Daniel and Kelly’s Extraordinary Universe - Exploration from the poles to the heavens
Episode Date: November 19, 2024Daniel and Kelly talk about difficulties encountered during polar expeditions, and how we can avoid making these same mistakes when we begin exploring Mars. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy in...formation.
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Before the first crew leaves from Mars, it would be good to know what to expect.
Yes, you want to know things like what kind of trajectory your spacecraft is going to
but you also want to know some of the squishier stuff too, like what kind of social problems
might come up along the way. To help think through the problems you might encounter, it might
be helpful to know what's happened in similar situations, but what would a similar situation
look like? Well, okay, a trip to Mars will include separating crew members from their family
and friends for more than two years, living in a cramped space with a small number of people,
who you may or may not like, days filled with tedious and boring tasks like fixing the toilet,
and a diet of shelf-stable and maybe less than delicious foods
in an environment where some small mistake could spell death for the whole crew.
Turns out, all of those criteria are met by research expeditions launched to Earth's poles around the year 1900.
Space will have fewer walruses and hopefully less cannibalism,
but at least initially will probably have similar levels of misery,
tediousness, stinkiness, and danger.
So today, we're going to talk about two different polar research expeditions
and discuss how the problems experienced during these expeditions
can give us some insights into how we should prepare for the first trip to Mars.
Welcome to Daniel and Kelly's Extraordinary Universe.
Hi, welcome to Daniel and Kelly's Extraordinary Universe.
I'm Daniel.
I'm a particle physicist, and I don't like being uncomfortable, but I do like camping.
I'm Kelly Weiner-Smith.
I'm a parasitologist, and I like gross stuff, and there's just not enough gross stuff at the polls for me to want to go.
Well, are you a camping kind of person?
Do you like to be out there in nature on the edge of survival, making coffee over an open flame?
I do, but I don't get to do it a lot because I married an indoor husband.
Sounds like you need a second outdoor husband.
Is that an option?
I don't know.
I think Zach would say no.
You have my permission, but I don't know what that counts for.
Oh, fantastic.
I'll let Zach know.
We went to a cabin once and he called that camping and then he was like, I've had enough.
And so that's it.
So what about you?
I don't have an outdoor husband, no.
But thank you for asking.
But no, my question for you today is what is the scariest or most dangerous
outdoor camping expedition experience you've had.
Have you ever thought, hmm, I'm not sure I'm going to make it back from this one?
No, I don't think I've ever done anything that dangerous.
And anytime that I have been scared, it's because I was camping and they were like
loud people nearby who sounded like maybe they were getting violent.
And so it was scary because of the other humans, not because of like wild animals or
difficult temperature conditions or something like that.
I don't know that I've really gone out on a limb while camping.
What about you?
I almost froze to death once in the Ozarks in a freak snowstorm.
Whoa.
I was going to go on like a week-long backpacking trip with my wife, Katrina.
And we had this wonderful guidebook to take us through the Ozarks.
And it said, you know, if people tell you it's going to snow, don't worry, it never snows in the Ozarks.
And the morning we started walking out, it started to snow.
We were like, hmm, this is weird.
But we just kept going because we had never bailed on a backpacking trip ever.
Okay.
And we were crossing streams, which were frozen.
and the temperature just kept dropping and dropping.
And we had to stop at like three in the afternoon and try to set up camp.
And it was like 10 degrees and our fingers were freezing.
And we made the like terrible decision to cook dinner inside the tent because it was so cold.
And we didn't burn the tent down.
But we did like go to bed in the sleeping bags at like 5 p.m.
Because the temperature was so low.
And we woke up at like three the morning having slept the full night and it was still like 5 degrees.
Oh, no.
So we woke up in the morning.
morning and hiked right back out of there.
And we were like, yeah, we're not doing this again.
And we spent the rest of that trip in a cabin.
So Zach would call it camping.
That's right.
Have you done any backpacking away from civilization since?
Oh, yes, absolutely.
We've since taken our kids backpacking and made similar mistakes this time being underprepared
for mountains in the summer in California.
Turns out when you go really high up, it can get pretty cold.
Yeah.
And I always get dizzy when I go really high up.
I think everybody's maybe picking up on me being a giant wimp and having married a giant wimp
and you're totally correct with that assessment.
Yeah, whenever I go mountain climbing with friends or something,
we get a little high up and I'm like, sorry, guys, I'm dizzy.
You keep going, I'm going to eat my snack, got my protein bar, and I hang out.
Well, fortunately, humanity has learned a lot about the earth
because there are people who are not like me and not like you
and can survive crazy conditions to explore all the amazing and beautiful corners of this earth.
Yeah, so the people who explore the poles are really amazing to me,
in part because it's like such a juxtaposition with my wimpiness.
You know, so when I read about the expeditions to the polls, like, I don't really like
being cold.
Virginia has a little bit of cold in the winter.
That seems really nice.
I have friends who go to Antarctica to, like, study seal diving behavior.
And I don't want to be that cold.
But they're incredible.
There are people who love this stuff and thrive on it and don't die.
And so is it hard for you to even, like, read about this?
It's like, while you're wrapped up in a blanket and sipping your warm tea, you're like,
this is too unpleasant, or does it give you a thrill to hear about other people suffering?
I don't revel in their suffering.
It makes me feel justified in my decision to stay home with my warm blankets.
You know, it's good that some people go out and explore the world,
and there'll be some stories today about an expedition that collected some data from the Arctic
that's used now as like a baseline for understanding climate change.
I'm glad there are people out there doing it.
It just doesn't have to be me.
I'm good.
What about you?
I'm in awe of these folks, you know, the way they risk their lives,
the way they suffer, the way they persevere, it's incredible.
I don't think that I could do it.
But of course, I'm not in that situation.
I don't really know.
There's been lots of times when normal people have had to do extraordinary things in order
to survive.
But this feels different because it feels like they've chosen it.
You know, they could have stayed home with their blanket and their tea and had a more
boring job.
But I guess there was something in them that made them feel like I want to do something
nobody else has done, even if I'm risking my fingers and my toes and my nose.
Why do you think they do it? What do you think their motivation is?
I think they're outdoor husbands, you know? And that's just some of us are outdoor husbands and some of us are indoor husbands. I think it's just really who we are. Everybody's different. And I want to explore the universe. I have this deep drive to understand the way the universe works. But I don't have a drive to physically explore the universe. I want to explore the universe mentally while staying home with my tea. And I think other people have that deep desire to see new things physically themselves, to be the first person to put their flag somewhere.
who were excited about the idea of like living in Elon Musk's colony on Mars.
I think we're all just built a little different.
Yeah, no, I totally agree.
I think we are all just built a little different.
I think these expeditions are a combination of like looking for adventure,
wanting to answer scientific questions,
and then also a little bit in some cases of a drive for fame.
So like famously, Roald Amundsen was heading to try to get to the North Pole first.
And he had like the whole ship like packed up and they were on the way.
and he found out that actually someone had made it to the North Pole first and he wasn't going to get the first claim.
