 I work at I-24 News since 2013 since a channel was established and I'm the defense correspondent in English since 2018. As the defense correspondent and also in my previous roles I was hundreds of times in Sderot and the Gaza border communities when red alert siren sounded, meaning that rockets are incoming and we all have to run to the shelters. Most of the times the rockets were intercepted, there were no casualties, no damages, and that was my report but there was one time in the city of Sderot which made me realize we're all wrong. My colleagues and I ran to the shelter again but with us ran a group of children and their mothers. The children were crying, the mothers were supposed to help them but they were also crying. That is when I realized that what is the work for me is life for them. That's where I understood that there is damage even if no building was damaged and no one was physically hurt. There are Israelis just like us in Tel Aviv and they deserve to feel the same safety and security that we feel here. Since that morning in Sderot my whole reporting has changed. No longer, no casualties, no damage, rockets intercepted and that's it. The damage is ongoing, the damage is mental for those people, for those kids who have now grown into this reality. I think they deserve much more than that from the state of Israel and I keep saying this in every report I file about rockets being fired to Sderot even if officially there are no damages and no one was injured.