When I was a kid, I wanted to be a bird. I fantasized about flight, and the double meaning of flight: escape. Oh how I wanted to soar with wings taut and just glide the air currents the way the upper hawks seem toleave my house, my school, my town and float far beyond all diurnal troubles. Are these magnificent birds having a good time up there? Are they joy-riding? Do they look down on us as silly blips from a distance, everything just potential prey or not prey, light or dark shadow puppets?
Then, in the mix of all the Carl Sagan andCosmos forever playing on the den TV in the background as if on a loop, I dreamed of getting higher than that layer of our atmosphereall the way to outer space, to see the earth from above the earth. I still do. Couldnt having that perspective solve so many human, and human-caused, problems? Could we not get a better handle on the arbitrariness of so many divisive conflicts and border issues from that vantage point where everything blurs into blues, greens, whites and browns? Couldnt we feel more protective toward this precious multi-colored marble we inhabit/trash, and want to better save it from ourselves?
My favorite author of the moment is Samantha Harvey with this slim new fiction, Orbital, which reads anything but slimly. It vibrates with so many layers of beauty that it feels more like poetry you have to put down frequently in order to fathom, spacedream, sigh, sometimes sob (I did that too). It takes us through a day amidst the nine-month stint of the four astronauts and two cosmonauts on the International Space Station, dizzily zipping around and around our globe. Despite the speed of their flight (or, more aptly and astoundingly,fall) around earththe incessant orbiting that amounts to one orbit per chapter to get us to 16 per dayits not a page-turner so much as a page-pauser. In only 200 or so pages, Harvey requires eons and our vast imaginations to take in the magnitude of all of space, all of earth, all the weather and natural formations, all humans and animals and objects, all billions of stars, all of time since the Big Bang.
The first note I wrote in the mental margins was perspective. Harvey turns every concept every which way to inspect every angle, from near and far, up and down. We feel as if we too are in the ISS, hurtling around earth at 17.5 thousand miles per hour, in what is effectively a tin can (or rather 17 connecting modules of tin can), with these six uniquely diverse crew, at 250 miles above earth. In her story, it happens to be the day a billion-dollar moon crew en route to a new (finally!) lunar landing catapults past them with their goal of traveling 250,000 miles. They are no longer the only humans between here and there. The relativity of days now when they pass 16 sunrises and sunsets in each; the arbitrariness of upright when theres nothing holding them down, even their tears floating intact past; the blurring of boundaries between countries and peoples when all they see out their windows is one continuous flow between water and land.
Is it necessarily the case that the further you get from something the more perspective you have on it? Its probably a childish thought, but he has an idea that if you could get far enough away from the earth youd be able finally to understand itto see it with your own eyes as an object, a small blue dot, a cosmic and mysterious thing. Not to understand its mystery, but to understand that it is mysterious. To see it as a mathematical swarm. To see the solidity fall away from it.
Chosen for their strength, the astronautical bones are hollowing, their muscles softening without resistance. The test mice they study are beginning to float and fly off and seem joyful in their newfound movement. The humans are the ones who are meant to be special, and yet they are also just test mice, there to measure the effects of this space experiment on themselves. Everyone and all these life-support things around them are just future dust motes, the potential of space junk debris in perpetual orbit.
Another traveller to the beyond Harvey mentionsnot bound by earths gravity and ringing it the way ISS is, but propelling out and out ad infinitumare my favorite Voyagers with their dualGolden Records, and the love story with its heartbeat quietly adding romantic rhythm to those faraway missions. So full of hope we are that well make contact with some other intelligent life form someday, so we dont have to feelso cosmically alone.
We send out the Voyager probes into interstellar space in a big-hearted fanciful spasm of hope. Two capsules from earth containing images and songs just waiting to be found inwho knowstens or hundreds of thousands of years if all goes well. Otherwise millions or billions, or not at all. Meanwhile we begin to listen. We scan the reaches for radio waves. Nothing answers. We keep on scanning for decades and decades. Nothing answers. We make wishful and fearful projections through books, films and the like about how it might look, this alien life, when it finally makes contact. But it doesnt make contact and we suspect in truth that it never will. Its not even out there, we think. Why bother waiting when theres nothing there? And now maybe humankind is in the late smash-it-all-up teenage stage of self-harm and nihilism, because we didnt ask to be alive, we didnt ask to inherit an earth to look after, and we didnt ask to be so completely unjustly darkly alone.
Our solitude and ultimate aloneness come into focus in these tight quarters, but also inescapable and haunting human connection, their ties to each other and to the invisible people hidden amidst the landscapes under clouds below. The astronauts dreams start mirroring each others, their sleeping and waking thoughts full of home and their histories as they look down and try to find their part of their countries, where their children, their spouses, their dying/dead parents might be. The solidity of the dreams vs. the surreality of their waking lives in this home away from home had me thinking: how relative are these varying states of consciousness too. Could we be dreaming when we think were awake and awake when we think were dreaming? Those moments when you awaken in the middle of a dream so vivid with someone dead or gone and ache to go back with them but you cant quite re-access that magic space again, and you weep anew with grief. Is that the real life in there and thistheout here,supposedlyis the fiction? All that we see, feel and think is just brain projection.