So he turned that ship around, lied to his funders and headed to the South Pole, which he did get to first.
And so I think in some cases it's not like a desire to get a certain amount of information or to see a certain place.
It's like a desire to like be number one.
But I don't think that's the motivation for everyone.
That's maybe just the motivation for some captains who have gone out there.
Well, lying to your funders resonates with me.
There's definitely been times when I've gotten a grander.
grant to do X and then I'm like, that's not going to work out.
I think I want to do Y instead.
I don't know if that counts as lying to your funders, but, you know, sometimes science takes a
swerve.
I don't think you're alone there.
I've heard a lot of people say that they pitch grants for projects they've already done.
Yeah.
So that they know they'll have it done on time and then they can use the money for the next thing.
Anyway, maybe Elon Musk has already been to Mars and he's pitching it, but he's secretly already
has a base there.
What do you think?
No.
I hope not.
No, I don't think so.
Quick aside that I thought was super fun.
So I was reading Friedhof Nansen.
Sorry about the pronunciation.
Part of his mission aboard the Fram was funded by Ringness Beer.
And in his diary, which he knew was going to get turned into a book, he very regularly
talks about how delicious ringness beer is.
And the day they ran out, he says it's a day of morning when we ran out of Ringness Beer.
And I'm like, to what extent is this advertising versus like actually being sad about running
out of Ringness Beer?
So anyway, some things haven't changed.
All right, but let's get back on topic.
Yeah.
Tell us why we're talking about polar expeditions today
if our real goal is to understand what life would be like on Mars.
Well, before you go to Mars,
you'd like to know what kind of problems you should prepare for,
what kind of things you're likely to experience.
And there's just not a lot of exploration missions
that are as intense as what a mission to Mars will be like.
But the polar expeditions come close.
And they had a lot of problems that I think,
NASA folks are now anticipating and have like incorporated into their mission plans.
But there's just a lot of problems that get encountered that you're going to want to avoid.
And there's a lot of common themes when you're reading this stuff that make you think like, oh, all right, there's definitely some stuff beyond figuring up the trajectory and like designing the rocket or the ship that you need to be thinking about.
So going to Mars is going to be uncomfortable.
So let's think about the most uncomfortable anybody's ever been.
That's basically the thought.
You know, as I said, I hate being cold.
So yes, hungry and cold.
I don't like either of those things.
And a lot of people died hungry and cold at the polls.
So let's hear all about it.
But before we do, I went out there and I asked folks if they thought that we could learn something about what life would be like on Mars without actually going there.
So before you hear these answers, think for yourself, what do you think we can learn about life on Mars from uncomfortable experiences on Earth?
Here's what folks around UC Irvine had to say.
We'd probably learn some helpful tips and tricks, but I think just the scale of how much more difficult it would be to get to Mars makes things a lot harder.
Even if it might be useful, it is only useful the first team of expeditions.
I think that's the best chance we have to prepare for something as extreme as Mars.
They're isolated for six months without any real way to resupply or get them out.
so I remember there was like several instances where they got ill and then they had to learn how to
from training and from remote how to take care of the illness for example the difficulty to getting
to the South Pole similar to the difficulty of getting to Mars at least on a local level right
like if to go to Argentina first then the weather has to be completely perfect to get to the South Pole
sometimes that takes several months for it to be good and so I think that would prepare the travelers
going to Mars mentally, like that uncertainty of, all right, we have this time window.
If we miss it, we're going to have to wait another amount of time, but you're still going to be,
you're going to still have to be just as prepared as you would have been before.
It's probably a good way to train, right?
Just send people to some cold remote place and say, okay, live by yourself for a year,
see how that goes.
See your life and misery.
Yeah.
No, no.
Once traveling to Mars is its own thing.
it's a lot easier to travel to the pole.
For me, I don't have a very dramatic answer to that.
I feel like it would be totally different.
I think it does because there's hospitable environments.
You learn how to manage those, so it's a stepping stone.
Oh, there's huge parallels.
That's why Antarctic stations are treated as a space analog,
especially the one that the Australians run,
where they have 10 people overwintering with no contact from the outside world
for eight months in the year.
And we see really interesting changes in immune system because you're not exposed to new introductions of microbes through that time.
And there's social aspects as well, how you get people to keep their dynamic moving in a good way when they're so isolated.
It was interesting to me the variability in answers where some folks were like, yes, absolutely there's stuff to learn.
And others were like, no, it's too different.
Yeah, I could see both sides and I do think that there's like a narrow window of Martian exploration where we can learn something from polar expeditions and we're going to try to focus on that narrow window today.
But what did you think of the responses?
Oh, I thought they were great.
That last one is from my wife, Katrina, and she touched on the social aspect, which was really fascinating because I know that she studies how folks microbes are similar when they live together in the Australian Antarctic Station.
And in order to study that, she had to have access to, like, how many times the Australians, how do you say, transmit fluids among each other?
And it turns out 10 people overwintering and the Australian station, there's a lot of fluid transmission.
Oh, my gosh.
We read a lot of stories about what happens at those stations, and that comports with what we had read.
Yes, it's a very exciting place down there.
Lots of different potential matchups, and basically all of them happened.
Not much else to do when you're down there.
So, you know, it's a way to pass the time.
Maybe that's a preview for what life will be like on Mars.
Yeah, could be.
It is a universal way to spend time.
So maybe outdoor husbands occasionally are indoor husbands in a different way.
And then they get bored and they need to do indoor things.
Yes.
Exactly.
Yes.
With other indoor people.
If you'd like to weigh in for our next episode, feel free to send us an email at
Questions at Danielankelly.org.
We'll send you the question and you can send us an audio file with your answer.
and then you can hear your voice on our podcast.
And everybody can hear your thoughts on the question of the day.
Mm-hmm.
All right, so let's get started.
So I picked two expeditions for us to talk about today
that I felt like illuminated some pretty important social things
that you'd want to think about.
I also specifically picked missions that most people hadn't heard about already.
So these aren't like the first person to make it to the North Pole,
the first person to make it to the South Pole.
Because if you know about polar expeditions, those are the things you're most likely to know about that are Shackleton.
And so these are research expeditions, which, you know, unfortunately, I'd like to think that people care more about research, but they sometimes don't.
So our first expedition is led by Adolphus Greeley.
Interestingly, he was in the Civil War and he got shot in the jaw.
Maybe interesting was the wrong word for that.
But he like got knocked out, he fell over, and then he got shot again.
but he survived and he wore a beard for the rest of his life.
And he was on the correct side of the Civil War, I'll say.
But he went through some intense stuff.
And then he got put in charge of this expedition that left in 1881.
So already this guy is a survivor.
He experiences terrible pain and tragedy and just moves on.
Yes.
Yep.
He's intense.
He's a survivor.
And I'll note that the story today is from a book called Labyrinth of Ice by Buddy Levy.
And it's a great book.
I recommend it.
Well, if I'm choosing somebody to head up my expedition to the,
the polls that I'm funding. I definitely want somebody who's been through some suffering. So I want to
see that on the CV, experience suffering. I want to see that too, but I think by the end of this
story, maybe we'll both agree that Greeley isn't your guy in particular. He lives and that's great,
but the rest of his crew. So what was the goal of this mission? You said it was a research mission.
