The government is providing monthly payments to help cover rent — but that does not look set to last and she is searching for private help to start afresh.
"We are living in uncertainty, we don't know what the future will hold," Karamyan told AFP.
Meanwhile Vahan Savadyan, 35, has become a mayor without a town.
He is still running Hadrut's local administration — but it is split between Yerevan and the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh in Stepanakert.
Instead of dealing with the problems of daily life, he is trying to help find temporary housing and keep track of his former residents now living scattered around.
"It is difficult — but you need to adapt somehow and not lose your spirits, not lose hope, and keep working," he said.
– 'Wait and hope' –
Those displaced by the conflict have filled up four floors at a student hostel belonging to Yerevan's main university on the outskirts of the city.
The coronavirus pandemic meant many rooms were vacant as classes were virtual — but now lectures are restarting in person and pressure is building for space.
Three generations of the Saakyan family are living together in two rooms.
"Back in Hadrut we had a house, land, garden, everything," says Arman Saakyan, 35, who was injured in the fighting.
"We heard that our house has been turned into a office for the local Azerbaijani emergency services."
The family says they could only grab their documents, mobile phones and a blanket to keep the children warm as they fled.
"But we aren't upset about leaving our possessions behind, we are upset about leaving our ancestral home, the graves where our grandparents are buried," said Arman's sister Maria Petrosyan, 38.
For now the priority is to make sure the family has a new home of its own.
But regardless, they will keep on thinking of their mountain-fringed hometown, and dreaming of returning there.
"If it is ever possible to go back then we would go back with joy," Petrosyan said.
"But we don't even know if that will ever be possible — we just wait and we hope."
del/jbr/jz