Posts Tagged "nasa tweetup"

Save My Spot (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 5)

Posted by on Oct 16, 2011 in Tweetups | 0 comments

Save My Spot (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 5)

"What? Astro Ron needs a number? What is she talking about?" The light rain was becoming heavier and I was starting to become distracted in my driving so I put the phone back in the cup holder, "Sorry Shannon, it'll have to wait. I have to get to the Tweetup first before I can figure out what this is about."

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Running on Empty (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 4)

Posted by on Oct 8, 2011 in Tweetups | 3 comments

Running on Empty (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 4)

It had been 18 hours since I had eaten anything and I remembered my nutrition bar tucked in a pocket of my carry on. I pulled it out along with the last remains of the bottled water from the Birmingham terminal gift shop. I put my cell phone on GPS and quickly wolfed down the nutrition bar before getting out of the parking lot and onto the main roads. I now had finally had my breakfast... sort of.

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Houston, I Have a Problem (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 3)

Posted by on Oct 2, 2011 in Tweetups | 2 comments

Houston, I Have a Problem (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 3)

Ok, I'm already touching a sleeping stranger on an airport bench, but it looks like I was going to have to take it up a notch to get her awake. I couldn't abandon her, so I looked around seeing we were alone and placed a hand on each of her shoulders, gave her a careful, but firm shake and in my best Jerry Lewis voice yelled, "HEY LAAADY!"

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Going, Going, Gone! (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 2)

Posted by on Sep 28, 2011 in Tweetups | 0 comments

Going, Going, Gone! (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 2)

The voice of the captain came on the intercom, "Folks, we seem to have lost oil pressure on our left engine and are diverting into Birmingham. Flight attendants please prepare the cabin for an emergency landing."

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Go For It! (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 1)

Posted by on Sep 25, 2011 in Featured, Tweetups | 2 comments

Go For It! (JSC135 Tweetup – Part 1)

Sitting in the cockpit of this simulator would be identical to being in the cockpit of the real shuttle - the motion based simulator even tilts up 90 degrees to put you on your back for launch. Since STS-135 was now in orbit and the last shuttle mission to fly, this simulator was going to be decommissioned only a few days after the JSC Tweetup. To me, this was the closest I was ever going to get to being an astronaut, so I felt like it was a now or never opportunity.

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