What were they trying to learn? So one, they were setting up a research station and the goal was just to
collect a bunch of environmental data, like temperature, barometric pressure, stuff like that.
They also were supposed to go look for the DeLong Expedition, which was another expedition sent to the Arctic.
But they were DeLong gone.
And, oh, I'm so sorry.
Maybe they actually weren't all dead yet at that point, but really didn't look too hard for them, to be honest.
I feel like that's the setup for so many tragedies.
Like, hey, we sent these people to this dangerous place.
They didn't come back.
So now we're sending you to go figure out what happened.
Like, I'm pretty sure I know what happened.
The idea is don't send more people there.
But anyway, you know, mission two gets sent.
The survivors of the Greeley Expedition did get saved by a crew that went in to save them.
So sometimes it works.
But yes, I think a lot of the time you're just like throwing more dead bodies on the pile, unfortunately.
Maybe that's a little cold, but it's cold out there.
It is cold out there.
So many puns I'm going to have for today.
It's going to be great.
But you were saying also that the point of this mission was just to get like barometric and environmental data.
Like we didn't know yet how cold it was at the polls and what the pressure was and what the weather was.
like there? That was still new to us? It wasn't totally new. So most of the folks who had gone to
the polls were trying to reach farthest north. And so it was like a race to get there and then to
come back. And it wasn't like systematic data collection. So his goal was to set up a research
station and collect data in the same place over a long period of time to get like some really
nice solid baseline, not just like collecting random data points wherever you happen to be on a trip
to try to make it to a place quickly. All right. So how did this mission go? Was it fun from
the beginning or did tragedy strike on day one? It was pretty good initially. So like they got there
and they set up their research station. They were collecting data pretty well. One of the secret goals
really had that he wasn't really supposed to be going for was to try to get as far north as anyone
had ever gotten before just to kind of like tie up that record. And they did that. All right.
I mean, the record was eventually beat. But like he was feeling pretty good about that. They were
getting their data. Things were going okay. But at the end of year one, they hit their first
major snag. There were a couple like social problems before then. But at year one, the first
resupply ship that was supposed to bring them supplies to like get them through to the next couple
years left too late in the season. What? How does that happen? They just like woke up late and didn't
make it or? I mean, this was a government expedition. And so I think they were like government holdups
and I don't know, one thing or another. And then temperature is different between years and they just
thought they'd be okay, but they weren't. And so by the time they got there, they hit a wall of ice.
And they were like, oh, well, we can't get there.
I mean, if I send people to a very unpleasant place and they're relying on my resupply,
then I'm sending that resupply like a little early just to make sure.
So, like, this is kind of shocking.
Yeah, no, it is shocking.
And Reilly's wife was mortified and very angry.
So there was a like letter writing campaign and the people in charge were like,
okay, next year we promise we'll send it sooner.
Next year, like can they make it without this resupply ship?
Is this just like extra biscuits and coffee?
Or is it like essential supplies?
So they did plan ahead knowing that it's possible that the mission wasn't going to get through.
And so they had enough food to get them through a year if the resupply mission didn't make it through.
But they knew that by year two, if they didn't get a resupply mission,
they were going to need to abandon the station and like hightail it out for an area where they were more likely to get rescued.
And maybe there'd be some resupplies along the way where boats would have left like,
this is as close as we could get.
So we dumped the food here with like a flag.
The plan was like if you don't get resupplies for two years, then you need to go out and try to get help.
And were there any resources there?
I mean, is it just completely barren where they were or could they like hunt polar bears?
Yeah.
So they were hunting.
They were hunting wolves and foxes.
And on this mission, they didn't have to eat their dogs, which is nice because I don't think they wanted to do that.
So they were able to do some hunting, which was also nice for like getting out and mental health and stuff like that.
So they were able to resupply them.
themselves a little bit. But the big problem came in year two where they sent out two boats
and for a variety of reasons like one hadn't been retrofitted soon enough because you need really
strong boats because you're going to have to sometimes like crush through the ice to try to get
forward if you think the ice is thin enough. And so for like a variety of fumbles, they kind of left
late again. Oh man. And one boat was like, I'm going forward anyway. And then that one got stuck in the
ice and sank to the bottom
of the sea with a lot
of the food. Oh, Greeley's
wife must have penned a really grumpy letter after
that, huh? She was not so happy
about the way this was all working out.
It's so sad reading about it. You know, like they were
standing on a hill looking, hoping to see
the ship, because there was a period
where it looked like things were opening up and the ship could
have gotten through, but like the food never came.
Why don't they resupply in the
summer? This is crazy. Why wait
for the ice to be forming so you have to race
against the ice? They were trying to like,
even the summer. But it's a long journey at a time where a boat rides are slow and they got out
later than they had planned on in both instance. And so even though they should have left earlier
by the time they left, it was too late and it just didn't work out. So is this resupply boats still like
on the bottom of the ocean or somebody eventually find it and pull it up? I don't know. So it was
the Polaris and it's not one of the more famous ships to have gone to the Arctic. And so I don't
know if anyone's bothered to pull it up. So it might still be there. I'm not sure. It's amazing to me how
hard it is to bring up a shipwreck, which means it like the earth is covered in shipwrecks,
many of which maybe nobody can get to or nobody ever will, which contain like vast
riches and archaeological and sociological stuff that would be super revealing about the time.
It's fascinating how close it is and yet how inaccessible some of this stuff is.
Yeah, but like it totally makes sense to me.
Like when I wear a wetsuit and I'm like in the water and I go to stand up, if the wetsuit is
open a little bit and some water gets in there, like it's much harder.
Like water is really heavy when it gets inside stuff.
It makes sense to me that it would be hard to lift a boat out if it's stuck and then it's got all that water and the boat and the boat is heavy on its own.
And so I think you'd rather just get the gold and leave the boat if you can.
Or the coffee or whatever's down there.
That's right.
Yeah, definitely you don't want to lose the coffee, although now it's maybe a little salty, a little less good.
All right.
So really goes out there.
They try to resupply him twice, fail twice.
What does he do?
Does he decide he's going to live off polar bears forever or does he head home?
So there's a disagreement in the crew.
Some of the crew think, like, look, we can make this polar bear thing work.
Let's just stay here for another year.
But Greeley is a rule follower in the Army.
And so he's like, no, we said that if the resupply didn't come in two years, we were going to leave and, like, meet everybody at this spot.
And so he followed the rules.
And there were 25 men that set out.
And they were able to get like a, I think it's called a cash where like some food got left for them and they found some of it.
But in the end, out of the 25 that set out only seven of them survived and the rest of them died from starvation and exposure.
So it was bad.
I mean, I've messed up research projects before, but nobody ever died because I was too late to file a report or run some calculation or something.
This is why I decided to not be an ER surgeon because I thought, you know, like there's going to be a day where something goes wrong and someone dies and maybe you could have done something about it.
