How To Kill Time In Space

Published: May 4, 2018, 2:25 a.m.

Near the end of STS-125, NASA\u2019s final space shuttle mission to the Hubble Space Telescope back in 2009, bad weather in Florida initially stopped the seven-member team from returning to Earth. The two-day delay that followed presented the astronauts with some unusual but much needed downtime. So what did they do with it? 

Looked out the windows.

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\u201cI liked to listen to music and watch the world go by,\u201d said Megan McArthur, a mission specialist on the Space Shuttle Atlantis. \u201cIt was pretty awesome.\u201d

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For our new project, Power Up, we're asking fascinating people to explain how they set themselves up for success while living in (and, in this case, off of) an exhausting world. 

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McArthur told us about the seemingly difficult task of relaxing in outer space. She also described her role in helping the American Girl doll company create Luciana, a Chilean-American who is an aspiring astronaut. 

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\u201cIt helps for people to see a role model who represents them, right?\u201d McArthur said of Luciana. \u201c[Someone] who looks like them, maybe who has a similar experience as they have, in order for them to imagine themselves in that same kind of environment.\u201d

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McArthur described her own experience meeting a role model: astronaut Sally Ride, who McArthur says she met when she was 16 years old. She says the 20-minute conversation with Ride, the first American woman to travel to space, was \u201ca special and unique experience for someone just starting to think about what they want to do with their life.\u201d

Tell us how you power up!