"If the government comes back I will go to jail and who will care for my family and children?"
"We are waiting for God to save us because we are tired," says Om Emad a mother in her 20s.
She says people in Mosul are praying for their lives to return to normal.
"We hate the way our lives are now," she says, in a determined voice.
"We want our husbands to return to work. We want our children to return to school. I refused to send my children to school after ISIS took over because I fear the radical curriculum they have imposed."
ISIS changed school curricula and books to push their ideology on the youngest in Mosul, residents say, in what they see as an attempt to brainwash the young.
"It has been two years since my son went to school. This means he has lost two years of his life."
Hajja Om Saleh
"I have not seen my sons and some of my grandchildren for two years. I see the pictures of my grandchildren and I see how much they have grown. I pray to God that he will give me enough years of life to see my grandchildren again," says Hajja Om Saleh, an elderly woman.
"My home is so sad and dark without my family."
Some of Hajja Om Saleh's grandchildren live outside of Mosul, but they have been unable to visit, and she has been trapped in the city since ISIS came two years ago, unable to even visit family.
"We want the killing and destruction to stop so that people can return to their homes and life can return to normal."