And I don't know that I can handle that.
like major props to the people who do.
We obviously need those jobs.
But I was like, I don't think I want that on my shoulders.
And Greeley had a lot of deaths on his shoulders.
I feel the same way you do.
I couldn't handle the sort of mental load of knowing that my decisions cause somebody to die.
Even if there are also days where like I've saved somebody's life.
That's one reason why I ended up in particle physics because I felt like there's no chance anything I do is ever going to impact humanity really in any way.
And not even like being able to develop new weapons, you know, like my parents were in the weapons program.
And obviously, there are big moral consequences there because they're developing literal weapons of mass destruction pointed at civilian populations.
And so I decided to be totally irrelevant.
And but then later, when I grew up, I thought, hmm, it's kind of weird.
Other friends I have actually useful skills that can help people and save lives and whatever.
I thought that might be nice.
But it does protect you against the days where, oops, I didn't get enough coffee.
and I accidentally cut off the wrong thing.
Yeah, I made a lot of the same calculations, and I'm totally happy where I am.
I'm totally happy being mostly irrelevant, but sometimes amusing.
That's fine with me.
I hope I make some people chuckle sometimes and nobody die.
That's right.
Anyway, these aren't the lessons of Daniel and Kelly's career choices.
We're trying to learn from Greeley's Expedition.
So a lot of people died.
Very few made it back.
And largely because they weren't resupplied.
Is that right?
Yeah.
So there's two lessons to get from this.
And the first lesson, it is all about resupport.
So just like a mission to Mars, there's like windows of time where resupply ships can leave.
And things go wrong.
So you need to be self-sufficient.
So, you know, you could imagine with SpaceX if that window that opens up once every two years to send a resupply mission,
you can imagine things going wrong and making it so that resupply doesn't show up.
For example, maybe China attacks Taiwan and the special computer chips that are made in Taiwan
can no longer be purchased and maybe that's a problem for SpaceX.
Or maybe SpaceX goes bankrupt.
and they're the only ones with the technology
to get a resupply ship to Mars right now.
Or Musk decides to invest
all of his money in X, and you're just left there.
But let's back up a second
and think about why you need a resupply.
I mean, the polar analog is interesting
because those guys needed to resupply,
even though they could hunt locally.
Now, clearly on Mars, they're not polar bears.
We're not aware of any large mammals you can eat.
But technology is also improved.
Is it absolutely clear that a Martian mission
will need to be resupplied?
Is it possible to just send a bunch of people there and have them be self-sufficient from the get-go?
Yeah, so that is a great question.
And maybe something you should try to plan for, especially if your goal is to have like a settlement.
Or you could just pack two extra years worth of freeze-dried foods and plan ahead of time for them to not expire.
Polar bear jerky.
I bet that's pretty good.
Sure.
Yeah.
Delicious.
I mean, I think you'd need a lot of space to do essentially subsistence farming for four people and survive just on that.
So that would be a pretty massive undertaking.
But, you know, maybe you want to try to pack enough to buy yourself time for that next open window or pack cyanide pills.
Oh, no.
Cyanide pills.
I thought first you were going to go into the like, maybe you should bring spices that would help you when you need to, you know, draw straws and decide who's going to be dinner and who's going to be at dinner.
You know, I was reading this book by Eric Seedhouse that was all about like lessons you can learn from polar expeditions.
And I was really surprised at how little he talked about sort of behavioral things that you could learn, but he brought up cannibalism, like a bunch of times.
And in this book, he kept being like, in this generation, they're all a bunch of wimps.
And he had a whole section where he talks about how like, okay, say you do run out of food and you look across the table and you're like, there's food.
Yeah.
Who goes first?
And he was like, well, the biggest one should go first because they require the most calories and can provide the most calories, which made me wonder if he's kind of like a short guy.
And he's like, and there's a bit of a bias there.
But, you know, the math checks out.
But then he went and he talked about how you could like 3D print the stuff that you'd need to like butcher a body.
And I was like, I would not invite Eric Seedhouse on my mission.
Like he is not coming with me.
Well, it seems like there are nuances there also.
Like, do you need to eat a whole person?
Can you just be like, hey, man, you don't need both of those legs or, you know, let's cut a hunk out of that buttock or something, right?
There are ways somebody could survive and still provide you food.
Sure. Those would be some very difficult conversations.
So did Greeley do any of that? Do you think there was any cannibalism? I mean, people died, right? And other people were starving, where they tempted to, like, you know, cook up their mates and have them for a snack?
So this is a pretty big controversy, actually, and we're going to return to it after the break.
I'm Dr. Joy Harden-Bradford. And in session 421 of therapy for black girls, I sit down with,
Dr. Afea and Billy Shaka to explore how our hair connects to our identity, mental health,
and the ways we heal.
Because I think hair is a complex language system, right?
In terms of it can tell how old you are, your marital status, where you're from, you're
a spiritual belief.
But I think with social media, there's like a hyperfixation and observation of our hair,
right?
That this is sometimes the first thing someone sees when we make a post or a reel is how
our hair is styled.
We talk about the important role hairstylists play in our community,
the pressure to always look put together,
and how breaking up with perfection can actually free us.
Plus, if you're someone who gets anxious about flying,
don't miss Session 418 with Dr. Angela Neil Barnett,
where we dive into managing flight anxiety.
Listen to therapy for black girls on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Dr. Scott Barry Kaufman,
host of the psychology podcast.
Here's a clip from an upcoming conversation about exploring human potential.
I was going to schools to try to teach kids these skills,
and I get eye rolling from teachers or I get students who would be like,
it's easier to punch someone in the face.
When you think about emotion regulation,
like you're not going to choose an adaptive strategy,
which is more effortful to use unless you think there's a good outcome as a result of it,
if it's going to be beneficial to you.
Because it's easy to say, like, go blank yourself, right?
It's easy. It's easy to just drink the extra beer.
It's easy to ignore, to suppress, seeing a colleague who's bothering you and just, like, walk the other way.
Avoidance is easier. Ignoring is easier. Denials is easier. Drinking is easier.
Yelling, screaming is easy. Complex problem solving, meditating, you know, takes effort.
Listen to the psychology podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Adventure should never come with a pause button.
Remember the Movie Pass era where you could watch all the movies you wanted for just $9?
It made zero cents and I could not stop thinking about it.
I'm Bridget Todd, host of the tech podcast, there are no girls on the internet.
On this new season, I'm talking to the innovators who are left out of the tech headlines.
Like the visionary behind a movie pass, Black founder Stacey Spikes,
who was pushed out of Movie Pass the company that he founded.
His story is wild and it's currently the subject of a juicy new HBO documentary.
We dive into how culture connects us.
When you go to France, or you go to England, or you go to Hong Kong, those kids are wearing Jordans, they're wearing Kobe's shirt, they're watching Black Panther.
And the challenges of being a Black founder.
Close your eyes and tell me what a tech founder looks like.
They're not going to describe someone who looks like me and they're not going to describe someone who looks like you.
I created There Are No Girls on the Internet because the future belongs to all of us.
