Jan 21, 2010 21:47
Spent most of the morning on paperwork, one way and another. We
have to do an end-of-mission summary report, and most of us spent
much of the morning working on our sections of it. It's really
rather amazing what we've accomplished in the last almost-two-weeks.
We've done some serious science, we've had some amazing adventures,
we've become experts at things that we'll never do again. (Unless
we return, of course -- there are quite a few people who've gone
on multiple MDRS rotations -- but even if we do return, things will
have changed.)
I helped people with wordsmithing and such, and as we were working
on the brief personal biographies for each section I was struck
once again by what an amazingly qualified crew we have. Laksen has
four advanced degrees and is a VP of a major biomedical company;
Bianca represented Belgium at International Space Camp; Paul was a
semifinalist for the "academic Heisman" award; Diego is well on his
way to being an ESA astronaut. I am so honored to have had the
opportunity to be part of this crew.
Despite the fact that much of yesterday's snow is still around,
Paul, Laksen, and Bianca took off on a GPS-tagging EVA. The mud
was terrible, though, and they soon had to turn back. I prepared
hot cocoa for the poor chilled Marsnauts. Paul's radio came back
from the EVA muddy and nonfunctional, but once I scraped the mud
out of the little USB port on the bottom it came back to life. (In
the process I also discovered tht these radios have a powerful LED
flashlight built in. Good to know about in case of emergency.)
In the afternoon it began to rain, making the already horrendous
mud even worse. Also, our Internet connection is currently limited
again, even though the bandwidth usage report shows that we did not
use more than the usual amount of bandwidth yesterday. (I've asked
the Mars Society to contact HughesNet and find out what's going on
but haven't heard back yet.) So with horrible weather outside and
no Internet to speak of, I pulled out the game Set and taught it
to Bianca and Paul. They are both very smart people and caught on
immediately -- in fact, they both beat me handily.
It's snowing now. The snow is building up on the satellite dish
and at the moment we have no Internet at all, so this report may
not go out until tomorrow, but I'm going to try to send it now just
in case.
(Later:) Well, that didn't work. Diego brushed the snow off the
dish and that brought the signal back, but it went back down to
zero again within 20 minutes. At the moment I'm watching the signal
meter wobble between 2 and 4, which is not enough to get a lock on
the satellite. So no more Internet until the weather clears.
The feeling of isolation I am feeling right now is, I think, the
most important thing I've gotten from this experience. The dust
and the mechanical failures and the sound of breath in your space
helmet are all part of the Mars experience, but I don't think that
any smaller-scale simulation could have given me this very genuine
feeling of complete isolation and self-reliance. We are a long,
long way from home and from anyone who could help us, and we are
reliant on the materials we have here and our own wits to survive,
and even though we are not actually on Mars the situation is similar
in emotionally important ways. It's not just our current situation
that makes me feel this way; I've felt it the whole time, but right
now I'm feeling it very keenly.
This feeling makes me more adventurous, more willing to take risks,
and it also makes me more what I call "protagonisty." Protagonists
don't just sit around or wait or expect other people to do things.
They try to better their own situation; they take actions that
affect the plot. Making your protagonist more protagonisty is an
important way to make a story more engaging; making yourself more
protagonisty is an important way to improve your own life.
It was being protagonisty that got me here, and I think the same
is true of all the other people here. I've been a lot more
protagonisty in these two weeks than I usually am -- leaping in to
fix things, trying things that might have a downside, seeking
forgiveness rather than permission. It's been an important life
lesson to me and I hope to hang onto it for at least a while after
I get home.
But I am ready to go home now.
I sure hope this weather doesn't stop crew 89 from getting here on
Saturday...
(Later:) Okay, Paul's going out to try brushing the snow off the
satellite dish again...
mars