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Note to Self

Space Tourism Gets Sweetly Personal for These Two Strong Lady Travelers

Note to Self

WNYC Studios

Self-improvement, Tech, Note, Npr, Education, Public, Wnyc, Manoush, York, To, New, Self, Radio, Business, Technology, Relationships, City, Society & Culture, Zomorodi, Newtechcity

4.72.7K Ratings

🗓️ 15 October 2014

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One woman mortgaged her home to buy a ticket to space. Another decided never to have children so she could accept an opportunity for space travel at a moment's notice, even a one way ticket. These two stories collide in this week's episode about women taking the giant leap of commercial space travel.

"I’m going to be seeing the perimeter of the Earth. But still, the whole idea of actually being that far removed from it is, for me, it’s priceless,” Lina Borozdina

Lina Borozdina has clutched her $200,000 ticket to fly on Richard Branson’s Virgin Galatic for over 10 years. Through divorce and a battle with cancer she has refused to trade in the ticket for a financial cushion. “That money is the money that I don’t count on,” she says. “That is my dream, and it’s put away in a separate box.” Lina is still waiting to go. She just really wants to know what it feels like, not just what it looks like, to see earth from above. She's never gotten a satisfying answer even after asking several astronauts. Until today.

“I was giggling like a little kid and one of my crew-mates took off his gloves and let it sort of spin in the air, and I’m like, oh my god, I can’t believe I’m in space,” Anousheh Ansari.

Anousheh Ansari is an engineer and entrepreneur and the first female private space explorer. She tells us what it's like to rocket up to orbit, about lifting out of her seat with weightlessness and being overcome with joy and excitement so much that she spun and spun and spun until she found herself cleaning up vomit in zero gravity. Kind of gross, but also kind of amazing.

The two women have a lot in common: both have childhood dreams of space travel that they couldn't shake, both are immigrants to the U.S., both well educated and they are most certainly not thrill seekers. “I don’t even go on, you know, roller coasters. To me, it wasn’t about the rocket ride. It was about being in space,” Anousheh says. They are also both just so so likable you can't help rooting for them.

The magic really happens at the end of this episode, when Lina and Anousheh have their first conversation. They talk logistics, like going to the bathroom in space as a lady. But also, Lina gets an answer to her driving curiosity: What does it really feel like to see our planet from space? Are our biggest earth-bound questions answerable?

This show definitely got us rethinking our fears and expanding our mental horizons. How about you? Would you take a trip out of this world after hearing this? Why? Let us know in the comments below or record your answer on your phone and email it to us at [email protected].

Space Travel Options Mentioned in the Audio:

    Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic:Tickets on sale for $250,000. Blast-off delayed multiple times but now looking like early 2015. Space Adventures:
      Circumlunar Mission. Ticket price is not yet determined.Expected Blast-off: 2018 Visit the International Space Station. Cost: Around $20 million. Blast-offs began in 2001, and international recording artist Sarah Brightman is set to go in 2015. There’s an option to extend this trip and conduct a spacewalk accompanied by a professional cosmonaut. Suborbital Spaceflight: Tickets will be $100,000. Blast-off has yet to be announced.
    XCOR Aerospace: Tickets are on sale for $95,000-$100,000 depending on the aircraft you choose. Blast-off expected in 2015. Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin: The suborbital adventure’s ticket price and blast-off date has yet to be announced.

If you like this episode, why not send this link to a friend who dreams of space. To have future episodes download directly to your device, subscribe on iTunes, or on Stitcher, TuneIn, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else using our RSS feed. It only takes a few clicks and helps us a bunch. Thanks.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello friend, this is an episode of Note to Self, but from when we used to be called New Text City.

0:06.9

Same good content, just the old name. Enjoy.

0:10.0

From WNYC, this is New Text City.

0:13.3

Where digital gets personal. I'm a new summer Ooty.

0:17.3

Were you one of these kids?

0:20.3

My interest in space, I've been interested in it since I was pretty little, about three years old.

0:26.1

You know, some kids are really into horses. Others are cuckoo for baseball.

0:30.4

And then there are the space nerds. You know the ones.

0:33.4

For the next space, I'd like to know everything about it.

0:36.4

And I always watch space movies.

0:38.9

You're hearing campers at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

0:42.0

I think it'd be kind of cool to work on the space shows, so I like space.

0:47.6

I was never one of those kids. I have terrible motion sickness and a touch of claustrophobia.

0:54.7

Right now, if you offered me a ticket on the next rocket headed for orbit, the answer would be no.

1:00.7

Absolutely not.

1:03.7

If you agree with me, well, get ready to reconsider.

1:08.9

And for those of you who would get on the next rocket, this episode's gonna help you prepare.

1:14.6

Especially since that ticket may be on offer sooner than you think.

1:19.7

Today, two very unusual women.

1:23.0

Two very unusual stories, beautiful stories that got me dreaming in a way that I never have before.

1:30.6

And look at this guy a little differently at night now. Maybe you will too.

1:39.7

First, let's meet Lena.

...

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