Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Astronaut Hayley shares her brave adventure
Episode Date: February 19, 2025From IV drips to rocket ships, Hayley Arceneaux has been on a journey. She joins Planetary Radio to discuss her memoir “Wild Ride” and her newly released kid's book “Astronaut Hayley...'s Brave Adventure,” which tell the story of how her experiences with childhood cancer at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital set the stage for her journey to space aboard SpaceX's Inspiration4 mission. Then, Planetary Society Chief Scientist, Bruce Betts, talks about the g-forces experienced during astronaut training in What's Up. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2025-astronaut-hayleys-brave-adventureSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Sarah Al Ahmed of the Planetary Society with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
From IV drips to rocket ships, Haley Arseneau has been on a journey.
She joins us today to talk about her memoir, Wild Ride, and her newly released kids book,
Astronaut Haley's Journey to the Future.
She's a young woman who has been on a journey to the future, but she's also been on a journey
to the future.
She's been on a journey to the future Arseneau has been on a journey.
She joins us today to talk about her memoir, Wild Ride, and her newly released kids book,
Astronaut Haley's Brave Adventure, both of which tell the stories of her experiences with childhood cancer
and how that set the stage for her journey to space aboard SpaceX's Inspiration 4 mission.
Then, our chief scientist, Bruce Betts, joins me for an exploration of the G-forces
experienced during astronaut training in What's Up.
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make sure you hit that subscribe button on your favorite podcasting platform.
By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new and awe-inspiring ways to
know the cosmos and our place within it.
Haley Arseneau is someone that I've wanted to speak with for years.
Both because the Inspiration 4 mission did what it meant to do.
It inspired me.
But also because I really value anyone who can go through really difficult things in
life and come out the other end holding on to their hope.
Haley Arseneau is the author of Wild Ride, a memoir of IV drips and rocket ships, and
her new kids book, Astronaut Haley's Brave Adventure, which was released on February
18, 2025.
Haley is a physician assistant at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
St. Jude specializes in treating some of the most challenging cases of childhood cancer
and other life-threatening diseases.
Working at St. Jude has been Haley's dream since she was 10 years old.
After receiving life-saving treatment for pediatric bone cancer at St. Jude as a child,
Hailey committed her life to achieving her dream.
Neither grueling math homework nor painful prosthetic limb replacement could stop her.
She wanted to work at St. Jude to help others that had gone through the hardships that she
had faced as a child.
And after a lot of work, she achieved her goal.
Little did she know that her triumph would lead her to become the first pediatric cancer
survivor and the first person with a prosthetic body part in space.
On September 15th, 2021, Haley blasted off on SpaceX's Inspiration4 mission, a journey
that was chronicled in the Netflix docu-series Countdown, Inspiration 4, Mission to Space.
Inspiration 4 was the first all-civilian crewed space mission.
Every person selected for that trip was chosen to represent an ideal.
Jared Isaacman, who funded the mission, represented the spirit of leadership.
Jared also commanded the recent Polaris Dawn mission and is currently the presumptive nominee for NASA Administrator.
Chris Sambrosky, a data engineer,
represented generosity on the trip.
He entered the contest to go to space
by donating to St. Jude and ultimately didn't win,
but was pleasantly surprised when a college friend
who had actually won gave him his ticket to space.
Dr. Sian Proctor, who's a geoscientist and artist,
joined the crew as a representation of prosperity.
During the mission, Cyan became the first black woman
to pilot a spacecraft.
And then there's Haley Arseneau, our guest.
She was chosen to embody hope.
Her unique story made her the perfect choice
for this mission, but getting there would prove
to be one of the most challenging experiences of her life, which is really saying something considering everything she's survived so
far. Together, their crew ventured to space for almost three days and raised over 200 million
dollars for St. Jude's Children's Cancer Research. Haley shares her experiences in an adult-friendly
manner in her memoir, Wild Ride, but her new kids' book, Astronaut Haley's Brave Adventure,
shares one of the most critical lessons
that Haley gleaned from her trials and triumphs,
what it means to be brave.
Hi, Haley. Welcome to Planetary Radio.
Hello. It's good to be here.
I have been wanting to talk to you for literally years.
I followed your inspirationiration4 journey so closely
and it is so wonderful to meet you.
Well, thank you for saying that
and for all the support through Inspiration4.
I hope that a lot of people, as they saw Inspiration4,
saw themselves in it.
And I hope that's why a lot of people wanted
to follow along on our journey.
That's why I was following along.
This is a personal thing that I don't think I've ever shared on the show before, but my partner is a pediatric cancer survivor. He survived leukemia
as a kid. So hearing your story and your experiences and knowing that you took all of that and then
decided to work with kids with leukemia, I was a crying mess the whole time I was watching that
documentary. Oh my goodness. Well, I would already love your partner. He sounds like he's a fighter. And that
was one thing that was whenever I was asked to go to space. One thing I was most proud of was thinking
about people going through cancer treatment and survivors of cancer thinking that now they can go
to space and that truly this guy is not the limit for them.
And it was a wonderful opportunity once more to donate and help bolster St. Jude and their
mission.
I know that this mission ended up crowdfunding so much money for St. Jude.
How did that turn out?
We raised about $250 million for St. Jude and for cancer research.
And something a lot of people might not know about St. Jude and for cancer research. And something a lot of people might
not know about St. Jude is that we treat patients and their families for free. Families never receive
a bill for their treatment, for their housing, for their transportation. And so when I had cancer and
I was treated at St. Jude, we think that my treatment probably cost in the millions of dollars,
but we'll never know because we never got a bill. And so by doing a big fundraiser, a unique fundraiser like Inspiration4, we're able to
give so many families that opportunity for treatment for some of the best treatment in
the world at no cost.
That makes such a big difference.