So listen to there are no girls on the internet on the IHurt Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
And here's Heather with the weather.
Well, it's beautiful out there, sunny and 75, almost a little chilly in the shade.
Now, let's get a read on the inside of your car.
It is hot.
You've only been parked a short time, and it's already 99 degrees in there.
Let's not leave children in the back seat while running errands.
It only takes a few minutes for their body temperatures to rise, and that could be fatal.
Cars get hot, fast, and can be deadly.
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I'm Emily Tish Sussman, and on she pivots, I dive into the inspiring pivots of women who have taken big leaps and their lives and careers.
I'm Gretchen Whitmer.
Jody Sweetie.
Monica Patton.
Elaine Weltera.
I'm Jessica Voss.
And that's when I was like, I got to go.
I don't know how, but that kicked off the.
pivot of how to make the transition.
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All right, I know everybody's dying to know about cannibalism on the Greeley expedition.
So the answer is, we really don't know.
It sounds like Greeley genuinely was not aware of it happening,
but all of the bodies of his crew were brought back to the U.S.
And some doctors thought that there were signs on some of the bones
that could have been indicative of flesh being cut away to be eaten.
And so there were some grumblings about possible cannibalism,
but it's thought that even if the evidence was pretty good,
the government tried to cover it up
because they wanted this to be an uplifting story
about how at least seven people got saved,
not a story about cannibalism in an army expedition.
So it's unclear.
An uplifting story about how we failed to resupply 25 people
and most of them died.
Well, it's a sliding scale, I guess.
Some of them made it back.
I think they were really clinging to the silver lining.
All right, so then what do you say
is the lesson we learn from the polar,
trips about how to resupply stuff on Mars, make it self-sufficient, building lots of buffer.
What can we do other than thinking, wow, you've got to be brave to go on one of these missions?
You know, it's going to be really hard to pack enough resupply to get a crew through an extra
two years. And that would be extremely expensive to do. But I think you really need to think
through how do we make sure the resupply gets there? Can we give them enough extra supplies
where it would be okay if we missed one launch window? What would that look like?
Could we have like a backup plan where maybe the next mission won't be crude,
but we have like duplicate rockets that just send food that we can dump somewhere on the Martian surface?
You got a plan for things going wrong and it's going to be even more complicated for a mission to Mars.
Well, it sounds like we should pack some cyanide pills.
You know, it might not be a bad idea.
Put that on the indoor husband's to-do list.
All right.
So what other kinds of lessons can we learn from polar expeditions other than just like resupply is crucial
and it's really hard.
So Greeley had a big problem on his expedition,
which is that he had at least three crew members
who were just not listening, not behaving,
and he had no ability to punish them.
So his engineer, of which he brought one,
was an alcoholic.
And when it was time for them to leave the research station
to try to, like, go get help,
he kept drinking the fuel alcohol.
What?
And they needed that for their ships
and to cook their food.
And at one point, he's drunk and he grounds the boat.
And Greeley is like, I'm going to shoot you.
But then he realizes, like, I can't because I have one engineer.
And I need this guy.
And he didn't have a backup plan.
So he, like, made a note in a notebook.
Like, we're going to talk about this with the government when we get home.
And, like, the guy just kept doing it.
He kept stealing the fuel alcohol.
He ended up being one of the first to die, which kind of solved that problem, sort of,
in the harsh, you know, math of the Arctic.
But it doesn't solve the.
we still need an engineer problem, right?
No, that's true.
But at that point, a couple other people had learned those skills,
which is something they should have done before they left.
So, like, lesson one, duplicate skills.
You need to have, like, multiple people who know how to do the same job
because you never know what's going to happen.
And so he had a similar skill problem with the doctor who around year two was like,
you know what, I don't want to do this anymore.
And really was like, dude, we wouldn't have hired you
if you were going to quit halfway through.
You have to keep going.
And he's like, I'm going to arrest.
you if you don't. And the guy's like, how can you arrest me? We're in the middle of nowhere.
And Greeley was like, no, I can. And he like didn't provide any details. What was this guy's
plan? He's like, I'm with you on this mission, but I'm going to stop being a doctor or I'm just
like going to walk home myself. Like, the guy's kind of stuck there, isn't he? That is what I
would have thought if I was in that position. But I think he was just like, I just want to chill. I want
less work. You still have to take care of me. But also he was involved in like some mutinous
conversations. There was like somebody else who wanted to take control because they thought
really wasn't doing a great job. And so the doctor was offering to diagnose Greeley as being
like mentally unstable so that somebody else could take over. And Greeley got word that this
sort of mutinous talk was happening, but he didn't do anything because he didn't have a lot of
options. And then the worst thing the doctor did in my mind, there was one guy who was like really
sick. He had gotten frostbite. And the doctor was like, look, I know we're all on rash.
We're all starving to death, but this guy, if he's going to make it, he needs extra food.
So can we please give this guy extra food?
And everybody's like, yes, we want to save this guy.
Let's give him some extra food.
And then Greeley saw the doctor eating the extra food that was meant to be for the other patients.
Oh, this doctor.
I hate this guy.
I know.
He's such a jerk.
He doesn't make it either.
But there's nothing that he could do.
And then the last guy, and this is why crew selection is important,
turned out that this guy had been in jail for forging a check.
And then when he got out of jail, he killed a man.
and then he changed his name
and he made it on the Greeley Expedition.
So not a great guy.
And as they're all starting...
Really needs a better vetting system.
Like, you know, weed these people out
before you take them on the mission.
Right.
Well, and so NASA has like a very stringent system
for how they pick people who get to go to space.
And so what makes me nervous
is that when we start to open it up
to like Musk will say,
well, anyone who can afford to go,
who are the people who are trying to escape Earth?
Like, no doubt.
There's a lot of like dreamers
and researchers and big things.
But maybe there's also people who are just, like, trying to escape the law.
So you're going to have to be careful with who goes.
But this guy's stealing their food.
Will everyone starving to death?
And he at one point gets caught because he snuck in, ate some raw bacon.
And then everybody was like, where'd the bacon go?
And eating raw bacon had upset this guy's stomach.
So he threw it up.
And they were like, oh, there's the bacon.
And so then he couldn't, like, pretend he hadn't stolen it?
Wait, I have a gross question.
Are they so hungry that, like, vomited up raw bacon is?
is still something you might consider like cooking up?
I don't know.
They had eaten fungus-covered dog treats at one point.
When they'd shoot an animal, they would start like licking the blood and like, and they
were eating moss.
They're like boiling their shoes to make tea and stuff, right?
These folks are desperate.
So at some point, even vomited up bacon might be quite a delicacy.
They are eating the leather in their clothes by the end.
Yeah.
So the book did not specifically talk about the fate of the
regurgitated bacon, it wouldn't surprise me if it had been consumed because when you're dying,
you'll eat like anything, which I think is something we've talked about before. We have themes.
Imagine going at a restaurant seeing this stuff on the menu like shoe tea or fungus covered dog
treats or once vomited bacon. It's amazing what people will eat though when they got to survive, right?
