 he had popped in. That's how she describes the attacker coming into her car. A violent assailant with a knife to her neck. Oh, he'd popped in. And she says when he opened up the door, she's narrating the door for him instead of looking over and seeing the door being opened. That's the mistake a lot of people make. They rehearse a story instead of the questions that might be asked about that story. It's a monologue instead of a dialogue that they rehearse. Every element of a fabricated story appears here. There's details about every aspect of this thing, except for the knife to the neck. The one part truthful people would recall with vivid, pure emotion. And that's when you put it up here. People who undergo this kind of situation feel things. They talk about those feelings. You can see these feelings on their face. They also will show fear on their bodies during times like this. And this sounds like a second grader made up a story about being yelled at and forgot to include details until somebody asked them to.