She was among the last batch of 1000 Syrians to cross into Jordan yesterday. Aid workers said the refugees walked at least 10km through the desert on the last leg of their trip to reach the border.
Syria's civil war, now in its third year, has killed more than 120,000 according to activists and sent more than 2 million fleeing abroad. Of those, more than 560,000 have come to Jordan, while others have gone to Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq.
Inside Jordan, 120,000 live under plastic tents in Zaatari Camp in Jordan's north, which is usually battered by snowstorms in January. The rest live in existing Jordanian communities, which complain that the newcomers have exhausted their meagre resources, including water, health care and education.
Some travel back to Syria when it is safe to do so, returning to Jordan if conditions become more dangerous.
In total, there are 45 points along the 378km Jordanian-Syrian border which the refugees use to enter Jordan, said Brigadier Hussein Zyoud, head of the Jordanian border patrols. He said the refugees rarely travel across the official border posts between the two countries, manned on the Syrian side by President Bashar al-Assad's army.
"This is the main route now because continued fighting to the west has made it increasingly difficult for the people to cross the lines between the government forces and the opposition," said Andrew Harper, the chief of the United Nations refugee agency in Jordan, who was among the aid workers receiving the refugees.
Talaa, a native of eastern Ghouta - a Damascus suburb that has suffered everything from a chemical attack in August to a siege - said she was on the road with her son and grandson for four days. "We were constantly crying back home because we were starving. I left 10 grandsons back home crying because there is no food."
Aboard one vehicle, 3-year-old Nasrallah Ahmad wept loudly. "He is crying because he saw the Jordanian soldiers with machineguns and thought they were going to shoot at us like back home," said his mother, who identified herself as Um Alaa, 33, a native of the restive southern Syrian border town of Daraa.
She said that the situation was "miserable" in Daraa, with serious shortages of water because the Syrian army blew up water pipes feeding their town. "There are shortages of food, medicine and fuel because many [workers at] shops and gas stations are afraid to be targeted by government snipers," she said. Electricity is available for four hours a day, and sometimes goes off for several days at a time.
A convoy of UN and Jordanian army vehicles escorted the refugees to a facility near the local provincial capital of Ruwaishid, where they will spend the four days having their identity checked before they proceed to Zaatari Camp.
Zyoud, the Jordanian border chief, told reporters at an army camp later that Syria's porous southern border neighbouring Jordan has seen a 300 per cent increase in infiltration and smuggling from last year.
Seized items included drugs, pistols, machineguns, stolen cars and tens of thousands of sheep.
But most who cross are simply looking for safety.
"God helped me reach this point," said Talaa, still shaking from the desert wind.
- AP