'A CHANCE'
Konstantin, a 27-year-old municipal employee, knows the stakes only too well.
He joined the territorial defence unit after fighting got close to his home in March, he says.
"I couldn't not do anything, so I joined the territorial defence to protect my town, my country," he explains.
He acknowledges however: "If I'd gone straight to the frontline, I wouldn't have survived."
Now, having undergone his training, he believes he "has a chance".
Nevertheless the baby-faced young man wonders how he'll react when on the ground in a real-life situation.
"Training is training, but when you see real blood it's different. Is it going to stop me in my tracks, or give me a rush of adrenaline?" he says.
Doctor Demian Popov, 53, tries to provide the recruits with methods of overcoming battle stress and teaches them about post-traumatic stress disorder and the role of intuition in battle.
He says that despite them being highly motivated "there is no methodology to find out who will leave the battle and who will not".
"It will be known only when the person will get there if he/she can fight or not," he adds.