Suzy Someday from Nowheresville, USA: Future Female Astronaut.
For the first time in history an all-women spacewalk occurred. On 18 October 2019 American NASA flight engineers Christina Koch and Jessica Meir of Expedition 61 worked side by side for 7 hours and 17 minutes replacing a failed battery charge-discharge unit with a new one.
Sitting at home streaming curiously on NASA’s YouTube channel is Suzy Someday, an 8 year old girl from Nowheresville, USA. She is in awe as her hero’s do their work. She is now, for her first time, witnessing what can be accomplished when little American girls dream. One dreamer born in Grand Rapids, Michigan and the other in Caribou, Maine. Both dreamers once like Suzy.
Suzy’s mother, who is preparing the family dinner catches sight of her little girl and secretly takes a quick snap to send to her loving husband working hard on the Amazon factory floor. Both parents, doing what many parents have been doing for years, sacrificing day and night so their children have a better life than they did.
Growing up Suzy will encounter failure, but forever there to help her overcome will be those images of her hero’s. A constant reminder of what it means to dream big, sacrifice often, and never give up.
In school her classmates will be preparing for homecoming, chasing puppy love on the weekends and daydreaming about popularity. All useless thoughts to Suzy.
Suzy is focused on her dream of one day becoming an astronaut, very much the same as Christina Koch and Jessica Meir once were.
It is endless goals and hours of work for Suzy. All in the name of furthering women’s influence and our exploration of space.
A much improved human race is on the rise. At the head are women like Christina Koch and Jessica Meir, and eventually Suzy Someday from Nowheresville. The notion that women belong only at home is for small brained people who are mouselike in thought.
Young girls of 10 or 11, who are looking to one day make a name and want to push along the social standing status of women need not look to politics but rather to space. Space work requires patience, enthusiasm and devotion. All three are highly developed naturally among women. The future work for women is space work.