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Welcome back to Not Alone with Melissa Sue Methman, where we share stories of resilience, hope, and we inspire that there's always light across the darkness.
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Today's episode features a powerful woman that truly embodies resiliency and grace.
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Dr.
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Gita Harb is born in a war-torn country in Beirut, Lebanon, where she lived in fear on a daily basis.
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Yet her faith, courage, and resilience brought her across the oceans, living a life of purpose.
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She truly embodies what it is to live with courage and with the heart and with purpose.
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So take a deep breath, open your heart and join us in this inspiring conversation today.
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So welcome, Dr.
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Hart.
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What a beautiful little introduction.
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Thank you.
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I'm so glad to be here, Melissa.
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I am honored.
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And I know you are a dentist, you are an entrepreneur, you're the host of Smile Diaries, and now an author as well.
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Yes.
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So you're just such an inspiration.
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And I love, I love seeing strong women like you that just are such a powerhouse.
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Thank you.
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Love to see women rise and shine.
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But I know that comes sometimes where we kind of forget about ourselves.
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And I just want to start, first of all, with your story, where you're from, because it's an incredible story.
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I mean, okay, first of all, when people look at you, you see that beautiful smile, beautiful heart.
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You're successful, you have your husband, two kids.
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Yeah.
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But they have no clue.
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Correct.
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No idea where you came from and what it took to get to where you're at today.
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So I'd love to start with.
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Yeah, 100%.
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I think most people, when they look at you, they don't know what you've been through and they don't know your story, and they think you've had it easy, and success was just an overnight thing, as we were talking about last night.
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And for me, my story just started out with, you know, being born into a war-torn country.
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I was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and my entire childhood was just really spent in a lot of it in bomb shelters underneath our house.
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And uh sleeping sometimes, you know, three, four days and not seeing daylight, sleeping on cement floors, cold cement floors, and the government would shut off the electricity, so we wouldn't have electricity, so we'd have to either have a candlelight or lanterns.
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And um, you know, living in fear.
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It was constant fear where you're always in fight or flight mode and not knowing if you're gonna survive.
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If you're and what's your earliest like memory?
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Is that like what that you remember all of?
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The earliest memory, I was probably I want to say four years old, maybe three or four years old.
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And I remember the whistling and the noise of the bombs kind of coming towards our house and our neighborhood.
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And you know, just the running and the screaming and just getting ready to just run downstairs.
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And sometimes you have a second, sometimes you don't have even a millisecond to run.
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And so this constant fear of I'm gonna lose my house, I'm gonna lose my parents, I'm gonna lose my family, I'm gonna lose my limbs, I'm gonna lose my life.
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And so that was pretty much my childhood.
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Although there was a lot of good days in Lebanon, and it's I always say it's a beautiful country and a beautiful.
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I've heard it's a very beautiful country.
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Yeah.
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But there were so many moments throughout my childhood and teenage years, and it was 14 years of it.
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I think I survived probably about five wars because every, almost every year, it was this person fighting that person, or this militia fighting that militia, or this country, you know, bombing us.
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And so it was constant just fear and constant dodging bombs.
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And sometimes we'd be at school and they would start bombing.
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And so the school would call my, you know, our parents and come get your kids.
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And so they would come and drive under bombs and try to get us home under bombs, and you'd never know where that bomb is gonna fall in front of you, behind you, on your car.
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So you're constantly on edge.
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It was constantly.
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Could you even sleep?
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Can you, you know?
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There was, you know, to describe it, I can just tell you, you know, most kids in this country go to bed, you know, with PJs on, and they're being read a book, and they have a teddy bear and maybe a warm blanket.
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Oh, yeah, the bedtime is like a whole process.
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The whole process for me going to bed was making sure I had my flashlight in my hand because if a bomb hit, I had to, there was no electricity.
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So I had to literally have a flashlight to know where I'm going.
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I slept with slippers and always making sure that if I had to jump out of bed at two, three o'clock in the morning that I had my slippers on, so I'm not barefoot.
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Um, instead of holding a teddy bear, I held on to the key shelf, you know, the shell the keys to the shelter.
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And I was called the key holder.
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And you were the youngest of eight.
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I was the youngest.
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I was the youngest of eight.
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And I was so afraid of dying as a child.
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And I had so much fear of dying that to me, the only way I can control my death or you know, where my life is going was to hold on to the keys to the shelter.
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Wow.
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And I would literally run.
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I was always the first person to run downstairs and open the shelter and bring everybody down and make sure there's light and you know, in there.
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And I would grab, you know, the younger kids, you know, sometimes our neighbors had babies, and I would grab the babies and get them down there.
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And so I was really every the adults didn't even have a key.
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I was always the one just, you know, running down and opening the shelter and making sure everybody's down there.
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Um, and I think because I was so afraid of death, I was so afraid of dying because it was, you know, it was constantly surrounded by that.
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Um, you turned on the news and you saw death, you know, you you went to school and I had friends that were affected by it and maybe hit by bombs.
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And um and your parents, were they going to work during that time?
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Or was that my mom was, you know, in a stay-home mom.
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We were eight kids, so she stayed home with us.