And for anybody who's listening, once you're done listening to this interview, you can
go to the page for Planetary Radio for this episode, and I'll include a link to donation for St. Jude
if you want to contribute.
The way that this organization has changed your life and the lives of so many others
is so beautiful.
And knowing that ultimately that culminated in your opportunity to go to space is just
so far beyond what I expected out of this journey for you. It's so beautiful.
Absolutely. I never could have expected it either, truly. And just to have had this opportunity
for something so beautiful to have come from such a difficult time, and then to be able
to have used my story and then my space experience to help other kids with cancer, it just feels
very full
circle.
It does.
And you lay it out so beautifully in this book.
We'll talk a little bit about both of your books today, Wild Ride, which is your memoir,
and Astronaut Haley's Brave Adventure, which is your newly released kids book.
But let's start with your kids book because that's where I started.
I did this kind of backwards.
Oh, really?
I started by reading your kids book
first because I wanted to take a fresh look at what story you were trying to tell these kids
without any more clouding. Obviously, I'd already seen the inspiration for docu-series, but as I was
reading through this book, I noted what you said and what you didn't say and what you told through
the images and what story you were trying to
impart to these kids. And I think it's a really beautiful flipping of this common trope, where
kids say, you know, I want to grow up to be an astronaut. But what this book actually says is,
if I'm brave enough to overcome childhood illness, or a really difficult time in childhood,
then you can use this bravery to do anything,
including going to space.
And I thought that was a really beautiful reframing.
I'm so glad that you captured that
because that's exactly what I was going for.
And just knowing that kids have to go through situations
where they need to be brave.
And some of the examples I gave
in the beginning of the book were that the character
had to learn
how to be brave at school and in everyday life.
And then for this character in particular, she gets sick.
And I don't use the word cancer,
but based on some of the illustrations,
I tried to portray the journey
that if parents wanted to talk about it with their kids,
they could.
And it could be used maybe if a kid has a family member
or a friend with cancer to show that.
So we can go through this and be okay.
But just the theme of bravery,
because I know that's something that we all face.
So what we face from a young age.
And for me, that was one of my biggest takeaways
from Inspiration4.
And so I'm just thrilled to be able to share
that message with kids.
You've had such a wealth of life experiences.
So it makes sense that you would write a memoir for
adults who want to follow along on that journey. But what was it that happened in your life after
you went to space that told you, I should make a kid's book out of this? It was during training.
And I was really touched by people reaching out during that time and saying that my story inspired
them. And of course, I was very touched by visiting with patients
with cancer and some of them were my own patients.
And them saying that they wanted to be an astronaut now.
And a lot of like, like this one little girl I remember,
she said, I can't wait to be an astronaut.
Like there was no if it was I,
and kind of the deeper meaning to her statement was, I'm going to make it
through my cancer and I can do anything I want to do. And so those were the moments
that I thought, you know, I have been so fortunate to have these life experiences. I really should
share my journey and what I've learned. And so that was when the idea for a kid's book
came along. And this has been about three and a half years
in the making.
So I'm really excited that it's out now.
There are some really interesting differences
between your actual journey to space
and the journey that you tell in this book.
How did you make the decisions on what to keep realistic
and what to make more fanciful or inventive?
I was thinking about what would entertain kids.
And also because in the last three years,
I've spoken to so many different schools
and groups of kids.
And I kind of went with what were the questions
I'm asked the most.
And I always get asked about, like, what did you eat in space?
Did you see any planets?
Did you see aliens?
And so I took kind of the things that I found kids to be the most interested in, and I
tried to include them in the book.
And so those were some of the more fictional aspects.
But then I also thought about what I wanted them to take away from it.
And I wanted them to be proud of their everyday bravery.
I wanted them to feel empowered to dream big and to believe in themselves and in their big dreams.
And so that's the story I tried to tell.
And you know, I didn't want it to be preachy at all.
I just hope that as the kids read about character astronaut Haley, that they can see themselves
in her.
But you've included so much of yourself in this book, not just in the actual storytelling,
but I mentioned this earlier, in the art that actually
goes into this. I found myself as I was reading early on in the pages, seeing this image of
you and your dad doing taekwondo and thinking, I wonder if she actually really did that. And then
I went and read your book and I found that one detail so much more heart wrenching and so beautiful in retrospect.
Well, I appreciate that a lot.
I'm grateful that I had a little bit of freedom to put bits and pieces of myself in the book.
I think that's what helped me fall in love with the book writing process and this whole
experience even more was that I could tell real life bits of my story.
There is one picture in the book that you mentioned
of me and my dad doing Taekwondo together.
And it was taken, like the illustrator, Lucy B,
she made that picture from a photo that I have with my dad
as we were getting our black belts together.
And so for me, whenever I am reading the children's book
and I see that scene, that's always the part
that just makes my heart feel very warm. It's just absolutely adorable what you've done with this book and if anybody goes back,
I encourage anyone who's trying to get this book for their child to consider reading Wild Riot as
an adult alongside it because even if you don't want to share every one of these details with
your kids, I think it'll make that process just so much more meaningful. Well, I really, I appreciate you saying that. Yes, I tried to, in a way, tie the books together.
And the Wild Ride also has a young reader's version, which is for ages eight through 13.
It's for a little bit older crowd than the children's book if they want it. Or if a kid
reads the children's book and the parent wants to read the young reader's version of Wild Ride to their kid to just give that more detail and depth.
I didn't know that you made another age version of that book. That is so meaningful because
as I was reading it, I was like, this is a great book that I think could be really wonderful
for that age bracket, the young people that are, you know, maybe about to enter their
young teen years and grappling with these hard things in life.
It's such a powerful age, that eight to 13 age group, where there's so much of themselves and
they're still figuring some things out. And, you know, sometimes at that point, you're kind of
struggling with your image and things like that, or at least I was around that age. And so Wild Ride,
the young readers version, hopefully helps empower them. And so Wild Ride, the young reader's version,
hopefully helps empower them.
