except for i was calling her. yeah. [ inaudible question ] go ahead. she had closer, please. she is currently in the icu. she lost a kidney due to her gunshot wound, but she s having a tough day today, but we re hopeful she ll make a full recovery. you said she played dead. can you convey what she went through? she s starting to remember things. it s going to be a very long road. obviously, physically, but mentally. she was shot through the back and it clipped her lung and got lodged in her kidney. so she s having lung problems with this also. she s jumpy, as you can imagine, when she hears a loud noise.
overblown but now we re underplaying it? well at least we were a little jumpy in the years after september 11th. understandably we were getting our bearings and trying to figure out how to deal with it. now, i don t think we re jumpy enough. i disagree with geraldo. i like these warnings. keep calm and carry on. how does it effect your life specifically geraldo? a hot dog vendor said that doesn t look right to me. exactly. someone saw something. that didn t blow up killing thousands of people. the only reason it was noticed is because the bomb was a dud. if the bomb had worked as planned, it would have blown up,
at that point, we were kind of with this small group of soldiers. kind of made a camp there in the jungle, and we just waited. so i m thinking, okay. so this is the farc, the left wing, you know, the freedom fighters. they were young, really young, kids, really. 16, 17, 18 years old. i wasn t an expert about the farc, but i had some pretty pointed questions, kind of philosophical stuff. but any conversation that i tried to engage them with just didn t go anywhere. they were curious about robert s ipod. they wanted to talk about music. they wanted to talk about their families. mi madre. si. at night they were kind of jumpy. and i think that kind of comes with being in the jungle for as long as they had been. it was just on the edge of darkness. it became more this distinct
at night they were kind of jumpy. and i think that kind of comes with being in the jungle for as long as they had been. it was just on the edge of darkness. it became more this distinct noise. and i asked if anyone else heard it. it was distant, but it was low. it kept building in intensity over the span of maybe four or five minutes. the soldiers started to become alarmed, because it continued to get louder and louder and louder. is that a helicopter? we were thinking maybe it was a helicopter. but the sound was becoming more complex. there was this kind of clicking, almost like a metallic sound. now the soldiers are totally spooked. and their little squad leader is telling them to take positions. and they don t want to go. we re all like what do you think
at that point, we were kind of with this small group of soldiers. kind of made a camp there in the jungle, and we just waited. so i m thinking, okay. so this is the farc, the left wing, you know, the freedom fighters. they were young, really young, kids, really. 16, 17, 18 years old. i wasn t an expert about the farc, but i had some pretty pointed questions, kind of philosophical stuff. but any conversation that i tried to engage them with just didn t go anywhere. they were curious about robert s ipod. they wanted to talk about music. they wanted to talk about their families. mi madre. si. at night they were kind of jumpy. and i think that kind of comes with being in the jungle for as long as they had been.