Being “The Astronaut’s Wife”
Soyuz TMA-21’s crew during the training: Andrey Borisenko, Aleksandr Samokutyaev and Ronald Garan (RIA Novosti / Oleg Urusov)
(19.2Mb)embed videoA mission honoring the 50th anniversary of mankind's first journey to space is set to depart for the International Space Station at 02:18 Moscow time (22:18 GMT).
The Russian-American crew will blast off from the same launch site that propelled Yury Gagarin into space. Their spaceship will be carrying an image of Yury Gagarin.
As the Soyuz TMA-21 crew gears up for takeoff, RT met up with the spacemen’s wives to learn how they are preparing for six months of separation.
The three Soyuz TMA-21 crew members are readying themselves for their mission to the International Space Station. Tuesday morning’s launch will honor Soviet cosmonaut Yury Gagarin, who 50 years ago this month became the first man in space.
“When I was in kindergarten, they gave us a play rocket,” cosmonaut Aleksandr Samokutyaev recalls smiling. “I spent all my time inside and I wouldn’t let other kids get in there. Since then, they started calling me Gagarin.”
Preparations have been intense, both for the crew and the Soyuz rocket. Any cosmonaut can attest to the arduous process.
“Working and training was so hard that sometimes, we fell asleep behind our desks,”Oleg Artetyev, test cosmonaut from the training center, told RT.
“We had to take many exams and sometimes we had to repeat those exams.”
But now there are much tougher days ahead for their families. Far from the frenzy and the glare of camera lights, the “better halves” of the astronauts have been going through preparations of their own – albeit, more personal ones.
“It’s really hard to explain the wave of emotions I’ve been feeling: worry, anxiety and pride,” said Oksana Samokutyaeva, wife of Aleksandr Samokutyaev. “I’m very proud of him. He, on the other hand, held his own. He showed no emotions. I was more worried and excited. He took our photographs with him – those that show us and our daughter Nastya.”
Ever since the official confirmation that their husbands would be going into space, every little thing becomes a memento for their wives.
“I am wearing my husband’s pullover,” confessed Zoya Borisenko, wife of Andrey Borisenko. “It’s warming me so I can feel closeness and unity with my husband. Here, all the wives wear their husbands’ clothes.”
A close bond has formed among the women.
Carmel Garan, wife of NASA astronaut Ron Garan, gave Oksana and Zoya a bracelet as a symbol of unity.
“We are going to be as united as our husbands have become,” adds Oksana Samokutyaeva.
Because for six months these women and their husbands are literally going to be worlds apart.