And then the one thing I really wanted them
to take away from that book was hope.
And just that, yeah, as we all go through difficult times
in life, that it will get better
and it can be even better than your biggest dreams.
Like I never could have imagined I would be an astronaut
when I was going through cancer treatment. And you never know what's around the corner in life. And
I think there's beauty in that. One of the details that I did catch in your book was an interesting
change you made between your real life experiences getting that call telling you that you were going
to be going to space, which was a kind of out of nowhere, get on a web conference. Now you're finding out suddenly you're
going to go to space when you didn't expect it.
But in Astronaut Haley's Brave Adventure, you change that.
And you change the detail.
It's now your brother who is telling you
that you get to go to space.
Why was that a meaningful change for you to make?
Well, my brother, he has been by my side
through this whole journey.
The actual real life Hayden is an aerospace engineer and his wife is also an aerospace
engineer.
And so we've always been close, but definitely as I was training, I would call him all the
time and say, what is, what exactly does this mean?
Or why do they want me to learn this?
He was the second person I called after I found out I was going to space after my mom.
And he helped encourage me. And so, he's really truly been there through it all. He was helping
whenever I was going through cancer treatment and I was so sick and vomiting, he was right there by
my side. And so, he's just, because he's always been there and he's so important to me, I wanted
him to have that moment where he got to tell me that somebody wanted me to go to space.
I love what this book, what both of them really say about heroism, right? Because astronaut
Haley in this kid's book is the hero, but you're also trying to point out that the kids
and the readers are the hero as well, if they can seize that bravery. And in Wild Ride, you're clearly the
hero, but so is your mom, so is your dad, and your brother, and all of the doctors, and everyone that
you worked with. It was a really touching tale of how we all work together to accomplish these
great things, even when one person is the person that's bearing so much of the weight of it. And
I wanted to ask you how that context for heroism
changed whether or not you felt like
you were ready to go to space.
Well, I will say that I think something
that's gotten me through really tough times
throughout the years has been focusing on other people.
And gratitude practice, even when I was younger,
without calling it gratitude practice,
but just focusing on how I've been helped by other people
and how they've given me a hand through the darkest of days.
And so I've always looked at the people around me
and seen them as the heroes.
And all of a sudden I was hearing
from so many different people
and they were telling me that I inspired them.
It was interesting for me to get used to,
to see myself in that light and like in the
spotlight like that.
Even through that time, I was just focusing on how grateful I was for the engineers and
for my trainers and for my crew members who were able to help give me such an incredible
experience.
Right.
None of us can do it alone.
And you talk a lot in Wild Ride about this idea of happiness and hopefulness being a
choice that when you
go through really difficult things, sometimes it can make you bitter if you allow it. And
both of these books kind of talk about, you know, the hard parts, but also the fact that
the aftermath of difficult situations can be very difficult. Not just in how people
treat you or deal with the hard things you've been through, but also in the ways that hardship can limit your ideas of your own future, right?
Yes.
But what you seem to be saying, what you're actively trying to combat is this idea that
it limits you, but instead you're saying hard things can free you.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
You learn so much about yourself
when you go through something difficult.
And for me, my situation was childhood cancer,
but everyone has something,
something that they've been through
that can hurt to the core
and just shake your vision of the future.
But you learn what your strengths are.
Because as you get through it,
you learn how you got through that.
And it can give you this feeling
that you can truly do anything.
And for me having such a difficult illness as a kid,
there were some days where I didn't know
if I would have many more days,
but it gave me this love and zest for life
that just really made me want to get the most out of every day I'm on earth and truly embrace the opportunities that come my way.
And I credit cancer with this gift that it gave me for loving life.
There's an interesting kind of juxtaposition here in that you're saying, I went through
this hard thing and it gave me this zest, this longing to do something with life.
But then you have this opportunity, someone comes to you and says, hey, do you want to
go to space?
And at the time, you weren't super familiar with the dangers of space travel or what the
current status of space exploration was like.
And in conversations with your brother, you brought up, there might be a 50-50 chance
that I might die,
but you were still already set on going.
Why was that so important to you to go to space
and do this, even knowing that it might be super dangerous
and knowing that life itself and this experience of life
is what you cherish most?
Yes, I love that example that you brought up.
Whenever I found out I was going to space
and I called my aerospace engineer brother,
I said, what's the risk of death?
Like 50 percent.
He's like, no, nowhere anywhere near that.
I was like, okay, well, great, because I was going to go anyway.
I remember afterwards some people that I feel like maybe didn't understand.
They said, oh, she survived cancer.
How can she risk her life like this?
But it's because I love my life so much
that I want to enjoy it.
And just, this was the most unique opportunity
I had ever been approached with.
But I think it feels like living
to take these opportunities,
even opportunities that scare you,
and to say yes to them,
to have that courage and that confidence to say yes,
knowing that it can open the door to so many experiences
that you never thought possible,
but truly it's because I love life
that I wanted to have the opportunity to go off the planet
and learn so much about myself along the way.
I think it says something really cool about this moment in space history, that you as
someone who didn't necessarily want to be an astronaut as a kid and had all of these
things in your life that previously would have been barriers to entry, right?
Absolutely.
You were not only a young woman, but you experienced childhood illness, you have a prosthetic in
your leg.
All these things together previously would have left you out.
But now we're in this phase where space is accessible to people like you.
And I found myself just being so grateful that someone who isn't solely
focused on space could actually have that experience.
I yes, I feel the exact same way.
And being the this mission that we were on this,
we were the first all civilian orbital space mission. Before this mission, really the people
that had flown were physically perfect. And I would never have qualified to be a NASA astronaut.
