, history brings in and tries to understand the roots. and if i m able to contribute to this process, well, at least part of that ambition, i hope. i hope will come true. well, it s been a real pleasure having you in the hardtalk studio. serhii plokhy, thank you very much indeed. thank you. it was a pleasure.
dark, low, miserable? no, not at all. no, no, i mean. well, 10% of the time, yes. and i had some very bad times to begin with, but i m lucky i m well at the moment, you know? and what i have to constantly remind myself of is that, even if i knew i only had six months left to live, it would make no difference to the way i m living now. and that, to me, is an enormous privilege, and i m very fortunate. henry marsh, we have to end there, but thank you very much for coming in to the hardtalk studio. my pleasure. thank you. hello. well, it s going to be cold
does well, we can afford better health care. but it is a huge problem. and there are no easy answers to it. as with climate change, there are no easy answers. if i may, i want to bring you back to the deeply personal as we end. you clearly, having spent a career confronting death in others, now have spent the last few months really looking death in the eye from a very personal point of view. and has it made you feel dark, low, miserable? no, not at all. no, no, i mean. well, 10% of the time, yes. and i had some very bad times to begin with, but i m lucky i m well at the moment, you know? and what i have to constantly remind myself of is that, even if i knew i only had six months left to live, it would make no difference to the way i m living now. and that, to me, is an enormous privilege, and i m very fortunate. henry marsh, we have to end there, but thank you very much for coming in to the hardtalk studio. my pleasure.
henry marsh, we have to end there, but thank you very much for coming in to the hardtalk studio. my pleasure. thank you. still very balmy out there for some of us for a late october night. 15 16 celsius, and wednesday promises to be another mild day. quite breezy and lots of showers in the forecast, too. 0ur tropical air arrived a couple of days ago, it s still with us, it was very warm yesterday in the south southeast, 21 celsius we won t quite get that today, but i want to show you the origins of this current affair, so this is the north atlantic and it s all very warm air across the atlantic, and here we have the caribbean. this is where the air has come from it s obviously cooled,
and has it made you feel dark, low, miserable? no, not at all. no, no. imean. well, 10% of the time, yes. and i had some very bad times to begin with, but i m lucky i m well at the moment, you know? and what i have to constantly remind myself of is that even if i knew i only had six months left to live, it would make no difference to the way i m living now. and that, to me, is an enormous privilege, and i m very fortunate. henry marsh, we have to end there, but thank you very much for coming in to the hardtalk studio. my pleasure. thank you. still very balmy out there for some of us