Yeah, yeah. The drive to live is pretty incredible. But this is mostly a lesson about picking your
crew and what you can do when you're out there.
I mean, this guy's the captain of the ship.
Doesn't he basically have complete authority?
Like, can't he execute people if he has to in order for the mission to succeed?
So, yes, he has that power, but he was a little concerned that if he exercised that
power, it would reflect poorly on the mission.
So he held back for a long time, but this guy who was stealing the food, he was getting
stronger while everybody was getting weaker because they weren't eating, but this guy was
eating more.
So eventually Greeley was like, all right, we're going to have to shoot this guy.
And he couldn't do it because he was too weak to, like, get up.
So he told two other guys like, you've got to go shoot.
I think the guy's last name was Henry.
And they did.
And so eventually justice in a way was served.
What are the lessons here?
So one, you need job redundancy because this got really in a whole a bunch of times.
There were a lot of times where he clearly should have punished someone or locked them up.
But he's like, he needed their skills.
So you're saying we need to like two engineers and two doctors.
and two cooks or whatever.
Or you at least need skill redundancy
where like maybe your doctor
also knows the main tasks of the engineer
and the engineer knows a lot of what the navigator needs to do.
And so, you know, I mean, I feel like in an ideal world
you'd be able to bring like a couple of all of these people
but probably are just going to need to have redundancy
and skills within the crew.
So everybody's got to be a doctor slash cook slash engineer.
Which requires a lot of prior planning.
And I think NASA does.
do that kind of like cross-training ahead of time.
But, you know, it would be good if Musk also had that kind of stuff on his mind.
Also, there was no jail cell, which kind of limited his options for what he could do.
But he also couldn't afford to lock up members of the crew a lot of the time.
Like if he locked up the engineer, then he still can't use the engineer's skills.
Wait, but help me imagine where they are.
I mean, they're on a polar expedition.
Are they sleeping in tents?
Had they built some sort of temporary structure?
I realize now I don't have like a mental image of where these folks are living.
So initially they were living in a research station where they probably could have like walled off part of it to make a jail cell.
So a research station is like a building.
Somebody built a building out there.
Yep.
Yep.
They brought building supplies and they put it together and it was a nice station.
Actually in a future expedition, I think it was Perry who stopped by and credited his survival with being able to like hang out in this station that had been so well built that like years later he could still go there to warm up.
Indoors are nice places.
Yes.
I'm pro indoors.
All right.
So they had indoors on this research station.
That's great.
Yeah, my indoor husband would love that.
So.
If you could get him out there.
That's right.
But, you know, then at some point they are living in a tent.
And so a jail cell would have been difficult.
But a plan would have been helpful.
He should have been able to see that this was a possibility that would come up,
that they wouldn't be able to, like, put someone in a jail cell and have a way to deal with
it instead of making a note that, like, oh, I'm going to tell the government that you
engaged in mutiny when we get home.
But for right now, we've got nothing.
And so, you know, on early naval expeditions,
blogging is something that they would do.
It was like a quick thing where you like really hurt someone enough that they don't want
to do the thing again, but then they can go right back to work and you don't need to like
confine them in a certain area.
And I'm not saying that I am pro corporal punishment.
I'm giving the history of punishment options.
But like whatever they decide to do, they needed to have a clearer plan and really needed
to feel like he was empowered to carry through on those plans.
And it just seemed like that did not happen for this mission.
Well, it's interesting that people would act this way on this mission because it feels
like sort of counter to their own interests. I mean, everybody's got to pull their weight for this
whole mission to succeed. And this mission has to succeed for people to survive. So it feels like
that would provide a lot of pressure for people to tow the line and be part of the team and stuff.
That's amazing to me that even under those conditions, some folks are like stealing the bacon
and deciding to not do their job anymore. There was a ton of variability, actually. So, you know,
there's the guy who's stealing the bacon, but there were also members of the crew where, like,
somebody was dying because they were starving and they'd take some of their food and they would feed the other person and try to like help them and like there were literally stories about them like cradling each other's heads and trying to like spoon feed them because they were too weak to eat so like there was a lot of compassion and a lot of examples of people being willing to like risk their lives to help other crew members but then there's the guy who's stealing the bacon and so I think you've got to be careful about who you send up there and then you need to have a system for making sure that the people who don't behave the way you want them to
there's some way to keep them from doing that again.
So Greeley is one example, and he seems like a little bit of a weak leader.
Like he had some of these tools and he didn't use them and maybe that would have helped him
keep his crew in line.
Is that a general thing in these polar trips and in these crazy expeditions and on, you know,
long voyages that the captain is not really feeling like they have these tools of their disposal
because it'll ruin morale or whatever is really unusual or is this a common theme?
The next story we're going to talk about is another case where a leader
had a little bit of trouble maintaining order for a different reason.
So it's not like this is the only story of a leader who has sort of trouble with
maintaining order, but there were some who were definitely more successful.
So Ernest Shackleton, for example, when his boat, the endurance sunk, first, he did a really
great job of managing the personalities.
So there were, like, three or so guys who were just, like, super annoying and super negative.
And Shackleton was like, you guys are sleeping in my tent.
And he just made sure that, like, their negative attitude didn't, like, seep over into
the other crew members.
and he was more willing to threaten people.
So for example, there's this story
where there was a stowaway on the endurance
and he discovered it after they had left,
it was too late to return the guy who had stowed away.
And so Shackleton said to him,
okay, but if anything goes wrong,
you're the first one we're going to eat.
And I think threatening cannibalism
is probably a pretty good way to keep people in line.
And he also was better about reminding people
about the documents they had signed ahead of time
where they promised to follow the rules
and he was just a bit more assertive.
All right. So then what's the takeaway? You're planning a mission to Mars. You're keeping
Greeley's experience in mind. You have your own experience as a parent, flogging your children
when they get out of line, you know, or at least holding that possibility over there.
I've never hit my kids, but I think the point is you need to have a plan that you are willing
to execute and that everybody knows could happen ahead of time. And that might not solve all
of the problems, but at least then you've got some path forward and some legitimacy.
And you have some credibility that the negative outcomes are going to keep people in line, right?
Yeah, you hope.
You hope so.
Yeah.
That's a real challenge, you know, being a leader of a mission like that, you know, really
being willing to follow through on those threats because otherwise they're empty and then
you have no power.
Yeah.
So you need to be careful about picking the crew, but you also need to be careful about picking
the leader because you could argue that if really had been a little bit more assertive
and had a little clearer plan, maybe some people could have lived longer, maybe they would
have made it to the resupply ship if Henry hadn't been stealing food for so long, if the cook
hadn't been drinking the fuel alcohol, that they needed, you know, to keep.
warm and stuff like that. You need a leader who's willing to follow through on this stuff.
I mean, I know as a parent, you don't make threats you're not willing to follow through on
because sometimes you have to. And if you're like, finish your dinner and nobody's going to go to that
movie. And you're like, oh, man, I kind of wanted to go to that movie. You got to be willing to do it.
