How
would you fell when your favourate singer/sportsman/agency replies to all the
fan mail you sent them? That might sure sound a dream. But Dream big and you
just might get your voice heard. When a 7-year-old boy wishing for a trip to
outer space recently decided to share his ambition with the agency that could
make it happen, he was surprised to receive a response. “Dear NASA,” his
handwritten letter reads. “My name is Dexter I heard that you are sending 2
people to Mars and I would like to come but I’m 7. So I can’t. I would like to
come in the future.” The boy then asks for advice on how to become an
astronaut. The charming letter, complete with a self-portrait of Dexter
apparently in a space capsule, was posted online by his mom this week, along with NASA’s
response, which she called unexpected. “Dear Dexter,” the letter from NASA’s
Office of Communications begins as it thanks him for his missive. “Just think –
in a few years, you could be one of the pioneers that may help lead the world’s
activities for better understanding of our earth and for exploring space.” Dexter
also received some colorful photos of Mars and the Curiosity rover roaming the Red Planet, along
with a sticker and a bookmark. NASA responds to hundreds of thousands of public
inquiries each year on a variety of topics, said spokeswoman Lauren Worley. The
agency received about 500 letters asking for more information about becoming an
astronaut just last week, she added. “But we especially enjoy responding to the
letters we receive from young aspiring astronauts,” Worley told TODAY Moms in
an email. “NASA is working to send humans farther into space
than ever before, first to an asteroid and on to Mars, and perhaps one of these
young writers will be among the first astronauts to set foot on another
planet.” Dexter, who lives in England, visited the Kennedy Space Center with
his family last year and loved it, his mom wrote on Reddit.
NASA’s response made him as excited as opening presents on Christmas Day, she
added. “He was so pleased to receive the letter, I hope NASA know the
difference they've made to him,” she wrote. “Good show NASA!” Encouraged by his
success, Dexter is now drafting a letter to the European Space Agency, his mom
wrote. While a lot
of 7-year-old children want to be astronauts, not all of them receive a NASA letter that encourages them to one day join
the agency. The letter is a vastly different approach than the space
agency took in 1962. That letter which surfaced on Shine today revealed an aspiring female astronaut who was told
by NASA that it does not have an ”existing program concerning
women astronauts nor do we contemplate any such plan.” Fifty years
sure has made a difference in NASA’s thinking as female and male astronauts now
share space aboard the International Space Station and 7-year-old boys receive
personal responses in response to their letters. A NASA employee on Reddit says
employees at the space agency LOVE these types of letters: “I work at NASA HQ in DC and whenever I visit
the Public Outreach people, they have scans of these letters pinned to their
cubicles. NASA eats this stuff up because it reinforces the idea they they are
doing good work. I hope Dexter follows the dream and he gets to go where so few
have.” Dexter Walters
has a long way to go before he becomes an astronaut, but now he has his very
own NASA letter he can look at every single time he needs some encouragement.
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