And it rekindled a boyhood dream that had gone dormant over the years. That dream was to be an astronaut. And I just could not ignore this dream. I had to pursue it. So I was lucky enough to get accepted to MIT.
While I was at MIT, I applied to NASA to become an astronaut. I filled out my application, and I received a letter that said they weren’t quite interested. So I waited a couple of years, and I sent in another application. They sent me back pretty much the same letter. So I applied a third time, and this time I got an interview, so they got to know who I was. And then they told me no.
So I applied a fourth time. And on April 22, 1996, I picked up the phone, and it was Dave Leestma, the head of flight-crew operations at the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
He said, “Hey, Mike. How you doing this morning?”
I said, “I really don’t know, Dave. You’re gonna have to tell me.”
He said, “Well, I think you’re gonna be pretty good after this phone call ’cause we wanna make you an astronaut.”
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