Eoraptor
Funditor
  

Aim small, miss small.
Posts: 876
Gender:
|
A moment of true awe. I’m not talking about a ‘I was just so happy’ moment. No. Have you just had one of those awe inspiring, slack-jawed, mind-blowing, heart-stopping, dumbfounded, at a loss for words moments? -I have had three that I can point to. One from mother nature, a summer storm had just come through and I was watching for rainbows and listening for thunder when a bolt of lightning came from blue sky way too close to me. I saw the light and had just enough time to think ‘oh wow that’s close’ before the thunder hit me like something solid. It sounded like the sky was cracking. I don’t think I was ever really in danger, but it felt as if my heart had literally skipped a beat. Never again will I underestimate lightning. -The next two mark rare moments in which, for a split second, I was intensely proud just to be human. -One was an osprey flyby at an airshow. There were other bigger, louder planes there, in fact the blue angels had just finished their show when the osprey flew over. I didn’t think it was coming back and had turned to look at something else. I suddenly heard engines behind me and turned just in time to see it roar by, buzzing the airstrip low enough that if it hadn’t been going so fast I would have thought it was going to land. I stared after the osprey long after it had disappeared, hoping that it would come back but alas, it did not. I think part of me went with it. -The last was perhaps the most unexpected. I had read that the ISS was going to fly over my house. I had seen space station flybys many times, but the night was clear so I went out to look. I had been out for a good while but hadn’t seen it, and was sure that for some reason I had missed it when I saw movement out of the corner of my eye. And there, rising strait up from the horizon was not only the ISS, but also the space shuttle Discovery. They caught the light just right and were each glowing far brighter Venus. They made no sound, of course, and their speeds were perfectly matched. Silver beacons rising before a dark, richly blue sky. Something about the sight caught me, and by the time I had gathered wits enough to go retrieve my family, they had passed the zenith and faded to the brightness of the stars of the big dipper. It was one of the last flybys of Discovery. So. A moment like that. Anyone care to share?
|
|
Back to top
|
"The very fact that there is life here at all, and that everything that's alive today, is so, because everything else passed away." -Jack Horner
"Once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return."
"Yet the finer they were the frailer; the cleverer, the more wrong-headed." -North
IP Logged
|