When heavy bombing strikes a major city, daily life transforms into a constant state of alert. In Tehran, the ongoing conflict has brought repeated waves of explosions, airstrikes, and shockwaves that ripple through neighborhoods—turning ordinary homes into fragile shelters.
Amid this chaos, one simple but powerful image has emerged across the city: people taping their windows, trying to prevent glass from shattering as bombs fall nearby.
This article continues and expands your content—combining real war developments, civilian experiences, and the science behind blast damage—to explain why this practice has become so widespread.
