Postby ClosetOtaku » Sat Mar 12, 2005 5:58 pm
I was a newly commissioned second lieutenant at a training session in Fort Lewis, Washington at the time. Our instructor came in and said something had happened to the shuttle, and we turned on a TV and saw congressmen speaking about it. But we had to get back to class, so I didn't see the footage until later on that evening.
I remember during lunch (we were on the west coast, and the accident happened around lunch time on the east coast) just driving around in my car, listening to the NPR coverage of the incident.
The only other time I recall being that shocked was 9/11. I remembered watching the drop tests and Columbia's first flight several years before when I was still in college. We all knew an accident would happen someday, but none of us thought it would be so soon.
By that evening, the coverage was on every major news channel. The footage ran over and over and over again. It was numbing.
Perhaps it is some indication of how much we've become desensitized to these kind of disasters when, over a decade later, Columbia was lost -- there didn't seem to be the same sense of pause in the nation's business when it happened. Then again, you have to remember where we were in 1986: the U.S. had emerged from a long economic slump, the mood was positive, Reagan was the Man. We were the Good Guys fighting the Evil Empire, and we were winning. The Challenger disaster reminded us we weren't bulletproof, that our technology had its limitations, that people still made mistakes of catastrophic proportions.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis