M.T.: What was it like moving to your neighborhood? Not sure, not in English. M.T.: Where do you hang out with your friends and family? Respondent: Home. M.T.: Where do you hang out with your friends? Respondent: Sometimes at the park or their house. M.T.: What park? Respondent: Colina Park M.T.: Colina Park. What do you do over there? Respondent: Just fool around. M.T.: What do you mean fool around? What do you mean by that? Respondent: Like do some hard court, play soccer. (1:40) M.T.: Do you hang out somewhere else in the neighborhood? Like around 5-1? In this block? Respondent: No I don't think so. M.T.: So you don't hang out around this street right here? Respondent: Oh, I do, I do. My house and then my sister's house. M.T.: Sister's house? Respondent: I also play outside, around this place. M.T.: Around the neighborhood? Respondent: Yeah, around the neighborhood. M.T.: So you play outside around the neighborhood? Respondent: Yeah, I play outside around the neighborhood M.T.: Who do you play with? Respondent: I play with the little kids around here. Just the Karen people. Karen kids. M.T.: How would you describe your neighborhood to someone who has never been there? Respondent: My neighborhood is safer than the old days. I would recommend them to come here. Sometimes they would have to watch out for the things and the people around here. Because of the bad things. M.T.: What kinds of bad things? Respondent: Gangs and shootings. And people around here. Bad people. Drugs, smoking. M.T.: So do you feel safe in the neighborhood? Respondent: Yeah sometimes, I feel safe around this neighborhood. M.T.: What do you mean sometimes? Respondent: Sometimes there would be screamings. Yeah screamings. And, just screamings. Some people screaming.