I touch the future. I teach.
The president felt that it was important to send an ordinary citizen to experience the excitement of space travel as a representative for all Americans.
I can remember in early elementary school when the Russians launched the first satellite. There was still so much unknown about space. People thought Mars was probably populated.
I was a little concerned with how the crew was going to view me because I didn't know whether this program had been kinda forced down their throats. But they were wonderful.
I cannot join the space program and restart my life as an astronaut, but this opportunity to connect my abilities as an educator with my interests in history and space is a unique opportunity to fulfill my early fantasies.
It's not the Olympics. It's Concord, New Hampshire, and a homecoming should reflect the community I'm part of.
My job in space will be to observe and write a journal. I am also going to be teaching a class for students on earth about life in space and on the space shuttle and conducting experiments.
If I can get some student interested in science, if I can show members of the general public what's going on up there in the space program, then my job's been done.
Every shuttle mission's been successful.
Sometimes when things get kind of frantic, it helps to call my husband Steve, because I think he's got a real good sense of where everything's gonna be in a few years.
NASA was going to pick a public school teacher to go into space, observe and make a journal about the space flight, and I am a teacher who always dreamed of going up into space.