So it was never one of my dreams because and truly it wouldn't have been in the cards for me, but then this mission came along and we were
able to change what it looks like to be an astronaut and to
bring to the table a diverse set of skills because of we had all
had different health backgrounds and career backgrounds. I do
remember the first time, for example, I did centrifuge
training and I was going to experience significant G-Force for the first time.
I asked some people there, I was like, have you ever known anyone with a prosthetic body
part that's been through this?
And the answer was no.
I asked my orthopedic surgeon if my prosthesis and my leg would be able to handle the G-Forces
and he said, I don't know.
And I remember just feeling so much fear in that moment. But then
also kind of shifting the perspective to thinking, well,
this is beautiful that I get to be the first. Yes, I'm afraid
because I don't know what to expect. But because I'm going to
be the first and it's going to open the door for other people
who are like me. And so there was some fear in the beginning
of all that. But then there was also just so much gratitude to be able to be that first person to open the door and
hold it open for all those to come behind me.
I loved that part about the centrifuge, but I'm also thinking about the day in the simulator
where you were, the whole crew was in there trying to test how long you could sit in those
chairs and you were trying to be really brave about the fact that this chair was causing you all
sorts of uncomfortableness stuck in it for so long. And it took you quite a while because you
didn't want to say something that could potentially remove you from going on this mission. But you
come around in the end being like, always let people know when you're struggling or when you're
in pain, because you said that
they could change the chair.
And that means that everybody else who comes after
who has a prosthetic limb is gonna have an easier time of it.
So it really is worth being vulnerable in those moments.
Yeah, I learned a lot about vulnerability
throughout the mission.
As I was just learning more about myself
and as I was training with my crew and with SpaceX,
and especially the beginning of
training I wanted to come across as the toughest girl, the toughest astronaut they had ever met
and whenever I was in that original seat and we were doing that launch simulation
and I started feeling the pain and it got worse and worse to the point I was sweating and like
gritting my teeth I didn't want to say anything because I was worried about how that would come across.
But whenever I did speak up,
it taught me a lot about how you need to be vulnerable
in certain moments, not only with like, with my crew
in order to be my fully present self and with my trainers
so that I could be honest and transparent with them,
but also with myself to learn about those moments
where even if I felt weak on the inside later,
I saw that as such a strength
that I was able to speak up in that moment
and hopefully make some good change
that they can use for future flyers
who have pain with that seat.
It's a hard thing to speak up,
especially when you're on camera
being filmed for a Netflix documentary.
Yes, that definitely added to it.
But especially in the section where you're talking about climbing Mount Rainier,
you guys did some really intense training to try to prepare for space. But here you are trying to
make your way up a mountain on this prosthetic leg while people are literally filming you the whole
time. That's got to be really nerveracking. I could feel the camera.
Because they had it trained on us the whole time.
It was nine and a half hours of a climb up the mountain, and I'd never done anything
like that.
I'd done some hikes over the years, but I didn't think climbing mountain would even
be possible for me.
And then I found out it was mandatory.
And so I made it possible.
But yes, I wanted, and that's again,
that was earlier in training where I just wanted
to come across like the toughest girl.
That one really taught me a lot
about just staying in the moment.
Cause it was a one foot, one step after another situation.
You know, the true test of that was not
to make it up the mountain.
It was to bond as a crew.
And we happened to get to the goal location that we had and camped for a few days on the
mountain.
But that was such a good way of really learning about each other.
And that was one of our first big crew bonding activities.
I'm so glad that you ended up loving the crew.
I've never gotten to meet any of the other people in person, but I've been in the same
room with Cyan Proctor and just being in that space, you could feel like what a kind and jovial
person she was.
Absolutely.
There must have been so much fun.
Yes, because we went through something so big together and we spent a lot of time training
and the training was intense.
And then we had this life changing experience.
The first time we all saw the earth from Cupola, I'll never forget that.
And Sian's my sister, and Jared and Chris, we all keep up.
We've got our group texts, it's strong.
And I know that we're going to be in each other's lives forever.
You can't go through something like this and not have it, you know, especially as we had
this life-changing experience. It's so
much of that life-changing experience, I like, I still, I think about being with
them and what they taught me. Well, we're in a really interesting situation right
now where we're all wondering what's gonna happen as this new administration
comes in and changes funding and priorities for NASA. And one of the things that we're still waiting on
is the confirmation of the new NASA administrator,
who right now, the presumptive nominee, is Jared Isaacman.
My only context for Jared came from the Netflix documentary
and now, you know, and watching him on the Polaris Dawn mission,
sticking his head out the hole and looking out at the Earth.
But all of these are kind of curated commercial experiences of him.
You know him personally.
And I know you can't speculate about what he would be like as a NASA administrator,
but what do you think he loves so much about space exploration?
And what do you think his priorities might be as he potentially takes this role?
I think he's going to be fantastic. I've seen him put to the test and I've seen him challenge and he is very fair
and he is thoughtful. He's able to see both sides of a situation and make the best decision for all
parties involved and I think he's going to do a wonderful job. I know we are waiting for his
confirmation hearing but I think he's he's going to do a wonderful job. I know we are waiting for his confirmation hearing, but I think he's going to do such a great job.
And I love hearing about his passion for space exploration
and just for journeying into the unknown
because that is how we progress as a society,
is learning more about what's around us.
And he not only sees that, but he lives it.
He has so much experience and he has really,
he's really pushed things.
If anyone ever gets a chance to hear him speak
about exploration, it's very inspiring.
And it definitely leaves you wanting to learn more
about what's around us.
You did do some really profound kind of tests
while you guys were all out in space,
despite being an all-civilian crew.
What were some of the medical tests that you got to do
while you were up there since you got to be
the medical officer on board?
Yes. So, really, such a large portion of our time in space
was spent doing research.