No, those moments suck. I hate those moments where I'm like, oh, now I don't get to do what I want to do
because I'm punishing you. Or the moments where you know your kid really wants to do something and
you want to let them do it. But you're like, you kept pushing. I remember once my daughter, like, I told her,
If you do that again, blah, blah, blah is going to happen.
And she looked me in the eye and she said the thing again.
And I was like, I have conflicted feelings on the one hand.
Wow, that took some chutzpah.
I'm proud of you for like being tough.
But on the other hand, go to your room.
You're not going to the camp out or whatever.
Yeah.
Interesting watching them grow and try stuff out.
It's a wonderful challenge, everyone.
Yes.
All right.
So what else do we learn from the polar expeditions?
We talked about resupply.
We talked about punishment and management.
and management, what else do we need to worry about
on our Martian mission that we can learn about
from our polar experiences?
Well, we're going to take a break
and then we're going to talk about
how psychology can be a problem on polar missions.
I'm Dr. Joy Harden-Brand-Bradford,
and in session 421 of therapy for black girls,
I sit down with Dr. Othia and Billy Shaka
to explore how our hair connects to our identity
mental health, and the ways we heal.
Because I think hair is a complex language system, right?
In terms of it can tell how old you are,
your marital status, where you're from, you're a spiritual belief.
But I think with social media, there's like a hyper fixation
and observation of our hair, right?
That this is sometimes the first thing someone sees
when we make a post or a reel.
It's how our hair is styled.
We talk about the important role hairstylists play in our community.
The pressure to always look put together,
and how breaking up with perfection can actually free us.
Plus, if you're someone who gets anxious about flying,
don't miss Session 418 with Dr. Angela Neil Barnett,
where we dive into managing flight anxiety.
Listen to therapy for black girls on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
I'm Dr. Scott Barry Kaufman, host of the Psychology Podcast.
Here's a clip from an upcoming conversation about exploring human potential.
I was going to schools to try to teach kids these skills and I get eye rolling from teachers or I get students who would be like, it's easier to punch someone in the face.
When you think about emotion regulation, like you're not going to choose an adaptive strategy which is more effortful to use unless you think there's a good outcome as a result of it if it's going to be beneficial to you.
Because it's easy to say like go you go blank yourself, right?
It's easy.
It's easy to just drink the extra beer.
It's easy to ignore to suppress seeing a colleague who's bother me.
you and just like walk the other way avoidance is easier ignoring is easier denials is easier drinking
is easier yelling screaming is easy complex problem solving meditating you know takes effort
listen to the psychology podcast on the iHeart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts when your car is making a strange noise no matter what it is you can't just pretend it's not
happening.
That's an interesting sound.
It's like your mental health.
If you're struggling and feeling overwhelmed, it's important to do something about it.
It can be as simple as talking to someone or just taking a deep, calming breath to ground
yourself because once you start to address the problem, you can go so much further.
The Huntsman Mental Health Institute and the Ad Council have resources available for you
at love your mind today.org.
Adventure should never come with a pause button.
Remember the movie pass era where you could watch all the movies.
movies he wanted for just $9, it made zero cents and I could not stop thinking about it.
I'm Bridget Todd, host of the tech podcast, there are no girls on the internet.
On this new season, I'm talking to the innovators who are left out of the tech headlines.
Like the visionary behind a movie pass, Black founder Stacey Spikes, who was pushed out of
Movie Pass, the company that he founded. His story is wild and it's currently the subject of a
juicy new HBO documentary. We dive into how culture connects us.
When you go to France, or you go to England, or you go to Hong Kong, those kids are wearing Jordans, they're wearing Kobe's shirt, they're watching Black Panther.
And the challenges of being a Black founder.
Close your eyes and tell me what a tech founder looks like.
They're not going to describe someone who looks like me and they're not going to describe someone who looks like you.
I created There Are No Girls on the Internet because the future belongs to all of us.
So listen to There Are No Girls on the Internet on the IHurt Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get to be.
your podcasts. Have you ever wished for a change but weren't sure how to make it? Maybe you felt
stuck in a job, a place, or even a relationship. I'm Emily Tish Sussman and on she pivots. I dive into
the inspiring pivots of women who have taken big leaps in their lives and careers. I'm Gretchen
Whitmer, Jody Sweeten. Monica Patton. Elaine Welteroth. I'm Jessica Voss. And that's when I was like,
I got to go. I don't know how, but that kicked off the pivot of how to make the transition.
Learn how to get comfortable pivoting because your life is going to be
full of them. Every episode gets real about the why behind these changes and gives you the inspiration
and maybe the push to make your next pivot. Listen to these women and more on she pivots now on
the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, we're back. So the last example for today is the Moss
expedition and this is a guy from Australia who went down to Antarctica around 1911 to collect
a bunch of scientific information about Antarctica. So this is another like it's not a race to the
pole. It's just going out there to try to collect data about this difficult environment.
And he had a really hard time. Like he went out with these other two guys. One of the guys fell
through a crack in the ice and they just never saw him again because he fell down through the ice
so far with like a bunch of their resupply stuff. And so now they like didn't have a lot of food
and they were racing back as fast as they could
and one of the guys just kind of died
from hunger and exposure.
Mawson, who's, you know, the leader of this expedition,
he's trying to race back in time,
but he, like, falls down another one of those, like, cracks in the ice,
but he manages to pull himself up.
And when he gets back, he looks out,
and there's the boat sailing away for the season.
He had just missed it.
Oh, no. Oh, no.
I know.
Like, so you'd think that he'd be the one
who would have a mental break,
but it turns out they,
the crew hadn't given up on him, so they left some men behind to watch out to see if
Mawson and the rest of the guys on his expedition got back there, and they had resupplied
enough to get them over the winter. And so they've got this chance, right? And the boat's
going to come back. And so Mawson's there with some other guys. And one of the guys there was a 29-year-old
named Sidney Jeffries. And he was the only guy there who knew how to use the wireless
telegraphy system. So he was the only one who could communicate with the outside world. And
And Jeffrey started to have a mental break. He starts trying to start fights with people. He's like, I can tell you're trying to be a jerk. Let's go to the other room and fight. And the other guy's like, I don't know what you're talking about, man. I'm reading a book. And he's just like trying to chill. And then at one point, Jeffries is challenging other people to duels. And so they have to lock up all of the weapons. At one point, he's telling Mawson about a disease he had of the type that we usually don't talk about in polite conversation.
Does it come from fluid transmission?
It does come from fluid transmission.
Yes, that's right, a theme.
Yes, be careful of those indoor husbands.
Some of them are diseased.
That's true.
Yeah, probably some of the indoor wives, too.
You just, you know, you got to watch out.
So Mawson goes to talk to the doctor and is like, oh, okay, so, you know, Jeffries has that disease.
And the doctor's like, no, that's a hallucination.
Nothing is wrong with him in that regard.
There was no dirty indoor wives causing any problems.
And then Jeffreys also starts storing his urine.
because he thinks there's some, like, medical reason he should be doing that.
He also stops bathing.
He's letting his hygiene go, so he smells bad.