Therapy is a touchstone for me, it helps me sort my scrambled head, even if only to tease out what I already know that got buried. I am continually battling with my own anxiety-driven knee-jerk responses to stress (these teens!) and ignoring the wisdom that I should do better in those moments. But cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has handy tips for flipping the script, should you remember to employ them. In hot moments when your reactivity is getting away with you, stick your head in the freezer for a few seconds, for instance. Or remove yourself from the scene to find an orienting response at the border of thingsthetreeline, thewaters edge.
I regularly love the ISS for this: from the perspective here on earth to look up and sometimes actually see that very reflective contraption as it arcs over like a different, higher, faster airplane on its own unique track. To take us outside of ourselves and our petty lives for an instant and know there are however many bodies in that ship right now, along with however many study mice and plants, and whatever else velcroed down to keep it from floating off, testing the limits for us of space, time, science, themselves. In order that the next mission, and the next crews, might go further.
Theyre the specimens and the objects of research whove forged the way for their own surpassing.
Theres so much loveliness to quote from HarveysOrbital, Ill save more for next week.
In the meantime, and I recommend you do, you can sign up for alerts to know when the ISS is passing through your particular spaceview.NASAs Spot The Station feature will text or emailyou if the space station is visible near you (choose the dot nearest you on the map), by night when you can actually see it. The alerts will come for a year, then they will remind you to renew. From the FAQs:
WHEN
The Spot The Station website will only notify you of optimal sighting opportunitiesthat is, sightings that are high enough in the sky (40 degrees or more) and last long enough to give you the best view of the orbiting laboratory..
HOW OFTEN
The space station is visible because it reflects the light of the Sunthe same reason we can see the Moon. However, unlike the Moon, the space station isnt bright enough to see during the day. It can only be seen when it is dawn or dusk at your location. As such, it can range from one sighting opportunity a month to several a week, since it has to be both dark where you are, and the space station has to happen to be going overhead.
WHAT
The space station is Earths only microgravity laboratory. This football field-sized platform hosts a plethora of science and technology experiments that are continuously being conducted by crew members, or are automated. Research aboard the orbiting laboratory holds benefits for life back on Earth, as well as for future space exploration. The space station serves as a testbed for technologies and allows us to study the impacts of long-term spaceflight to humans, supporting NASAs mission to push human presence farther into space.
And to think, Ive been calling it earth, as does Harvey actually, which is more by definition just the dirt on this planet, e-a-r-t-h, how funny, when you look at and say it a few times, it becomes such a strange word for something both so big and small. But, mind you, its singular Earth, says NASA, super special with a capital E. Respect. Perspective.
I dont want to give away the ending, but it does all end.
At the brink of a continent the light is fading. The sea is flat and copper with reflected sun and the shadows of the clouds are long on the water. Asia come and gone. Australia a dark featureless shape against this last breath of light, which has now turned platinum. Everything is dimming. The earths horizon, which cracked open with light at so recent a dawn, is being erased. Darkness eats at the sharpness of its line as if the earth is dissolving and the plant turns purple and appears to blur, a watercolor washing away.
Krista Madsen is the author behind wordsmithery shop,SleepyHollow, inK.,and producer of the Home|body newsletter, which she is sharing regularlywithThe Hudson Independentreadership. You can subscribeforfreetoseeallherpostsandreceivethemdirectlyinyourinbox.
Here is the original post:
Perspective - The Hudson Indy Westchester's Rivertowns News - - The Hudson Independent
- Space Shuttle STS-118 Endeavour Space Station Assembly ISS-13A.1 S5 Truss 2007 NASA - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Hurricane Isaac Spied By International Space Station | Video - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Raw Video: Space Station View of Isaac - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Station Crew Member Discusses Life in Space with Japanese Media (English Translated Version) - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Station Crew Discusses Life in Space With Social Media Followers - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Earth Illuminated: ISS Time-lapse Photography - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- LIVE From The International Space Station 1080i Full HD - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- ISS Progress 47 Re-docks to Space Station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- FreeOK2 - Seth Andrews "Scrabble on the Space Station" - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Raw Video: International Space Station at Night - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Cargo Ship Undocks From Space Station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Mission Highlights: SpaceX's Dragon Makes History - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Soyuz Launches to Space Station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- [ISS] Manned Soyuz TMA-03M Departs Space Station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- China's space station dream one step closer - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Space Station Live! Tour - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- SpaceX Dragon Capsule Hatch Opening from International Space Station (ISS) HD 5/26/2012 - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- Space Station Crew Welcomes World's First Commercial Cargo Craft - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- SpaceX capsule docks with space station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- [SpaceX] Dragon Berthed to Space Station - Video [Last Updated On: September 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 7th, 2012]
- How a toothbrush helped fix the space station [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2012]
- MacGyver in space? Astronauts fix space station with toothbrush. (+video) [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2012]
- MacGyver in space? Astronauts fix space station with toothbrush. [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2012]
- MacGuyver in space? Astronauts fix space station with toothbrush. [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2012]
- Space station's toothbrush fix; astronaut breaks spacewalk record [Last Updated On: September 8th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 8th, 2012]
- Astronauts repair space station with help of toothbrush [Last Updated On: September 9th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 9th, 2012]
