reporter: and galina, who s begging fo it all to end. please close the sky for ukrainian people. please. reporter: many of the survivors we spoke to no longer have windows or doors, all of them shattered by the blast. this on the first day of snow in much of the country, as russia continues to target water, electricity and heating. norah. o donnell: tough, tough situation, chris livesay, thank you. thanksgiving is just one week away and inflation is unfortunately on the menu. sticker shock is forcing some shoppers to visit multiple stores to find deals. cbs s carter evans shows us how you can save this holiday season. reporter: these days a big chunk of charlie heydt s budget goes into his shopping cart. how much are you spending? between 300 and 400 bucks, seriously. reporter: it s a week of groceries for his family of four. when your grocery bill is more than your car payment, that s crazy. reporter: julie chambers
i m not the way i was, she says. i haven t recovered. they haven t broken me, but i am lost deep down in my soul. now, somehow, galina and her neighbours must rebuild. but the trauma of occupation is writ large here. 0rla guerin, bbc news, lyptsi. 0ur correspondent hugo bachega in kyiv told us more about the attack on the dam in mr zelensky s home city. we had an update from the mayor of the city of kryvyi rih earlier this morning, saying that more than 100 houses had been flooded. residents had been evacuated. but he said the situation was under control. this is president zelensky s hometown. yesterday, in his nightly address, he described it
it s even hard to breathe. nearby, the spot where the occupiers did target practice. local people say there were russian and chechen forces here. the conditions are pretty squalid. they ve left a lot of ammunition boxes behind. some of them even fled without their boots, which were left outside. but over here on the wall, one interesting detail. a single word, which someone has written in broken english. sorry. galina says they should be sorry. her garden used to be carpeted with lilies. now, it s littered with the debris of a russian attack. she tells me the occupiers hid in the trees and fired day and night.
blocking traffic on a busy road and road learning the hard way to not mess with angry italian motorist saw this little girl from galina is amazing. in case you didn t hear that ,. that is a judge cackling and she loves cigaret smellis that is definitely in my world. everything about that . he evenn being polite. he was polite. sorry. is there a question on the table just watch you that it s so much fun. one of the chicksuch gets pulled by her hair is even better. i obviously there s peoplein that are better. you know, this is something and somebody could be going with emergency. you know what this is?
talk of operating under fire, saving the lives of wounded civilians, but in terrible danger themselves. were these the missiles that hit the hospital? i ask the hospital director what she thinks about western sanctions. galina thinks some countries don t understand what is happening here. she says perhaps they don t believe it, but they should. hungary has already said it will veto the ban on oil imports. with the wreckage of war all around, many ukrainians struggle to understand why the west would even hesitate about sanctioning russia. because the point you hear time and again here is that every dollar spent on russian oil and gas is funding a military that s doing all this. ukraine did defend its capital, but russia s war has shifted focus now. it hasn t stopped. sarah rainsford, bbc news, kyiv.