Saturday, April 30, 2016

Last Recorded Words Aboard the Challenger Spacecraft-by Kim Michael


"Give Me Your Hand"

    by Kim Michael

    Copyright March 2015



On January 28, 1986, seventy-three seconds after lift off, the space shuttle Challenger exploded nine miles above the earth.  Despite thorough coverage of the accident by the media, the last few minutes inside the spacecraft were kept from the public.  Only years later would we learn that some of the members on board did not die in the explosion.  And in those last few, terrible moments; as the spacecraft came crashing to earth, the last unofficial words recorded in the cabin was a single voice saying, “Give me your hand.”

They were not words of anger or regret.  They were “human” words.  Words that resonate at the very heart of what it means to be human.  When I first heard this story it made a lasting impression on me, and it occurred to me that it is in the simple act of reaching out to one another that the true strength of what we are, and who we are, is the most meaningful. 

“Give me your hand,” reminds us in a way that no other words can, that we are never really complete as evolved creatures or master works of creation until we have the ability to connect with one another.   

And of all the words that could have been spoken that day, “Give me your hand” leaves us with the undeniable truth that the simplest of all human gifts-- are perhaps the most precious.   

We may one day traverse the galaxy.  Walk on distant planets and live in great cities beneath the ocean, but no matter how far we reach, no matter how high we climb, the one thing that will not change, and has not changed since the dawn of our existence, is our need for one another.    

When I think of the words, “ Give me your hand”, I am reminded of Luciano De Crescenzo, a famous Italian writer and director, who once said—"We are each of us, angels, with only one wing, and it is only when we embrace each other….that we can fly."
Kim Michael
Author

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