And that went back to, they approached us with this
at the beginning of our inspiration board journey,
and we all as a crew said that, yes, back to, they approached us with this at the beginning of our Inspiration4 journey.
And we all as a crew said that, yes, we wanted to contribute to science as much as possible
and help answer questions.
We didn't want this to necessarily be like perceived as a joyride.
We wanted to help contribute to science.
And so a lot of the questions were biomedical in nature. And so we did things like we ultrasounded our eyeballs, our bladders, our large blood
vessels to evaluate for the size and the shape and microgravity.
We were swabbing different parts of our bodies throughout the mission to see the microbiome,
how the microbes on our skin changed in those three days and the small spacecraft sharing
it with three other
people. We took cognition tests. As astronauts have previously reported a space fog, and
so they wanted to see how a short duration space mission would compare with a longer
duration space mission, some of the data they already had. And we gave a bunch of samples.
We gave saliva samples, urine samples, blood. We took blood every day because they wanted to see what changes occurred.
Me and another crew member wore continuous glucose monitors to evaluate for the reliability
in flight.
It's been really interesting as the data is now coming out.
We actually just were published in Nature, which people who are into the science journal
realm, they know that Nature is such a prestigious publication. But it's really exciting to see.
There are some differences between, for example, our three-day mission and longer duration space
missions. And there are some similarities as well. That's really cool. I'm going to have to look up
that Nature paper and link it on this page too,
because I love getting into that.
And especially as we're thinking about sending people
into space for longer term journeys and sending women
and people who haven't been represented in space before,
we need to be able to do these medical studies
to see how long-term space travel can impact people
because our data is pretty limited right now.
Data is limited, yes. And one thing about us being a civilian crew is I feel like we were very
transparent with the symptoms that we were having as well because we're not worried about not being
qualified to fly again. And so I think a lot of us were very honest with our medical team as well
about the true symptoms we were experiencing and not afraid to ask for medications because we didn't feel
perfect in space.
Our bodies had been in gravity our entire lives.
All of a sudden that gravity element is removed and that comes with symptoms.
And so I've enjoyed being able to share with people that the human side of being in space.
Yeah, it was really interesting to read about the back pain caused by your spinal cord kind of elongating
because you weren't in gravity.
But also the flip side of that was that being in space
allowed you the freedom to not be putting that pressure
on your leg all the time,
which meant that you weren't getting
that same kind of inflammation.
And it occurs to me that this might be way out
in the future, but we could someday think
of space as a form of medical treatment for people who are in recurring pain because of
situations in gravity.
Oh, that's an interesting thought.
I like that.
Yes, my life felt great in space without, there was no pressure on it.
Because SpaceX was able to design my seat on the flight, I was not in pain on launch day.
But I really like that forward-thinking approach.
We'll be right back with the rest of my interview with Haley Arseneau after this short break.
I'm Jack Corelli, Director of Government Relations for the Planetary Society.
I'm thrilled to announce that registration is now open for the Planetary Society's flagship advocacy event, the Day of Action. Each
year we empower Planetary Society members from across the United States
to directly champion planetary exploration, planetary defense, and the
search for life beyond Earth. Attendees meet face-to-face with legislators and
their staff in Washington,
D.C. to make the case for space exploration and show them why it matters. Research shows
that in-person constituent meetings are the most effective way to influence our elected
officials, and we need your voice. If you believe in our mission to explore the cosmos,
this is your chance to take action. You'll receive comprehensive advocacy training from our expert space policy team, both online
and in person.
We'll handle the logistics of scheduling your meetings with your representatives, and
you'll also gain access to exclusive events and social gatherings with fellow space advocates.
This year's Day of Action takes place on Monday, March 24th, 2025. Don't miss your opportunity to help shape
the future of space exploration. Register now at
planetary.org slash day of action.
In Wild Ride, you talk about your encounter with the overview
effect, but you don't really talk about it in astronaut
Haley's Brave Adventure, because that's not the point of the
book.
But if you were to say anything to kids about that overview effect and seeing the Earth
from space, what would you say?
I think one of my biggest takeaways that I would share with little ones is when you look
at the planet, you know that you'll never be alone.
There's a lot of people with you and we're all in this together.
And I think you've got a really great context for that because the zest for life that you
have because of your experiences has led you to travel all around the world and to focus
specifically on going to places that can help you learn Spanish so that you can then use
that life skill to make medicine and your treatment more accessible to other people.
And I was thinking about that as I was rereading Astronaut Haley. There's this beautiful context
of what that ability to communicate and to see the world as one large thing can do for
you. But you do note in Wild Ride that as you were going around, you did find that there
are huge disparities between nations when it comes to medical care. And being able to learn Spanish helped you bridge that gap in
some respect. Are there any lessons you think you can take from that experience that might
be helpful when it comes to space? It's not a life or death scenario necessarily, but
those disparities still exist between nations.
They do. So as the medical officer, I was in charge of the health of my crew in space.
And especially as going through medical officer training, I learned medicine is very limited
in space. Not only are there options for medication limited, but diagnostic equipment is very
limited. For our mission, we just had a portable ultrasound on the iPhone. And missions like ours by space travel,
it helps come up with equipment
that could eventually serve regions
where diagnostic resources are limited.
One thing that we were trying to do on our mission
was help qualify a diagnostic device that was very small
and it would help identify inflammation.
And the beauty of resources like this is that
if similar diagnostic resources are found to be functional
and accurate, it can help not only in the limited abilities of space
but also places on Earth where diagnostic resources are limited.
And so by space travel, it really helps solve problems
here on Earth and can help in low
and middle income countries if there are true developments made that can help the medical
environment of space, which is extremely limited, can also help some limited environments on
Earth.
I get this question all the time.
Why should we be investing in space exploration when there's so much that needs to be done
here on Earth?
