9:00 AM

The Final Space Shuttle Mission

At the close of the STS-135 shuttle mission, I began to wonder how I would even begin to sum up my experience working on the Space Shuttle Program. It has been the most exciting, invigorating thing I could have imagined doing with my career, and I have been very, very blessed. Working at the TPS Imagery Coordinator console (TIC) in the Shuttle Mission Evaluation Room (MER) in Houston's Mission Control Center (MCC) has been the highlight of my career up to this point. I'm going to miss the on-orbit console support that we provided to the Space Shuttle Program during the next couple of years, but I'm excited about the things to come!

After writing multiple long paragraphs about my work that were way too in depth for this blog, I decided to scrap it all and just go with the pictures and videos from the last flight, STS-135. Enjoy!


This video is of the KSC Closeout Crew saying goodbye to the Space Shuttle Program (God Bless America!!):


My friend and coworker, Dave Melendrez, created this next video to commemorate the final Space Shuttle launch, ever. It's a long one (17 minutes), but good.


TIC Team on console during STS-135
Leslie Upchurch and Dan Labasse, STS-135
Big Dawg, Little Dawg, McMahan & the Queen Bee (aka. Dan, Amanda, Johnathan and Leslie)
Dan and me
Johnathan, me and Dan on console, STS-135
Johnathan and me on console, STS-135
SSP MER during STS-135
TIC Team 1 on console during STS-135
TIC Team 1 on console during STS-135

Leslie and I were very blessed to be able to make the trek to Florida's Space Coast to watch the April 2010 attempt of the last launch of Endeavor for STS-134. In this trip, we were able to see the final vehicle to take flight in the Space Shuttle Program, the Space Shuttle Atlantis, up close and personal as it was being prepped for it's final voyage in the Orbiter Processing Facility. So amazing!!


Leslie and I standing aft of Atlantis in the OPF

The final video I have is an incredibly reflective one about all the things we've accomplished in space. It's a great way to conclude this blog. If you don't watch the others, watch this one. What Kind of World Do You Want:


11:04 PM

First Memory Verse: Check!

So Celeste attends a private Christian school in League City. One of the things they do is teach the children verses of the Bible, by having them memorize them. Celeste's first memory verse (starts with an "A," they have one for every letter of the alphabet) is due one week from today. However, when I picked her up today from school, she was so elated about having already memorized her verse and being able to get a toy from the "Treasure Chest" for having done so. We took this little video for Daddy... enjoy!



Oh yeah, and in case you didn't notice, "God died so we don't have to..." Hahaha!!

9:14 AM

First Day of Kindergarten

It's done. We have just dropped off our one and only child for her very first day of school. And it wasn't easy.


Yesterday afternoon, Ms. Linda, Eric and I all had tears in our eyes as we said goodbye and picked up our school-age daughter from Ms. Linda's for the last time. Ms. Linda has been a blessing in so many ways to our little family. She has been the most reliable, dependable, caring and devoted provider for our daughter that I could have ever dreamed of finding. These last four years with Celeste in her care have given us peace of mind and we have grown very close to Ms. Linda and her family. It was hard choking back the tears yesterday, and I almost didn't make it. I can't say enough how much of a blessing Ms. Linda has been to us, and while it's a great thing for Celeste to begin her school years, it's also bittersweet.


Last night, I pressed Celeste's clothes, bleached a tiny rebellious chocolate milk stain out of her shirt, packed her lunch, worked with her on her first homework assignment, and then we all sat down and packed her very first backpack with all of the necessities of the first day of school.


First homework assignment
Her first homework assignment was to decorate this cutout with all of her favorite things. She only wanted to color them, she didn't want to use beads or magazine clippings, and the said sandals, a book and a necklace and bracelet were her favorite things (she drew the necklace and bracelet later, in red).

Today began with Mommy and Daddy running around the house like headless chickens, hurriedly preparing Celeste a cooked breakfast while she slept and double and triple-checking the contents of her backpack. It's obvious we are so new to this! Then I picked up my 46-pound daughter out of our extremely tall bed (she sometimes crawls in while we're dead asleep), put her on my shoulder and took her into the living room where we played Rio and set her little table with chocolate milk, a small waffle and some scrambled eggs. After much encouraging, she ate most of the waffle, drank the chocolate milk and barely touched the eggs (much to my dismay). Daddy braided her hair while I blow-dried my own, and then we grabbed our things and ran out the door.