But perhaps, most importantly, he's in control of the communication system,
and he starts telling the outside world that actually everybody but him has lost their mind
and everybody's trying to kill him.
And he won't let anybody else communicate with the outside world.
And so what is the lesson here?
So this guy, you know, when he gets back to Australia, it turns out he needs to end up in an asylum.
He spends the rest of his life there.
He probably had the onset of something like schizophrenia, which happens often in your early 30s.
This guy was 29 years old.
And so I think the lesson here is one, if you take young people with you, there are a fair number of diseases that don't become apparent until you're like in your 30s.
And so there's some chance that you're going to be dealing with these problems when you're in this harsh and
environment. But more importantly, people break sometimes. Like even people who don't have like
underlying mental health issues will break under difficult conditions. And so you need to have a system,
which means you need to, you know, maybe have some therapists with you on the trip or you need to
try to see if you can get some shelf stable medication that you can send with you. Like you need
to have a plan for what happens when things go wrong. Because even the humans that seem the most
stable when you hire them on to the crew, they're not necessarily going to stay stable the
whole time.
But some people survive this experience without their minds cracking.
Is it thought that this guy was more susceptible to it?
He already had these mental issues and this tough experience brought it out?
Or was he like totally sane and the experience itself just broke him?
I don't think we have great information about what this guy was like before the trip.
It could be that this experience broke him, although he did volunteer to be one of the people who
stayed. So he must have kind of felt like he had a handle on the situation. So first of all,
we read a bunch of astronaut memoirs and a bunch of astronauts lie about their mental health.
It totally makes sense because if they say I'm feeling anxious, maybe they don't get to go on
another trip to space, right? So they have every incentive to say that they're fine. And so there's
plenty of stories. A lot of the stories are medical. Like there was a guy who thought he was going
to have a heart attack a couple days before he was supposed to go up to space, but he lied and went to
like a doctor covertly and didn't tell anyone else about it because he didn't want to
anyone to know.
And then there's also people who passed the tests maybe really were fine and then break
later.
So for example, Lisa Noak was a NASA astronaut.
She went up on the shuttle.
She started dating one of the shuttle astronauts.
He left her for another woman and she tried to kidnap the other woman and it's not clear
what she planned on doing with her after that.
And so is this the one who drove cross country wearing astronaut underwear?
So she would say that actually she hadn't worn it and that she had twins.
and that those diapers were from a prior trip she went on and she just forgot to throw them out.
But yes, I think that's exactly what happens.
She had rubber tubing and she was arguing like, I was using the rubber tubing for exercise, like it was a tension thing.
And it seems pretty clear that she was planning on trying to kidnap this woman.
And it's not clear what she was going to do with her after that.
I think the lesson is don't date astronauts or don't date people who have the mental fortitude to go in these missions
because there's clearly something weird about those books.
you know, more power to them, and I'm glad that we have them.
We've learned so much about the polls and we potentially will learn a lot about Mars,
but I'm not sure those folks need to be in the reproductive pool, you know?
I don't know.
I think there's a lot of people who would say that astronauts are like the best of us.
I don't think there's a lot of people advocating for pulling them out of the gene pool.
You might be on your own there.
It's interesting because if we build a colony, it's going to be populated by those folks and
they're going to be reproducing.
And so if it takes a certain kind of person to be willing to go on that mission,
then your colony is going to be filled with those folks.
The same way that colonies a few hundred years ago
required some fortitude and some risk-taking
and they're definitely not representative samples
of other countries, right?
Sure, but then also they'll have kids
and maybe their kids will be more like a representative sample
from the country that they came from.
And I think no matter who you send,
you need to have a system in place
for what happens when someone has a mental health crisis
because I just think that it's unavoidable
no matter who you pick,
that at some point there's going to be a problem with someone.
And on the ISS, they have a system.
You're supposed to tie somebody up, put a towel underneath their chin,
and duct tape their head to something so that they can't move.
And then I think you're supposed to offer them like an oral,
something like a tranquilizer to calm them down.
And if they refuse, you can also, like, inject it.
And so essentially the plan for the International Space Station
is to just immobilize someone until you can get them home,
which will only take a couple days.
But it gets much more complicated if you're stuck on Mars for two years
and you're worried that they're going to try to hurt themselves
or hurt somebody else.
Usually it's hurt themselves, not hurt somebody else, but like having a system in place for that.
Like, are you just going to trank someone for a year and a half?
That doesn't seem feasible or good for the person being knocked out for that long.
No, but it might solve some of your other problems.
Like, hey, this person turns out to be dinner, right?
They go crazy or they break the rules.
Like, oh, maybe we don't need a resupply.
See, you should be going to space.
You are apparently comfortable with any of the difficult decisions that need to be made.
I'm not sure I'd want to be on your crew, but I think maybe you should go.
No, I'm comfortable having a podcast conversation about these difficult decisions, but when rubber
hits the road or, you know, ice hits the tent, I think it'd be a lot harder to do than it is to
talk about.
Yeah, fair enough.
So those are the lessons for today.
You know, when you read about these stories, there is a lot of really exciting, inspirational
stuff that's going on, people really pushing the limits and people who are just really excited
about getting answers doing like whatever it takes to get those answers.
But there's also a lot of difficult stuff along the way that if you plan for, hopefully
Hopefully you can avoid or at least minimize the negative impacts of.
So let's hope that Elon Musk is doing sufficient planning for his first trip to Mars, which
is hoping will happen in the next decade or so.
I think the takeaway from me is that we imagine these expeditions to be voyages or scientific journeys,
but these are people and these expeditions have people on them and so they have people problems.
And people problems come with people and you can't escape them and so you got to be prepared
for them. You know, people got to go to the bathroom and people are going to be jealous and mad and go
crazy. And you can't pretend that just because you have noble goals that are universal or deep
and fundamental, that you're somehow just going to magically avoid those issues. So yeah, you've got to be
prepared. Bring your astronaut underwear and bring your astronaut tranquilizer. Amen. I think especially
with space, people tend to project utopias and think that everything's going to be great up there,
but I think humans are going to bring all their problems with us into the heavens and we need to
plan. All right, thanks everyone for taking this voyage into our historical expeditions and what
we can learn from history about the problems we'll face in the future when humans, we hope,
one day do start to colonize the solar system.
Daniel and Kelly's Extraordinary Universe is produced by IHeart Radio. We would love to hear from you.
We really would. We want to know what questions you have about this extraordinary.
ordinary universe. We want to know your thoughts on recent shows, suggestions for future shows. If you
contact us, we will get back to you. We really mean it. We answer every message. Email us at
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Don't be shy. Write to us.
When your car is making a strange noise
No matter what it is
You can't just pretend it's not happening
That's an interesting sound
It's like your mental health
If you're struggling and feeling overwhelmed
It's important to do something about it
It can be as simple as talking to someone
Or just taking a deep calming breath to ground yourself
Because once you start to address the problem
You can go so much further
The Huntsman Mental Health Institute and the ad council
have resources available for you at loveyourmindtay.org.
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And sometimes from our guest personal lives, too.
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