Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Trudy Chapman's avatar

Yes, nothing says “hope” like a rocket launch, I totally agree.

I was at my granddaughters birthday party during the launch. I had it streaming on my phone and when the launch countdown began, all the adults huddled around my wee screen to watch. The kids were momentarily interested but quickly ran off to do 5 year old birthday stuff.

I must admit, my heart pounded as the rocket shone against the eggshell blue sky, and conversation turned to “where were you when the Challenger blew up…?” Yikes. And still… the thrill of exploration, the proof we can still do big things, the science that is happening on this trip… the composition of the crew… they all remind me of the feeling in my body of the good days we’ve had… so different from the constant dread I’ve felt since… well… let’s say the last five years as we lurch from one bad thing to the next.

I appreciate this reminder that if we work together, we can still do big things. Good things. And be hopeful.

Thanks for your piece. And for creating good memories with your son.

James Quinn's avatar

I wrote my first reply before I remembered Walter Lippman’s tribute to Amelia Earhart, written just a few days after she disappeared on her way to Johnston Island toward what would have been the end of her round-the-world flight. I print it here because Lippman had a far greater command of the language than I ever will.

"The best things of mankind are as useless as Amelia Earhart’s adventure. They are the things that are undertaken not for some definite, measurable result, but because someone, not counting the costs or calculating the consequences, is moved by curiosity, the love of excellence, a point of honor, the compulsion to invent or to make or to understand. In such persons mankind overcomes the inertia which would keep it earthbound forever in its habitual ways. They have in them the free and useless energy with which alone men surpass themselves.

Such energy cannot be planned and managed and made purposeful, or weighted by the standards of utility or judged by its social consequences. It is wild and it is free. But all the heroes, the saints, the seers, the explorers and the creators partake of it. They do not know what they discover. They do not know where their impulse is taking them. They can give no account in advance of where they are going or explain completely where they have been. They have been possessed for a time with an extraordinary passion which is unintelligible in ordinary terms.

No preconceived theory fits them. No material purpose actuates them. They do the useless, brave, noble, the divinely foolish and the very wisest things that are done by man. And what they prove to themselves and to others is that man is no mere creature of his habits, no mere automaton in his routine, no mere cog in the collective machine, but that in the dust of which he is made there is also fire, lighted now and then by great winds from the sky."

15 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?