|
Ashby empathizes with Mark Kelly's situation. "Their decision is complex and personal," Ashby said in an e-mail. "I have no doubt that my friends Mark and Gabby will make the right decision for their family and for NASA." Ashby went on to fly three times in space, before leaving NASA. Mark Kelly already has rocketed into orbit three times. But the shuttle program ends this year, after just three more flights. NASA aims to launch Endeavour on April 19, provided Discovery takes off later this month as planned. To buy time, NASA recently named a backup commander, Rick Sturckow, for the two-week space station delivery mission. He joined crew training two weeks ago; the intensive sessions can last into the evening and fill weekends this close to flight. Around the same time, Mark Kelly decided on Houston for his wife's rehab so he could be close to home and his job at Johnson Space Center. He is concentrating on his wife's care, but also has been back to work, his brother said. This is Giffords' second week of rehab at TIRR Memorial Hermann hospital. In a Twitter update early Wednesday, Mark Kelly said Giffords is making "Lots of progress!" TIRR Memorial Hermann's Lex Frieden, professor of biomedical informatics and rehabilitation at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, said Kelly's decision about his NASA flight status won't be the only important one he needs to make during his wife's long rehabilitation. Public opinion is irrelevant, Frieden said. "What's important is the decision that they make and the comfort they have with that decision ultimately." Mark Kelly has said he'd like the decision to be made jointly, with his wife's opinion, if possible. A former NASA colleague, Susan Still Kilrain, said if she can, Giffords will tell him to go. Kilrain, in 1997, became the second American woman to pilot a space shuttle. Then, she was single. She recalls how Ashby's wife, Diana, urged him to continue with his mission training despite her cancer. "She really wanted him to stop sitting around and waiting for her to die," Kilrain said. "All the wives would feel that way, and his wife (Giffords) seems to have a very big support system." That said, there's no way Kilrain would resume training under the Kelly-Giffords circumstances. Women, she noted, tend to be the caregivers. She points to her own life story: She stood down from space flying after her first child was born and quit NASA in 2002. She's a stay-at-home mom to four children, ages 4 to 11. "Me personally? I wouldn't fly," Kilrain said from her home in Virginia. "But I certainly would definitely respect his decision to fly. I wouldn't second-guess that in a minute." ___ Online: NASA: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/home/index.html Melanoma Research Foundation:
http://www.melanoma.org/community/
diana-merriweather-ashby
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor