jill ellis, seriously -- kill us, serusly hurt us, not allow us to leave thcountry.s pretty much -- in my head, i had the picture of me getting hurt. amy: that is dr. wais aria's 13-year-old son who is an accomplished pianist. as we wrap up, you treat traumatized afghans. after these 20 years of the u.s. war and occupation, how do people recover? >> i think we have to be optimistic, but to be honest, there is no hope, especially for myself. i spent all my life to help people stop but when i came out of afghanistan, i can with a bunch of -- my children, myself. i cannot talk anything about the situation. a doctor from columbia university helped us a lot and i should talk and speak -- i believe, there is no hope for the future. the taliban do not change. we already noticed what they're doing. unfornately, they become more empowered -- powerful authorization at the moment. whatever they want, they can decided. there is no hope. even just talk in front of media, ok, we will give women's rights, human rights, civil rights. but i am not optimistic. one of the example is my