Eric's truck is in the shop, so he's driving an un-tinted car. I followed them in my car, and kept watching her little head bounce up and down excitedly the whole way to the school. It's hard to explain the wave of emotions that I felt this morning.


I remember when that baby girl was too tiny to fit inside her infant carrier without ample support. I remember how that little head needed extra rolled up blankets in the additional infant head support part to keep her head up in the weeks after she was born. All those beautiful white eyelet sundresses, matching hats and tiny sandals. Her cute, dimply and toothless smiles at us both, and her bountiful laughter would fill the house as a baby. I remember feeling soooooo scared the day she rolled herself right off the edge of our bed and onto the carpeted floor, and how angry I was at Eric for raising the bed (as if those 2-3 extra inches mattered) even though she was unharmed. Then there was the time I received a cell phone picture from my father-in-law of my 7-month-old with her tongue hanging out one side, standing on her tiptoes and stretching to get those tiny little fingers on the piano. It was a short week or two later that she began walking; people could hardly believe their eyes that this 7-8 month old was walking so well.


When she was 14 months old, I nervously dropped her off at Ms. Linda's for the first time. I remember crying on the way to work; I felt awful about leaving my baby at a place unfamiliar to her. But then she didn't want to go home when I picked her up, and I knew I'd found a keeper in Ms. Linda.


And now here I was, 4 years and 5 months after that first day at Ms. Linda's, watching my baby girl's curly head bounce up and down excitedly as we took her to her very first day of Kindergarten. Where has the time gone??


Of course, as every typical Mom does, I took photos of our baby as she made her way to her new school for the first time. Here they are... I can't wait to pick her up this afternoon and hear all about her day!!


Posing in front of the school
Cuteness!
Celeste and Daddy standing outside her Kindergarten classroom
Ms. Pino helping Celeste get started on her first activity

She has 14 students in her class. It's an all-day kindergarten class, and her buddy, Jude, is in her class! So glad she already has a friend there with her. I think I'm more nervous for her than she is today.


I miss my baby girl today... where has the time gone???

8:14 PM

Starting Her Out Young...

Celeste loves going to the gym. She will even flex her muscles and show you how all her "hard work" in the Kid's Club has been paying off.


Today, she's been reading through my book, The New Rules of Lifting For Women. And she's been asking about the workouts in the book! Too cute.


Starting her out young!
This is what you're suppose to do, Mom!

Maybe I can teach her about being healthy now at her young age so that she'll have an even better, healthier lifestyle. Crossing my fingers...

2:50 PM

Physical Update

New shirt from Catalina Island, curtesy of EricWhile most of you family members are waiting for me to put up a blog about the space stuff (I assure you, I will; it's going to be very image-intensive), I thought I'd update you with my working out status! (Haha yes Aunt Cyndi, one of these pics was taken at Boca!). ;)


So OMG, there is so much information out there. I started by going back to the gym, and I felt great about that. Then I started reading a lot online and talking with friends and family members who are intense and very knowledgeable, and I found that I was quite the dummy about my body and it's needs. I purchased The New Rules of Lifting for Women and began learning a lot more.


At first, it was completely overwhelming. I was more focused on working the last shuttle flight at the time I began learning more about what I was doing wrong and what I should be doing in the gym and in my eating habits.


I'm still learning. There's so much that I am finding out every day that I don't know. If I'm going to be losing fat and replacing that with muscle (not trying to look like her, her or her, if they can even be called female!!), then I need a higher protein, lower carb and fat diet.


So I went to Nutrition Depot and purchased some protein powder (yummm!!!!), some female vitamins and fish oil supplements (for Omega-3s). But the protein... oh my!! Apparently, I can't digest it very well... and ummm... that trait that Gabe has that everyone loves so much, well I found it in my genes, too.


(Dad: "Son, don't do that in the kitchen while we're eating!"
Gabe: Steps 2 feet back into the living room. Mission accomplished.
Dad: Rolls eyes as we all bust out laughing.)


Man, that was embarrassing!!! Well, I didn't actually have any embarrassing moments, but let's just say it was not pleasant to deal with. So I found this chewable papaya extract tablet that you can take after eating that really helps! (Can anyone guess what I'm getting Gabe for Christmas??) Yep, I'm excited about that right there.


So here are a couple of pics of my new little forming bicep. I'm kinda proud of this thing!


Yay! Progress! Cute!