A neighbour still delivers them food and they have enough supplies of canned meat and potatoes to get them through the bombardment that has now lasted more than two weeks.
"I just want the peaceful sky above my head -- and my children to live in a free world."
A green 4X4 full of soldiers races down one of the village's dirt roads. A few minutes later, a civilian SUV leads a troop transport vehicle towards the "contact zone" a few hundred metres away.
The Ukrainian forces seem to be taking advantage of a Russian pullback from the area as Moscow transfers troops from Kharkiv to the eastern Lugansk region.
Ukraine has said it has retaken control of part of its border area with Russia. The defence ministry published a video showing armed soldiers by a border post painted in the blue and yellow colours of Ukraine.
On a road near Ruska Lozova, a sign points towards Belgorod, a Russian city about 50 kilometres away.
Sergiy, a young soldier whose first name has been changed, said he would push the Ukrainian counter-offensive to Russia "with pleasure".
But the little soft toy with large blue eyes he wears on his bulletproof vest is not only to bring good luck.
"It's a gift from my ex-girlfriend. I put it on so they will be able to recognise me if I get blown up," he explained with a morbid chuckle.
In peaceful times, Moscow holidaymakers would travel this road to spend their summers on the Black Sea beaches of Crimea.
Now, a retired couple who had taken refuge in Kharkiv drove back to the village to search their house for "linen and clothing to change, documents, we forgot to take the documents last time".
"It is scary to see, the village was beautiful... and now everything is destroyed," said Semion, 70. "People have also died."