The Columbus Dispatch

Astronaut shares stories from year on space station

- By Melissa Davis

A poor student who nearly flunked out of high school, Scott Kelly hardly seems the astronaut type.

His childhood years in New Jersey were rough and, in school, he didn’t apply himself to any subject that bored him. By early adulthood, he was drifting aimlessly as an emergency medical technician, enjoying the fast pace but wondering what he should do with the rest of his life.

What he did have, though, was a determinat­ion to make something of himself — and the good fortune to pick up a book that changed his life:

Tom Wolfe’s “The Right Stuff,” about the Mercury astronauts and the dangerous, wondrous first years of the U.S. space program.

Eager to join their ranks, Kelly taught himself to study and to persist, and soon he was successful­ly completing rigorous academic work and making night landings on an aircraft carrier.

Decades later, he became the first American to spend nearly an entire year — 340 days — on the Internatio­nal Space Station. He returned home in March 2016, and the longterm space habitation’s effects on his body are being studied now as the program contemplat­es a Mars mission.

Handily, Kelly has a convenient control subject, who is geneticall­y identical to him but stayed on Earth: his identical twin, Mark, an astronaut and husband of former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. (Scott Kelly was in space when Giffords was shot; he details in the book how he spent agonizing hours waiting, not knowing whether she had survived.)

Kelly’s new book, “Endurance: A Year in Space, a Lifetime of Discovery,” is a rollicking tale, well-told, about his journey to making the trip of a lifetime. He shares the big-picture stuff (“I’ve learned that grass smells great and wind feels amazing and rain is a miracle. I will try to remember how magical these things are for the rest of my life”); the entertaini­ng (in preparatio­n for Mars: “Can a pair of underwear be worn four days instead of two? Can a pair of socks last a month?”); and the frightenin­g (cerebral fluid doesn’t drain properly in zero gravity, and it “may squish our eyeballs out of shape”).

The best parts of the book are those in which Kelly answers the burning questions all of us have: How do you sleep in space? How do you brush your teeth? Eat breakfast? Drink coffee? Call your family? Work out?

Loss of bone mass, one of the factors NASA is observing, is a real concern, Kelly writes. He was required to run on a treadmill two hours a day, six days a week — which was often painful — to slow the loss.

“Our bodies are smart about getting rid of what’s not needed, and my body has started to notice that my bones are not needed in zero gravity.” As for those well-worn exercise clothes, “there is no laundry up here, so we wear clothes as long as we can stand, then throw them out.”

As for working for a year in space with astronauts from other countries, some he might have met only a time or two, Kelly notes, matter-offactly, “We have agreed to carry out this huge and challengin­g project together, so we work to understand and see the best in one another.”

He has been asked many times about what it’s like spending so much time with Russians. He concludes, “I’ve learned that Russian has a more complex vocabulary for cursing than English does, and also a more complex vocabulary for friendship.”

Such cooperatio­n will serve us well when we go to Mars — a feat that Kelly is sure we’ll achieve. After all, the space station is “the work of 15 different nations over 18 years, thousands of people speaking different languages and using different engineerin­g methods and standards,” he writes.

“In some cases, the station’s modules never touched one another while on Earth, but they all fit together perfectly in space.”

“Endurance: A Year in Space, a Lifetime of Discovery” (Knopf, 400 pages, $29.95) by Scott Kelly

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