
New
Delhi : Astronaut Sunita Williams said space travel has changed her
perspective towards life in general, and the idea of humans arguing
or having differences over issues seems so "silly" when you
look at Earth as "one planet" from outer space.
Williams,
60, who recently retired from the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), is currently visiting India. She was speaking
at an interactive session titled "Eyes on the Stars, Feet on the
Ground," hosted at the American Centre here.
During
the conversation, she spoke about her most recent mission -- which
saw an intended an eight-day test flight to the International Space
Station (ISS) extend to over nine months due to technical issues with
the Boeing Starliner spacecraft -- Williams described space travel as
the ultimate "team sport", adding that countries need to
work together as "this is our one planet, we are here together".
"When
you get to space, I think everybody does this... we all want to look
for our home. My father is from India and my mother is from Slovenia.
So I'm obviously looking for these places to call home. And that's
your first objective," she said.
However,
she noted that this initial search for a specific home eventually
evolves into a broader realisation of the Earth's unity. "Our
planet is alive. Some people think there are just rocks out there,
but it is moving. I could see seasons, changes in oceans' colours
with algae blooms, for example, or seeing ice formations in the
north, you know, in the high northern hemisphere or down near
Antarctica," she said.
She
said looking at this beautiful, living planet from up there changes
one's perspectives towards life. "It changes one's perception
about people having any differences. It makes you feel like we are
just one, and we all should work closer and easier together,"
the astronaut said.
"And
it actually sort of made me feel like, why would anybody argue about
anything. I know, I'm married. I have a husband. We argue. So I
understand arguments, but like the reality of it is, like why? You
know, it seems so silly when you look at Earth from that
perspective," Williams added.
When
asked about if she is afraid of anything, Williams responded in a
lighter vein, saying, "I'm still afraid of a lot of things.
Where I live, there are some bears. I'm a little bit afraid of waking
one of them up. They're sleeping right now. That's good." "So,
you have to know your place in the universe and then on Earth and be
careful and respectful of the animals that are around you," she
added.
The
astronaut, who retired on December 27, 2025, capping a stellar
27-year career, during which she completed three missions aboard the
ISS and set various human spaceflight records. Williams logged 608
days in space — second on the list of cumulative time in space by a
NASA astronaut. She ranks sixth on the list of longest single
spaceflight by an American, tied with NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore,
both logging 286 days during NASA’s Boeing Starliner and SpaceX
Crew-9 missions, NASA said in a statement on January 20.
She
also completed nine spacewalks, totalling 62 hours and 6 minutes,
ranking as the most spacewalk time by a woman and fourth-most on the
all-time cumulative spacewalk duration list. She was the first person
to run a marathon in space, it said.
At
the American Centre event -- "Eyes on the Stars, Feet on the
Ground", she was asked a plethora of questions, ranging from
ways to maintain mental health to managing space debris and from
commercialisation of the space sector to collaboration of the public
and private sectors in space missions.
Born
in Ohio to Deepak Pandya and Ursuline Bonnie Pandya on September 19,
1965, the former US Navy captain remains a figure of immense a figure
of immense inspiration in India. Students attending the event noted
her ability to make complex professional challenges relatable.
Aashi
Baisoya, 21, pursuing a B.Tech degree from a Delhi-based university,
who attended the event along with her three other classmates, said,
she walked out of the hall "feeling great".
"The
way astronaut Willams engaged with this audience, showed not only her
immense calibre and knowledge of the profession, but how she made it
very relatable to the youths, sharing her own story," she told
PTI.
Kritagya
Arora, 21, her classmate, echoed her views and added that the
adaptability that Williams demonstrated at the beginning of the
session, as also wonderful sense of humour during the course of the
interaction, was something noteworthy.