“It’s difficult for some people may be to understand because it’s not really tangible,” she said. “But that positive energy is so important, and you can control that energy, and it helps to control your attitude.”
Mann, 45, a Marine colonel and test pilot who was born in Petaluma, California, said it’s important to recognize there are all types of people aboard the space station. It’s currently home to three Americans, three Russians and one Japanese astronaut.
“What that does is it just highlights our diversity and how incredible it is when we come together as a human species, the wonderful things that we can do and that we can accomplish,” she said.
While fascinated with stars and space as a child, Mann said she did not understand who became astronauts or even what they did. “Unfortunately, in my mind at that time, it was not in the realm of possibilities,” she said.
That changed later in her career. Now, she’s taking in the sweeping vistas of Earth from 420km up and hoping to see the constellations, as she encourages youngsters to follow their dreams.
As for describing Earth from space, “the emotions are absolutely overwhelming,” she said. “It is an incredible scene of colour, of clouds and land, and it’s difficult not to stay in the cupola (lookout) all day and just see our planet Earth and how beautiful she is, and how delicate and fragile she is against the blackest of black that I’ve ever seen — space — in the background.”
Mann rocketed into orbit with SpaceX on Oct. 5. She’ll be up there until March. She and her husband, a retired Navy fighter pilot, have a 10-year-old son back home in Houston.
The first Native American in space, in 2002, was now retired astronaut John Herrington of the Chickasaw Nation.