HomeUncategorizedNight Launch…
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ghostsniper
ghostsniper
28 days ago

From age 11 until 51 I was mostly all-in on everything space. The Jetson’s. In the mid 60’s we had a new dog and he was named “”Astro” and he was my best friend.

All of us huddled around the toob watching “One small step for man…”.

From the west coast of FL I saw the launch many times from 150 miles away. There was a window in my office that faced east and on it I had used a black marker to trace the arc of the various launches I had witnessed, with the dates.

The luster tarnished with time then the fantasy turned to reality and somewhere along the way I became disinterested, then cynical.

My wife wanted me to watch the recent launch and splashdown on the TV but I couldn’t be bothered.

I was sitting on the porch lost in thoughts….

HJB in Texas
HJB in Texas
28 days ago

Reading the account is a pleasure …. so nicely done with the poetic flair …. makes the imagination of it much more visual …. easier and satisfying. Thank you Jean.

jean
jean
27 days ago
Reply to  HJB in Texas

You’re very welcome, HJB.

I was on the beachside when the shuttle exploded. Heartbreaking, horrible sight.

Joe
Joe
27 days ago

NASA logo;

“You can ask the people around me, I don’t give up … and it’s not out of frustration and desperation that I say I don’t give up. I don’t give up because I don’t give up. I don’t believe in it.” — Johnny Cash

DT
DT
27 days ago
Reply to  Joe

There’s a back story if you’re speaking to or about me.

Joe
Joe
27 days ago
Reply to  DT

It is a great trait. Love to hear it.

DT
DT
27 days ago
Reply to  Joe

Spent the 1980s and 2010s in the biz. The thrill wears off. It’s not “giving up”; it’s “had enough”.

azlibertarian
azlibertarian
27 days ago

Very nice, jean.

I share a similar experience, although I can’t express it poetically.

My brother is in the oil bidness and lives outside Houston. This was approaching 30 years ago. Anyway, at the time, a woman in my brother’s office was married to an astronaut and through that connection, we were offered tickets out on a causeway near the Cape to watch a Shuttle launch. I say “near the Cape”, but to my eye, we were still 2-3 miles away from the launch tower. Like the launch you’re describing, the one we watched was at night….about 2am, if I remember. And for a kid raised in the 60’s whose heroes were all astronauts, it was quite a sight.

I still care about NASA, but my caring is familial. Son-in-law#2 is an electrical engineer with NASA. Wicked smaht…..don’t ask me what it is that he does.

jd
jd
27 days ago

Lovely description, Jean. Thank you.

DT does your site have a new look or is it my computer?

DT
DT
27 days ago
Reply to  jd

Not sure to what new look you refer. Should be the same ol’, same ol’

jd
jd
27 days ago
Reply to  DT

Must be me. Deleted all my history yesterday and it changed the font and general look of your site. Thanks for quick response.

jean
jean
25 days ago

I was lucky enough to have worked for companies that let their employees go to the parking lots any time there was a launch so we could be awed and amazed. Some of my best Florida memories from the 38 years spent there.