'Even under missiles we carry on living' - how young Iranians are coping with war
14 hours ago Ghoncheh HabibiazadBBC Persian Snow fell in parts of Tehran on Tuesday night, blanketing the Iranian capital with a layer of white after air strikes on oil depots caused days of dark skies and black rain. But life goes on, even as the war drags on.
"I think my creativity has increased during the war. I'm constantly stressed and end up building prettier homes in the game," she said. Sahar - whose name, as with the other contributors, has been changed for safety reasons - found out on Tuesday that a woman she had gone to school with had been killed. "Her body hasn't been found. I felt horrible after hearing it," she said.
"Why do we have to experience such horror when we're in the prime years of our youth?
I just want this to end before Nowruz. My favourite days in life are the early days of spring. "
It is usually a time when families gather to celebrate.
But this year that has not been the case, according to those living in Tehran.
"It doesn't feel like the run-up to Nowruz. But even under missiles, we carry on living. We have no choice but to live," said Peyman, a man in his 30s.
So empty that for every person there are 30 or 40 empty seats.
The streets are very quiet as well. so quiet that you could easily play football in the middle of a street," he added.
Another man in his 30s said: "My sleep schedule depends on the bombings now.
I go to sleep at around six or seven in the morning and wake up at 2pm. Sometimes, I have to go out to buy groceries, but Tehran is very empty. "
Some headed north towards the Caspian Sea, where there have been fewer attacks.
Mina, a woman in her 20s, is one of them.
She is now in the city of Rasht.
I felt guilty about leaving without her, so I didn't want us to go," she recalled. "The night they hit the [oil] depots, our flat was shaking all the way to the front door. All the windows lit up as if it were morning. "
"The day after, we finally went to Rasht, in a car covered with patchy stains from the polluted rain.
"My best friend decided to stay in Tehran with her family, but I call her every day.
We talk on the phone about all the exciting things we'll do after the war is over. Maybe we'll dye our hair lighter after this. "
The satellite internet system has become a vital communications lifeline for some trying to contact the outside world. It operates like a mobile phone mast in space, using a constellation of satellites to communicate with small dishes on the ground that have a built-in WiFi router. Using Starlink in Iran carries a punishment of up to two years in prison, and authorities have reportedly been searching for the dishes to stop people from connecting.
He added that he had hidden the device "somewhere remote" to prevent the authorities from "finding or jamming" it.
50) for1GB of data - a high price in a country where the average monthly salary is estimated to be between $200 and $300.
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