But time and time again,
as we're exploring and investing in space,
we find situations like this, right?
Where you can take a lesson and take it back to Earth.
And just two years ago,
I was interviewing someone who was working
on a mobile astro pharmacy
that could then completely change life on Earth.
It was such a cool concept.
So I will never stop screaming from the mountaintops about all the beautiful applications of these technologies here on Earth. It was such a cool concept. So I will never stop screaming from the mountaintops
about all the beautiful applications of these technologies here on Earth.
Yeah, my crew member, Cyan, always says, solving for space solves for Earth.
And I love that.
That's a beautiful way to put it. Yeah. So you got to go on this beautiful grand adventure,
but for a while there, you weren't sure you were going to be able to go to space, let alone get your dream job at St. Jude.
You did so much work to get there, but you were still rejected from St. Jude several times before
you finally succeeded. And I super relate to this as someone who went into astrophysics.
Everybody who wants to study space, they have these beautiful dreams. But as I learned in the
hard way getting out of college, you're going to face a lot of rejection before you find that dream job. And I ultimately found my place at the Planetary Society,
but what would you say to people who want to pursue these space careers or jobs like yours
that are really medically intensive that might face rejection along the way?
One thing I've learned about rejection is it doesn't always mean no, it can mean
not right now.
And I really believe that things work out
how they're supposed to work out.
And I had applied for several jobs at St. Jude
over the years that I thought I was gonna be a shoo-in.
I had had this dream job of working at the hospital
that saved my life since I was 10 years old.
All I've ever wanted to do is work at St. Jude.
And I really thought whenever I applied
that they would just kind of open the door for me
and say, we've been waiting for you.
And then when I got told no, not one, but three times
as I was lacking experience or just not the right fit,
it was discouraging for sure.
And that's why I wanted to be open about this in my book
because I think a lot of people can relate to it.
A lot of times these dream jobs, they are their dreams for a reason that you really
have to work for them.
And by showing up over and over, people are going to see your passion.
And so that's what I continue to do.
I just continue to show up and I ended up at the best fit out of all the times I applied
the job I ended up getting was absolutely perfect for me.
And it came after I had gained a lot of experience that ultimately I needed.
And so I really do believe things work out as they're supposed to.
But that is it's so normal to have these ups and downs in your career.
It's not linear.
As you continue to show up, work hard and show your passion. People see that, they feel it. And it's an important lesson to share,
but you do also say in Wild Bride
that if you could go back and tell your 10-year-old self
what the future would hold, you wouldn't.
Why is that?
I think the beauty of life is that you don't know
what's gonna happen.
And I think that's why on your really tough days,
you have to hold on to hope that there's gonna be
better days ahead.
You just don't know them yet. that there's gonna be better days ahead.
You just don't know them yet.
And that they could be better than you can even imagine.
Like I never could have imagined I would ever go to space.
And I have loved that part of life of just being surprised.
And that's not the only time I've been surprised
by something incredible, but on those really tough days,
on my really dark days where I felt like I was losing hope, it's like I had hope in the unknown.
And so I love the journey that I've been through in life,
and I'm glad that I've had the surprises that I've had.
And I wouldn't want to ruin the surprise for young me.
I think so much of the beauty of the journey
has been rolling with the punches,
seeing what's come my way and embracing the opportunities.
It's reminding me of the chapter, I think it was called,
Losing Hope, Choosing Hope, where you're talking about going to Camp Horizon, which is a summer
camp for kids that have either encountered pediatric cancer or have survived it. And
there's a camp song where you sing about, you know, beyond the horizon, there's hope for everyone.
And I noted this because at the Planetary Society, we actually worked with Melody Sheep
to make a song called Beyond the Horizon that was like a remix of things that our CEO, Bill
Nye, had said and other people.
But suddenly, there was this really interesting parallel that like kind of crystallized for
me, which is that, you know, kids with cancer are people who are dealing with really hard
times.
They have to think,
well, somewhere beyond that horizon, there's something beautiful coming for me. But it's
the same motivation that drives people to want to do space exploration. It's not driven by the same
sadness necessarily, but there is a kind of like understanding of the fragility of life on earth
and the fact that we don't know what's beyond. And that's what drives us to explore.
And I found that parallel, like, really illuminating for me
and really beautiful.
Yes, and those who do aerospace work on Earth,
it's very hopeful of, as you're working towards advancing
what we know and you're working towards things
that we haven't even discovered yet.
It's very exciting work.
I have really enjoyed my experience you're working towards things that we haven't even discovered yet. It's very exciting work.
I have really enjoyed my experience in getting to see the space side of things and just learn
so much from the space industry.
I love the drive.
I love the passion in everyone I've met who works in the space industry.
Well, you have a large family between St. Jude and SpaceX now, but I was thinking about
this image of you that they took in space of you floating there with your hair floating
all around you and you're holding this picture of you as a kid.
You don't have any hair, you're in the midst of dealing with cancer, but you're still smiling.
And I re-encountered this thought and this image recently because I was interviewing
Emily Calandrelli who just recently, yeah, she became the 100th woman in space. And as I was researching
her, I was going through her website and I found this gallery called Space Sisters. And you're in
there in a very similar fashion, you in your flight suit holding the same image, but you're
surrounded by other women who have recently gone to space. And I wanted to ask you what it's been like not just becoming a part of the space community, but finding that community
within the group of women that have recently gone to space. What I love about our group is it is such
an empowering group, such an uplifting group. And we celebrate each other's accomplishments and successes as if they're our own.
And there's power in that.
There's been so many unexpected parts of my space mission that have been wonderful surprises.
And one of them is finding this sisterhood, especially with Cyan.
I think we initially started calling each other space sisters.