- Space Station fixed with $3 toothbrush [Last Updated On: September 9th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 9th, 2012]
- Global student space experiments transformed [Last Updated On: September 11th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 11th, 2012]
- Student Biology Investigations Stream Live On YouTube Space Lab [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2012]
- Japanese cargo ship leaves space station [Last Updated On: September 12th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 12th, 2012]
- YouTube Space Lab: Bill Nye, contest winners, share results as streamed from space [Last Updated On: September 13th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 13th, 2012]
- LIVE from the Space Station: Gotta-See Video [Last Updated On: September 13th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 13th, 2012]
- Making music in outer space [Last Updated On: September 14th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 14th, 2012]
- Space Station Spin-Off Could Protect Mars-Bound Astronauts From Radiation [Last Updated On: September 14th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 14th, 2012]
- Female astronaut takes command of space station [Last Updated On: September 16th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 16th, 2012]
- 3 space station astronauts return to Earth tonight [Last Updated On: September 16th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 16th, 2012]
- Soyuz brings three station fliers home to pinpoint landing [Last Updated On: September 17th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 17th, 2012]
- International Space Station Astronauts Land Safely in Kazakhstan [Last Updated On: September 17th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 17th, 2012]
- Space Station 'nauts touch down on Kazakh steppe [Last Updated On: September 17th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 17th, 2012]
- International Space Station: Formal handover of power - Video [Last Updated On: September 17th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 17th, 2012]
- NASA astronaut Sunita Williams completes first-ever space triathalon [Last Updated On: September 18th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 18th, 2012]
- Astronauts Return From Space Station, As An American Takes Command [Last Updated On: September 18th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 18th, 2012]
- Photos: Space Station's Expedition 33 Mission [Last Updated On: September 19th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 19th, 2012]
- New, Compact Body Scanner Ready for Space Station [Last Updated On: September 20th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 20th, 2012]
- SpaceX launch to space station is Oct. 7 [Last Updated On: September 22nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 22nd, 2012]
- NASA: Dragon prepared for space flight [Last Updated On: September 22nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 22nd, 2012]
- SpaceX, NASA target Oct. 7 launch for resupply mission to International Space Station [Last Updated On: September 22nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 22nd, 2012]
- Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield launch to space station pushed back two weeks [Last Updated On: September 25th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 25th, 2012]
- Computer glitch delays space station undocking [Last Updated On: September 26th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 26th, 2012]
- Space station at risk of debris hit [Last Updated On: September 27th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 27th, 2012]
- Orbital debris sets off space station alert [Last Updated On: September 27th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 27th, 2012]
- Space station on alert [Last Updated On: September 28th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 28th, 2012]
- NASA offers opportunity to use communications testbed on space station [Last Updated On: September 28th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 28th, 2012]
- Back-to-back near-misses on space station [Last Updated On: September 29th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 29th, 2012]
- Huge cargo ship undocks from space station [Last Updated On: September 29th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 29th, 2012]
- Russians face up to their space crisis [Last Updated On: September 29th, 2012] [Originally Added On: September 29th, 2012]
- Private SpaceX Rocket Test-Fires Engines for Space Station Trip [Last Updated On: October 2nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 2nd, 2012]
- NASA Plan to Build Space Station Beyond the Moon Criticized [Last Updated On: October 2nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 2nd, 2012]
- New Private Rocket Arrives at Virginia Launch Pad for Tests [Last Updated On: October 2nd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 2nd, 2012]
- Singer Sarah Brightman Outbids NASA for Space Tourist's Seat [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- Space station in no need to move to avoid debris [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- NASA considering deep-space station on moon [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- NASA Mulls Deep-Space Station on Moon's Far Side [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- Space Station to Move to Avoid Debris [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- 1st Year-Long Space Station Mission May Launch in 2015: Reports [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- Space Tourist Outbids NASA for Flight [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- International Space Station safe from orbiting space debris [Last Updated On: October 3rd, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 3rd, 2012]
- SpaceX encore: 2nd private space station shipment [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- How 'The Big Bang Theory' Sent Howard Wolowitz to Space [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- Space Station-Bound SpaceX Dragon Capsule Gets Mission Patch [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- SpaceX plans historic flight to International Space Station Sunday [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- How 'Big Bang's' Howard flew to space [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- Canada unveils two new space 'Canadarms' [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- How SpaceX Will Keep the Space Station in Business [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- Canada Unveils Next-Generation Robotic Arms for Spaceships [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- Space station-bound SpaceX rocket to launch Sunday [Last Updated On: October 5th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 5th, 2012]
- SpaceX set for its first cargo run to space station [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2012]
- One Year In Space: US-Russian Crew Launching Audacious Spaceflight in 2015 [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2012]
- SpaceX ready to resupply space station [Last Updated On: October 6th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 6th, 2012]
- Private space station delivery to launch Sunday [Last Updated On: October 7th, 2012] [Originally Added On: October 7th, 2012]