I was a teenager when our whole family gathered around the family TV (it was still black and white back then, but it didn't matter, the pictures from the moon were also in black and white) and held our collective breaths as man walked on the moon for the first time in the history of universe. It was the one moment of my life when you knew that everyone in the country--no, everyone on the planet--was doing the same thing you were.
Having
grown up on Twilight Zone and Star Trek (the original, folks, in the first
run), having read science fiction and comic books, it was just the most
exciting thing I could possibly imagine. Was man actually going to
conquer the moon? Was American ingenuity going to to triumph over the
dreaded Soviets and get there first? The Cold War was in full bloom
and the "Space Race" was a big part of it.
Of course, the space program had
been a part of my life ever since I could remember. I had vague memories of the earliest Mercury
flights, and I probably watched each blast-off and each splash down. There was a time there where I could recite
the names of all the astronauts and each of their missions in order. Yes, I was really into it.
But whether you loved the space
program or couldn't care less about it, on that day, you were watching. You were transfixed. You were holding your breath wondering if it
was going to be successful, or if perhaps it would end in disaster.
I
doubt if anyone who is too young to have lived through this unbelievable day
will be able to understand what it felt like at that singular instant in time.
It
was truly an epic moment, the most incredible moment of my life. I
suppose when I think back on it, it still is. There were no VCR's, DVR's
or anything like that back then. I tried taking photos of the first
pictures back from the moon right off the TV screen with a crummy camera, and
of course they didn't come out.
Of course back then, when I could
barely comprehend the magnitude of man walking on the moon, I didn't envision
something called the "internet" would come along and I'd be able to
easily find all the pictures of man on the moon I could ever want.
The
memory of Walter Conkrite taking off his glasses, and, with tears in his eyes, saying, "Man on the moon," is one I will take to my grave.
It
wasn't until later that we learned just how great a pilot that Neil Armstrong
had to be to pull off the landing without crashing or aborting. Armstrong
was a true hero, beyond any doubt. Much later, Armstrong didn't think what he had
done was so special, once saying, "I just went where I was sent."
I figure that's got to be the
understatement of all time.
If this post reads a little
familiar to you, that's because I posted the original version on August 25,
2012, the day Neil Armstrong died. It was
a tribute to him. I have edited it now
for this purpose, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Armstrong's most
famous stroll.
It's a shame Armstrong isn't
around to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his historic walk. Fortunately the other Apollo 11 astronauts
who were part of the mission, Buzz Aldrin, the second man to walk on the moon,
and Michael Collins, the command module pilot, are still with us. By the way, I always felt bad for Collins, to
have gotten that close to the moon, and to see the other two crew members
walking on the moon, that he never got walk on the moon himself. His role was vital of course.
I must say, knowing that it was
fifty years ago makes me feel old. I
guess there's a good reason for that.
"One small step for man, one
giant leap for mankind."