And then it grew into this group of
uplifting women who have similar interests, have had these extreme opportunities and
life experiences and there's so much connection in that and one thing that we all feel really
passionately about is wanting to share our experience. And so we try to use it to uplift
other people, especially young women and little girls, and to hopefully inspire them to dream
big and hopefully see themselves in us.
I hope to meet and speak with each and every one of these women. Because as I was looking
at that image, I did, I went down the rabbit hole. I searched everyone's life and I came
away from it just like tears streaming down my face at my computer like this is so beautiful.
Oh, I love that so much. Yeah, it's such a great group of girls. And everyone's just,
we're just really happy to be where we are. And to have found this connection through
it.
And it occurred to me too, that your journey into space was not that long ago, but at the
time there was maybe around 70 women that had been to space.
Now we mark just at the end of last year, a hundred women that have gone to space.
And that's not that many years since you went up, right?
The number is accelerating and a lot of that is due in part to the advancement of commercial
space.
And I know that people have all kinds of feelings
about commercial space, but what has it taught you
about the power of this opportunity
to allow for more of these opportunities
or accelerate our ability to include
more people in this journey?
A really powerful aspect of commercial spaceflight
is how it's allowing more and more research to take place.
So for the Inspiration4 mission, for Polaris Dawn, we have taken the role of participating
in research very seriously. I know there's been research on some of the suborbital missions
with Kelly Girardi, she and her all-female research team. we're so happy to be where we are that we want to
help contribute. And I think that there's going to be, I think a lot of the information that we have
and a lot of the data we have about the human body in space, a lot of this is going to come from
the commercial side of things. And I find that very exciting. Also, it's going to do so much
good for our planet for people
to go up into space and experience the overview effect to
see our planet and to have that life changing moment where
your perspective changes for good.
And I am hopeful as more and more people see that there will
be more peace on Earth, more unity, and more support for each other,
not just people from the nation where we came, but for all people around the world.
And we can't take every one of your patients to space, but you did get an opportunity while
you were up there to live stream some of your experience and answer questions from the kids
at St. Jude.
Yes.
How many people joined that call? There might've been around 10 on the call,
actually actively asking us questions,
but there were over a thousand people watching it live.
And then since then,
many kids have been able to watch it on YouTube.
But that was truly the highlight of the mission for me.
It was what I had been looking forward to the most
before I went to space.
And whenever I went to space.
Whenever I got to hear the little voices of my patients from space, it just filled us
with such enthusiasm.
It just reaffirmed for all of us why we were doing this mission.
We were raising money for St. Jude throughout training, throughout our time in space, and
even after coming home.
That was so important to all of us.
I loved how my crew took on fundraising for St. Jude
wholeheartedly, even though Chris and Cyan,
and I think Jared at the time,
hadn't even been to the hospital yet,
but they had so much love for it.
And they could hear about the hospital through my stories.
And that was just so important to all of us,
trying to advance life on Earth
by helping raise money for cancer research.
And then of course, it was just so cute
hearing the questions from the kids
about what they wanted to know about our space experience.
My favorite question was, are there cows on the moon?
It was just, it was kids being kids.
And I loved that.
It was, I felt just very genuine and happy.
You say in Wild Ride that, you know, when you're actually doing your medical work, you
don't always tell your patients that you're a cancer survivor.
You do if it's helpful in contexts where, you know, you feel like it will bolster them.
But now you've added on to that story, I went to space.
Has that changed the way you share your story with your patients?
I think it's helped me connect to a wider range of patients and especially those little
kiddos who you see a little stuffy of an astronaut or you see a rocket in the corner of their hospital room.
And then it's such a great segue into saying,
oh, you know, I rode a rocket.
And there's some kids that if I tell them I had cancer,
especially the little bitties,
maybe they don't understand quite the gravity
of that connection.
But if I tell them I'm an astronaut,
then that's something that is more
maybe familiar to them. And it's just been a, it's been a really, not only great way of connecting
with the patients, but a great way of being able to tell them that life after cancer can be full
of accomplished dreams that no matter what big dreams you have, either on earth or in space,
that those dreams can come true and having cancer doesn't have to limit you.
on earth or in space that those dreams can come true and having cancer doesn't have to limit you.
That's so beautiful.
And I love that there's so much more to you
than just the story.
You were saying during the time
when you entered high school essentially,
you hated that everyone thought of you
as the cancer girl, right?
But I think you've really,
you've made it a part of your identity
in a way that's like, it's not just I had cancer. I've you've really, you've made it a part of your identity in a way that's like, you know, it's not just I had cancer.
It's I've overcome something really hard and now I'm going to do everything I can to try to help other people overcome that as well.
And that's a really powerful way to re-contextualize that.
Yes. And to take back the power that I had cancer and it really put my life on hold and I had to go through treatment
and really there was so much suffering during that time,
but it's helped me to not feel bitter about it,
to think about the other people that I could impact
because of my experience.
And so ever since I was 10 years old,
I was raising money for cancer research
and trying to help other kids, trying to encourage them.
And that's ultimately what led me to the field that I'm in now.
And it's just, it's definitely not lost on me how grateful I am to be where I am and to have,
I'm grateful to have had cancer and to have had this incredible life journey
where so much beauty can come out of so much pain.
And I love that after you got to come down from space,
you splash down, you get to see your family,
and then you get to celebrate with all the people
that have been on this journey with you.
And seeing so many people along the way,
the doctors that helped you with your physical therapy,
and the kids that you've treated,
and everyone get to celebrate the fact
that you went to space together.
It is so much, not just your triumph,
but all of their triumph.
And it was a beautiful part of the book for me.
Well, thank you.
I really, I love the way that you see that
and that takeaway.