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But my dad, yes, my dad was a politician, so he was actually very much involved in a lot of things, you know, politics in Lebanon.
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He was an entrepreneur as well, and he had businesses.
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So he he was a very he was a public speaker, a poet, and a writer.
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So was he living in a lot of fear?
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Because he probably knew a lot more what was going on.
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He knew a lot more what was going on.
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Yes.
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And oh, for sure he was living in fear.
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And his stories are even crazier than mine.
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Obviously, he went through a lot, but um, it was constant, you know, you never knew.
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It was, it wasn't anything that where you had a warning.
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So it wasn't like tomorrow we're gonna bomb.
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So get in the shelter.
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It was literally immediately you'd be sitting in a cafe, you'd be sitting in a restaurant, you're at school, you're at home, and all of a sudden you just hear that whistle and you know it's coming for you.
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And so at the age of five, Melissa, I remember I knew from the sound of the whistle in which direction the where the bomb was coming from.
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Is it coming from north?
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Is it coming from east?
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Is it coming from south?
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I knew at that age where that bomb just from the sound of the whistle, and I knew which direction to run.
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I couldn't imagine.
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You know, everybody that's listening that has a five-year-old to know can you imagine them listening to that and be like, oh, I gotta listen for the bomb and the shelters and fearing for the life of the pig?
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Definitely.
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I mean, it wasn't something normal that a normal five-year-old should go through.
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It wasn't anything that a five-year-old should not know what a sound of a bomb is.
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A five-year-old should not be woken up by a bomb falling outside their balcony and the light is be, you know, the sky's been being lit up with bombs.
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It should be.
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Do you remember any like health, you know, to to live on a fear like that every day?
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Do you remember anything that was maybe where you're not hungry as much or there, you know, do you remember that as a child affecting you?
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I remember, so I remember, and and this is interesting because as I got older, and I I think I was around 25 or 26, I started to feel so much anxiety, like panics, and I wouldn't, I couldn't put a finger on it.
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And I said, you know, where is that coming from?
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Like, why am I waking up and feeling like I'm gonna have a panic attack?
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And I had to sit down and really look back at my younger years because when I was growing up, I didn't think anything of what I went through.
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I didn't really sort of process it.
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I never processed my experience and my trauma.
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Yeah, because you left, you were 14.
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I was 14.
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And I thought it was just a way of life.
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Like, that's just how everybody, you know, living.
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When you move to the America, you have to say, I mean, this is incredible that you exactly come and you're you're like, wait, high school, you gotta skip high school.
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Of course.
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So for me, um, going back to your question, you know, what do I remember at the time, health-wise?
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And I remember now when I close my eyes and I look back at this moment, I remember being in the shelter.
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And I remember going, screaming and going, Mom, I can't breathe.
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I can't breathe.
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And my my heart, it felt like an elephant was sitting on my chest, and my chest would be so tight.
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And my poor mom would be like, What are we gonna do to get our mind off of it?
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And so sometimes these sort of what I call now panic attacks, what I was as I was younger, it would happen randomly throughout the day, even when there's no bombs, because I think it was my body trying to process the trauma.
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And as soon as I heard bombs far away, I would start to feel that elephant sitting on my chest.
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And my mom would tell me, like, let's go to the neighbor's house and turn on the TV and like play with your friends.
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And she was trying to get my mind off of it.
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And now when I look back at it, I'm like, that's like where my panic, you know, attack started.
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It was really started out in the shelter when I was like five and six and seven.
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Um, but I never really knew that that's what they were.
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Um, so yeah, I remember screaming like I can't breathe, I can't breathe.
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And and I would try to take a deep breath, but it just wasn't wouldn't go in.
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It would just kind of stop.
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And then I had to do these shallow breaths because I one deep breath just would not go into my lungs.
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And um yeah, so there was so many moments like this.
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And you know, growing up where you just had to pray.
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And I remember just holding the cross and just praying like a thousand Hail Marys and a thousand our fathers, and just praying and saying, you know, at the age of five, I would say, I just want to see myself at six.
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Like, please, God, let me live until I'm I just want to see what my face looks like at six.
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And then I would turn six and I would say, Please let me live until I'm seven.
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I just want to see what I look like, and so it was year by year, I would just beg God at night when I'm sleeping and praying to just survive another year and just to see myself at you know, the next age in the next age.
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And so it's just it was a hard way of growing up.
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I mean, it just made you grow up fast, and uh, you know, it puts you in a you know fear, it's a constant trauma and constant fear.
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Your body, your nervous system is always on edge, yeah.
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Always on edge.
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Yeah, and it's hard to survive in that state for sure, but you did for so long.
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It's chaos, it's pure chaos, and and you're in it.
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And I think the worst thing also is that it's nothing that is actually expected.
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So if you know it it wasn't like there was a warning where you're like, okay, let me get ready slowly.
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It was kind of, you know, you're you're somewhere and you're sleeping, and it just like boom, like bang.
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And and so you always have to be ready.
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It was always that waiting for something to happen.
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You're waiting for something bad to happen.
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Yeah, the anticipation, like something.
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You carry that into your adulthood because you know, you know, even when I was an adult, I always was waiting for something bad to happen.
