We've just ditched the danger, now let's see what else space has in store for us. There's no point in going back after this. A beast like that could have killed us instantly right on the first step if we weren't carrying the proper space equipment. Oh, that's interesting. Look up ahead, the view from here looks great. It's truly beyond our imagination, isn't it? Yet up close in person the chapters of this planet become dark and perilous like the one before. Life can't be sustained there, it's not in the right conditions. It's too cold for an organism to live there. The coldest it's ever been back at home was at -128.6 degrees Fahrenheit! No, this can't be called home. It look's beautiful though, it almost looks like home, but it isn't. Let's go further and explore the depths of the universe.
Space, it's more than just a place with planets and stars. There's life to it. Lurking out there, waiting to be seen. Undiscovered light years in this edge-less infinite. Back home, when we look up at the night sky, there's only so much the naked eye can come to see. It seems as if space isn't alive. It seems lifeless, our eyes have deceived us.
This giant beast has secrets that are disguised to capture it's prey with the death like truths. Reality and fantasy begin to merge as one, leaving us mind blown. Space is perilous. It truly is. From home it's just a wonder, but we're far from home. Masking the reality, things that can't seen. Space is perilous.
The peril of space are seen in the following quote from the book "Apollo 13." It says,"In the hour or so since the astronauts had moved over to Aquarius, no definite decisions had yet been made about how to propel the docked ships toward home, and with the spacecraft moving closer to the moon, at a speed climbing back up to 5,000 miles per hour, the options were quickly fading" (Lovell, Kluger 143). We see how mission control is desperately trying to look ways to get the astronauts back home. Any wrong move can cost the lives of this men up in space. It's nothing easy, it's life threatening with other potential obstacles that could complicate things along the way.
Reflection: Three weeks ago, I wasn't really a good reader and it was hard for me to keep myself reading. Now, I don't have that same difficulty which is making reading something I want to do. Before I had to force myself to read but now I do it on my own.
The peril of space are seen in the following quote from the book "Apollo 13." It says,"In the hour or so since the astronauts had moved over to Aquarius, no definite decisions had yet been made about how to propel the docked ships toward home, and with the spacecraft moving closer to the moon, at a speed climbing back up to 5,000 miles per hour, the options were quickly fading" (Lovell, Kluger 143). We see how mission control is desperately trying to look ways to get the astronauts back home. Any wrong move can cost the lives of this men up in space. It's nothing easy, it's life threatening with other potential obstacles that could complicate things along the way.
Reflection: Three weeks ago, I wasn't really a good reader and it was hard for me to keep myself reading. Now, I don't have that same difficulty which is making reading something I want to do. Before I had to force myself to read but now I do it on my own.