Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Ride, Sally Ride, Aboard Your Rocket Ship


This evening when I came home from work I opened my laptop to access the internet, my home page is Google, so the ever changing Google-Doodle masthead is the first thing I see. Today’s doodle caught my eye right away because it showed a picture of the Space Shuttle assembling the word Google with its robotic arm.  Running my mouse over the doodle revealed that today (May 26, 2015) was Sally Ride’s 64th birthday.

When Sally Ride died in 2012, I was deeply saddened by the brief announcement and obituary I discovered on the MSN website and wished that it would say more about who she was and her accomplishments.  The article duly noted that she the first American woman in space and that she had a PhD in astrophysics, both of which were major accomplishments, especially in the United States where women have been perpetually held back by good ol’ American chauvinism.  Sally was preceded in space by two Soviet women, Valentina Tereshkova in 1963 and Svetlana Savitskaya in 1982.

The fact that the United States was a mere 20 years overdue with its inclusion of women as astronauts is quite telling. With Sally’s trip aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger in June 1983, one can only speculate that it was partially (or mostly) a public relations move on NASA’s behalf.  With Cosmonaut Savitskaya’s trip aboard Soyuz T-7 in August of 1982, NASA was under the gun to not be shown up by Russia’s obviously superior egalitarianism. Fortunately for NASA, Sally had a lot more foresight than her Old-school employer and provided the lumbering institution with the perfect Poster Child for their embarrassing belatedness.

 Despite the nearly never mentioned glass ceiling that American businesses and institutions perpetuate, Sally managed to meet the stringent qualifications when NASA put out the call for the new class of astronauts to accompany the next generation technology of the Space Shuttle program. Sally made the final cut along with five other women, but she and her gender faced a multitude of challenges from a conservative organization populated by stuffy executives and former military test pilots. It was due to open-minded individuals like Apollo astronaut Alan Bean and a few insightful others, within the public relations department, that NASA began to recognized that the gender and minority gap within the organization was working against their desired public image of being the leaders of a new generation.

It became obvious that NASA was fast tracking their women candidates in hopes of at least qualifying with the Russians for the second woman in space, but then Russia showed their cards with the launch of Soyuz T-7 which was strangely coincidental with Ride’s trip aboard Space Shuttle STS-7. It seems seven to be a lucky number with astronauts, beginning with the first seven astronauts selected for the Mercury missions, America’s premiere manned space program.
 
      

Aside from the obvious accomplishment of being the first American woman in space (and to date, the youngest person ever to go into space), Sally holds a special place in my heart for another accomplishment and that is being the “mold breaker” of what kind of person would be going into space.  Before Sally and her generation, astronauts were basically pilots, typically test pilots and mostly military pilots.  To me, Sally Ride’s trip into orbit was the turning point that would lead to the democratization of the space program and the promise of spacefaring finally coming of age.  After this people of various backgrounds and professions, and not just pilots, would be finding their way into space and the United States would actually become a spacefaring nation.

This promise was quite heartening for me because of my own experiences with the hopes of being among those who would go into space, not as pilots but as professionals like engineers, scientists and tradesmen.  Adventurers and colonists taking their professions and families into what Gene Rodenberry called (via Captain Kirk);  “The Final Frontier”.  Like Sally Ride, who had been discouraged from pursuing an interest in science as a profession by her teachers, I had been discouraged from pursuing a career in the space program purely on the grounds that I wore glasses, which (at that time) would automatically disqualify me for “test pilot’ style astronaut training. Consequently, she and I each spent our tearful teenage nights cursing those who should have been encouraging instead discouraging our youthful ambitions.

However, Sally’s determination (and lack of eyewear) was stronger than her teacher’s discouraging advice and history attests to her strength, courage and fortitude. Despite the odds she became America’s first woman in space and an inspiration to generations of would be spacefarers. To me Sally Ride is The First Lady of the American space program and a kindred spirit, I grant her all the admiration that anyone can muster for someone who they have actually never met, yet always admired.  When I read of her succumbing to Pancreatic Cancer in July of 2012, it had only been two years since my diagnosis of impending Pancreatic Failure, it seemed to me that she and I were more than just comrades in dreams, but travelers on the same journey.   With our eyes on the stars, we dreamed of a time when space would be open for anyone willing to take the risk that comes with the call of adventure. She taking the high road aboard her space ships and me taking the low road aboard my sailing ships.
Ride, Sally Ride aboard your mystery ship. I look forward to someday meeting up with you; Where the ocean meets the sky, we’ll be sailing.

Miles
 

May 26, 2015




 

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