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You know, I I think chaos felt comfortable to me.
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Yeah, and it was my like comfort zone.
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So, yeah, I mean, you go through so much as a child that it really traumatizes you and affects you as an adult.
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Yeah, almost like those limited beliefs that stay with you, right?
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And that was safety for you to just keep okay.
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No, when it starts comes back, you kind of revert and go back to what you know.
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That's what you know as a child.
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I mean, when you've grown up in that environment where chaos and death and fear and you know, fight or flight mode, and you constantly, your nervous system is causing, as I think as an adult, you sort of crave it.
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It's almost like that's what you're comfortable with.
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Yes, right.
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Yes.
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Um that's what your body knows, and the body keeps the score too, so it's always stays trapped in you, right?
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And affecting your in your health.
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And yeah, and I I'd love to, you know, tell everyone that you when you moved and you're 14, you know, you stayed very resilient.
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Because you're did your parents come across?
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So, my actually my dad stayed behind.
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Okay.
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Because, you know, he he was a politician, he was involved in some, you know, certain things, and he wanted to stay there and we had businesses, so he couldn't leave either.
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You know, he's like, I gotta be here for the house and the businesses and run and all of all of that stuff.
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So my mom came with us for about I want to say a couple of months, and then she left.
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And then she left as well.
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So then you were alone with your siblings.
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I was alone with my siblings.
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Wow.
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And so it it was sort of I I you know, I grew up, I and I say this all the time.
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It was sort of going through puberty and trying to find myself at 14, but it wasn't just your normal teenage person trying to do normal.
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Because you didn't speak English.
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I didn't you spoke French though, to parança.
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Yeah.
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So we, you know, when we escaped Lebanon and we came here, we just came here on vacation.
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We're thinking we're just gonna come visit my brothers who were here in college and they had graduated and they were working.
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And little did I know that this was gonna be my home and my life.
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And we thought, we'll come for like a couple weeks or a month or whatever, and then we'll go back home.
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The situation will get better, and we'll get back home.
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I'm gonna go into high school and go back to seeing my friends and my cousins and my family and my neighbors.
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And after a month of being here, the situation got even worse.
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That my dad said, You guys are not coming back, you're just gonna stay here.
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And at the time, you know, like I said, I my um Arabic was my first language and French was my second.
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And I barely spoke English.
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I was just learning English as a third language.
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And so my dad decided, you know, called my mom and said, we need to find Gita High School.
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Um, and also my older older brother was about a year and a half older than me.
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And so they looked for high schools and they got me in and they tested me and they said, Well, she's just beyond her years, like she needs to be in college, like she's already four years of high school would be a waste of time for her.
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And I remember just looking and going, I don't even speak English.
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How am I gonna how am I gonna go to college?
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And I barely speak the language.
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So they decided to put me in in high school for three months just with the graduating, because it was towards the end of the year.
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Okay.
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And um, I remember just going like March, May, April, May, or something like that.
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And I graduated three months later.
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Even not knowing the language very well.
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And I remember getting like honors and calculus and and and all the I graduated with like honors.
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I don't ask me how that.
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Well, because you're brilliant woman, yeah.
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I did.
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And um, and so yeah, I and I remember being asked to the prom, and my mom goes, absolutely not, you are not going.
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And I, you know, and and to talk about this the social aspect of it, you know, I was 14 and graduating with 18-year-olds, and they were going to the prom and getting dressed up and having all this fun.
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And, you know, my mom was like, No, you're 14, you're not going to a prom.
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And and I remember just being felt like this outsider.
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Like, do you feel pretty lonely?
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Oh, yeah.
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It was a very lonely journey because number one, I didn't speak the language.
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Um, you know, number two, I didn't feel yet that I belonged because, you know, it's it's a different culture.
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It's, you know, in high school in Lebanon, we went to an all-girl Catholic high school.
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So it was very strict.
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I mean, we had nuns, our hair had to be up, no makeup, no earrings, no jewelry.
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And then I come here and they put me in a Catholic high school in Connecticut.
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And I remember going to high school and I walked it, and this was a culture shock for me.
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I remember going and we had uniforms here, and I remember wearing a uniform, and I'm thinking this is Lebanon, right?
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So I'm putting my hair up at a ponytail, no makeup, no earrings, nothing.
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And I walk into the bathroom at the high school in Connecticut, and the girls were spraying their hair with makeup.
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I mean, with hairspray, the makeup, the lip gloss, and I I was shocked.
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I was like culture, I was, I stood there and I go, and I looked at myself and I remember humble and I looked at myself and I go, mm-mm, like that's gonna change.
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I'm like, oh and the next day I showed up with like full-on makeup.
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You're like, I'm like, no, no, no, we're bringing each other.
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I love that.
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Um, but yeah, it was definitely still such a different culture in so many ways.
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And I really had to immerse myself and make friends and you know, learn English.
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And I started watching movies to learn English and listening to, you know, more music and things like that.
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And, you know, made friends.
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And I was really adamant about losing my accent and not having an accent because I had that craving of like, I gotta be American and I gotta fit in.
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I gotta fit in and I gotta belong here.