Sunday, 26 August 2012

The world is a lesser place without Neil Armstrong

At the age of 82, and surely proving that space travel has no lasting health risks, Neil Armstrong died yesterday. A genuine hero of our time, he saw the kinds of things that the rest of us can only dream about.

I've just been reading the speech that President Nixon would have made if the lunar module with Armstrong and Aldrin had failed to dock with the command module for the flight home. This was highly possible because of the fuel situation in the module. The two astronauts, knowing that there was absolutely no hope of recovery, would just have drifted off to die slowly in space.

In his place I would have been content with that knowing that I had seen the most extraordinary sights that life could possibly offer and that I'd been somewhere beyond where any normal man could hope to go. And I wonder if he felt that too.

Neil Armstrong has slipped the surly bonds of earth for the last time and left the kind of footprints in life that mere mortals will find hard to copy.

Surely some sort of effort should be made to send his ashes to Mars so that he can be the first man there as well. It seems only fitting.

Rest in peace Neil Armstrong.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments will be moderated