There was so much celebration,
especially with my medical team and with friends I had
whenever we went through cancer treatment together
and just so many people that supported me through the years. It felt like a celebration for all of us. And whenever I got back from space and
gotten back to Memphis and St. Jude had a parade and there were kids going through cancer treatment,
holding signs, and it was my 19 that helped save my life and everyone that came together. And it
just felt like just this incredible moment
where we did this together.
And now you've got this beautiful kids book that's just come out. Are you looking forward
to sharing it with some of your patients?
I am. I am going to be bringing several copies to St. Jude and doing readings with the kids
and just telling them this simple message that if I can do this,
you can do this. And I hope that it inspires some big dreams and some big adventures.
Thanks for doing all of this, not just coming on the show and writing these books, but for
being brave enough to turn something that could have absolutely crushed your spirit
into the fire that carries you
onward. It's absolutely inspirational. And I've seen so many people go through this kind
of arc in the space industry. Everyone's got their own story for why they're so fired up
about it. Everyone's dealing with their own personal struggles. But in the end, especially
if we can bolster each other, we can go to space, we can do anything together. And I
think you represent that very well.
Well, I appreciate you saying that so much.
And thank you for what you do,
because, as you said, everyone has a story,
everyone has their why,
and thank you for spotlighting our stories.
Well, thanks, Hailey, and here's to the next brave adventure.
Yes, thanks so much.
There are so many beautiful details to this story that we didn't get to explore in this conversation.
But you're just going to have to read her books to learn more.
I know I personally connect with the story, but no matter who you are, it's an inspiring tale of resilience, love, and hope.
Each of us has our struggles that have shaped our lives.
You never know when someone's going through something, so it's a good reminder to be kind
to one another.
After all, as far as we know, we're some of the only intelligent creatures in the entire
universe.
I also want to send a huge thank you to everyone who worked so hard to fight childhood illness
and support all of those who are going through difficult medical times.
People like Hailey saved the person I love.
They saved Hailey.
And they're working each day to create the treatments that we need to conquer illness
here on Earth and in space.
And no matter what you're going through right now, I hope that there are brighter days ahead
and that when you come out the other side of whatever it is, that you appreciate your
bravery and that it sets you free,
whether that means you're going to space
or just living life.
Now, let's check in with Dr. Bruce Betts,
our chief scientist for What's Up.
Hey, Bruce.
Hey, Sarah.
Hi there.
Oh, there he there.
Who'da heed it?
Ha ha, man, I was looking forward to that conversation
with Haley Arseneau for so long.
One of the things I think that kind of really hit me as I was reading her books about this
was the moment that she tried to go through astronaut training.
And Haley has a prosthetic leg.
There's a prosthetic in her leg and no one who's ever had something like that has ever
gone through something like G-force training.
And, you know, it sounded like a really intense experience in the book, but I know you tried to become an astronaut at some point. So can you describe what these centrifuge trainings are kind
of like and how many G-forces you might be pulling during them? I can give a shot at it. I can give
the NASA side of it. Basically, the basic launch typically is in the 3G range.
People tend to pass out around 5 or 6 Gs, and if they're trained to do the weird pretend-like
your constipated maneuver, you can crank that up to 6 or 7 Gs, but you don't want to do it for very long.
And then, of course, they have negative Gs, if you want to think of it that way,
where they are actually going the opposite direction
and being pushed into their straps,
although those tend to be lower.
I went through the full medical range of tests,
but they didn't do that.
They were too busy poking, prodding in my brain.
Oh man, not literally probing your brain, right?
Not in a inside thethe-skull kind of way, but they did electroencephalograms, I believe
is the right term, EEGs.
Yeah, what was kind of shocking for me reading about how SpaceX prepares their space travelers
was all the tests they did on hypoxia.
They would put them inside a chamber and kind of dial up the oxygen or the nitrogen, just
dial it all around to see how their brains reacted and make them do cognitive tests while
they were doing it.
Like that just...
And I've done that.
It was encouraged but not required as a separate test.
I've done the hypoxia.
So basically designed for people who fly above altitude where you can have enough oxygen
So that if you don't notice your oxygen going out you've experienced
What it feels like and how you start to become stupid and what other symptoms you feel and what I was doing
They didn't push us to
passing out but they did do the cognitive tests to make people aware that you need to be very
wary of something wrong with your oxygen system.
Weird, our bodies really like it.
Really though, kind of need that to survive.
Oh man, going to space is just such a thing and trying to go through all that training
with a prosthetic limb, not knowing how it was going to affect all of that. I mean, that's scary. If that had broken her leg, she wouldn't have been
able to go to space and she would have had to get it replaced again. That's a whole level
of bravery that I don't know if I'm prepared for and I'm blown away by this lady.
I know that's wonderful that from her challenging life perspective, she's developed such a positive
attitude and is sharing it with the kids out there.
Right.
I'm always just belligerently hopeful.
So it's nice to find other people that are just as obnoxiously hopeful as I am.
Belligerently obnoxiously hopeful.
That's you. That's you.
That's me.
Well, what do you got for us this week, Bruce?
Is it belligerently hopeful or what do we got?
Oh my gosh.
You wouldn't believe how belligerently hopeful it is.
It is the-
This may be one of the greatest or one of the lamest space facts ever, depending on
your perspective.
So sorry to those who go lame.
You ready, Sarah?
Ready.
Hey, what's this word?
Star?
And what is it backwards?
Oh, no, Bruce.
Rats.
Yes.
Random space fact.
There you go. In the meantime, everyone go out there, look up the night sky and think about what's up
there.
Is it?
Stars?
Or is it?
Rats.
Thank you.
Good night.
We've reached the end of this week's episode of Planetary Radio, but we'll be back next
week with another tale of perseverance through tragedy as we look back at NASA's Genesis
mission, the SolarWinds sample return spacecraft that crashed and still managed to achieve
its mission.
You think the Osiris-REx sample return was a wild ride, just wait until you hear this
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