It sounds less than ideal — but as the report notes, Williams and Wilmore’s difficulties don’t end with their sleeping arrangements.

As with every ISS mission, the Starliner astronauts initially had specific jobs to do on board the station that would have eaten up their eight-day journey. As Time reports, their main priority was checking in on the Boeing capsule and making sure its communications, life support, and other essential functions were in good shape.

With that checklist done and their journey having been extended until possibly February due to Starliner’s technical issues, Wilmore and Williams have instead been assisting their fellow crew members with their tasks and experiments, including repairing a urine processing pump.

Beyond that lovely job, Wilmore and Williams were also forced to stretch their clothing rations because there’s no laundry on board the ISS. Generally speaking, astronauts pack enough clothes for the length of their journey, and with their trip home having been pushed back repeatedly, the Starliner crew had to make do until a Northrop Grumman resupply mission finally came to deliver them new clothes earlier this month.

  • @[email protected]
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    5626 days ago

    Beyond that lovely job, Wilmore and Williams were also forced to stretch their clothing rations because there’s no laundry on board the ISS. Generally speaking, astronauts pack enough clothes for the length of their journey, and with their trip home having been pushed back repeatedly, the Starliner crew had to make do until a Northrop Grumman resupply mission finally came to deliver them new clothes earlier this month.

    I can imagine hating everything about being up there and hating life and hating your job and hating boeing so fucking much right now. Sounds miserable. At this point, no one will be excited to do a one week mission ever again because of the possibility of this happening.

    • Pennomi
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      5926 days ago

      Trust me, wearing used clothing is far, FAR from the most uncomfortable thing an astronaut does. If something like that bothers you, you wouldn’t sign up for being an astronaut.

      • @[email protected]
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        2126 days ago

        Hell, I wouldn’t sign up just because of the amount of exercise they have to do every day to avoid atrophy. I’m far too lazy.

    • @NOT_RICK
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      4526 days ago

      Eh, I feel like any time I would get annoyed I’d just look out the window and marvel at the view

      • Flying SquidOP
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        2426 days ago

        And remember that everyone you love is down there and you can’t even hug your kids. But hopefully you can fix that urine recycling system before everyone dies of thirst.

        • @Cocodapuf
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          1326 days ago

          I think the astronaut life is not for you…

          Some people would happily accept the indignities of space flight, for the unique opportunity to go.

          And as you point out, fixing the urine recycling system is a critical job, it’s not like it’s busy work. If it doesn’t get repaired, everyone dies of thirst.

          • @[email protected]
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            626 days ago

            It’s not. For sure. Actually getting kind of creepy with projecting his attachments onto them with every post about the mission.

          • Flying SquidOP
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            26 days ago

            They thought they were going to be there for eight days. That is what they happily accepted.

            I might happily accept a vacation to Tuscany, but if I found out I couldn’t leave or see my family for months after I got there, my mind might be different on the subject. And I wouldn’t be stuck in a little space station.

            • @Cocodapuf
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              Uhh… I’ve never heard a single astronaut say “I wish I’d spent less time in orbit”.

              Most astronauts sign up because they want to go to space, but then they end up only spending 1-6 months in space over the entirety of their career.

              Imagine you wanted to be a chef, so you went to the finest culinary schools and then eventually for a job at an acclaimed restaurant. But then you had to just peel potatoes for years, before finally they let you be a provisional chef for a week and you actually got to use the skills you trained for, but still knowing that they’ll put you back on boring prep duty at the end of the week… But then at the end of the week the head chef gets sick and he’s out for the whole month! How would that feel?

              Remember, this isn’t a vacation, this is their career. This is what they want to do. And these people have the most impressive resumes you’ve ever seen in your life, no joke, reading one is intimidating. They could do just about anything they want, and they choose this.

              • Flying SquidOP
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                -626 days ago

                Because there’s never been a situation like this before.

                And chefs get to go home and see their kids every night.

        • @ChicoSuave
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          1126 days ago

          Their family is so close too, around 200 miles away.

          • @Cocodapuf
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            26 days ago

            Way closer than if you’re serving in the military overseas! That could be thousands of miles away!

            Well you’re closer for at least for some of the day… Which is about 45 minutes long because you’re orbiting so fast…

            Ok, so you’re not really closer, but sometimes you are, if you squint!

        • @I_Has_A_Hat
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          You are flying in space. Space. If you are in that situation, know you’ll eventually get home, but “I can’t hug my kids!” is the thought in your head, then you don’t deserve to be an astronaut. There are thousands of others who would happily take your place who don’t have some primal need to always be around their family. This isn’t a 3rd grade slumber party for fuck sakes.

          • @Warl0k3
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            26 days ago

            Indelicately stated perhaps, but I quite agree with the sentiment. They’re up there a shorter time than deployed military personnel, and they’re in space, not some impoverished country we have no business invading. You can call your kids, or your parents, thats a common thing astronauts do! Even facetime, there’s regular ISS livestreams, I think they even streamed themselves playing KSP at one point. I went longer without giving my folks a hug during covid, and all I had out my window was deepest suburban hell.

            Being separated from your family sucks, but to phrase it like it’s a hardship that outweighs being in space…? Only a few hundred people have ever experienced what they get to do. They’re advancing our species with real, substantive, impactful actions, which is more than any of us can claim. They’ll survive eight months without hugs.

            • Flying SquidOP
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              -126 days ago

              They’re up there a shorter time than deployed military personnel

              They were going to be up there for a shorter time. Now they aren’t. They planned for an eight-day trip.

              • @Warl0k3
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                326 days ago

                (Just gonna ignore the rest of the comment, huh?)

                Dude that’s pretty unremarkable for military personnel. NLTs aren’t exactly set in stone, and Captains Williams and Wilmore are 58 and 61 respectively. This is not the first time they have had to deal with something like this. They’re safe. They’re not leaving their young children without a parent. They’re not any more out of touch with their families than we all were during COVID. And, lets be honest, their families have had years to get comfortable with the fact that they are SPACE SHIP TEST PILOTS. Of all the things that could go wrong, this is pretty damn minor.

                • Flying SquidOP
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                  -226 days ago

                  I’m not sure how their being test pilots makes it any less horrible for them to be stuck somewhere for months when it was only supposed to be eight days.

                  Do test pilots not find being separated from their children as sad a thing as everyone else who has children? I am guessing, in general, test pilots want to be with their children as much as most parents do.

          • @owatnext
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            826 days ago

            Loving your family and wishing to hug your children? No outerspace mission for you!

            • @[email protected]
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              426 days ago

              Weak and pathetic. You should be willing to throw your family in a wood chipper at a moment’s notice for a chance to space, you ingrate gravity over.

          • @Cocodapuf
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            226 days ago

            but “I can’t hug my kids!” is the thought in your head, then you don’t deserve to be an astronaut.

            Well it’s not that you wouldn’t “deserve” to be an astronaut, it’s not about entitlement. It’s that an astronaut is not the right job for you, you’d probably be happier in another role.

    • @[email protected]
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      826 days ago

      At this point, no one will be excited to do a one week mission ever again because of the possibility of this happening.

      I’m sure theyve got plenty of capable people lined up that are chomping at the bit to do it. People know how risky going to space is, and if this turns into just an extended stay, it’s not going to deter the people who have been training to do this.

    • @Cocodapuf
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      726 days ago

      It sounds like you can definitely imagine a problem.

  • @[email protected]
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    4226 days ago

    As opposed to what? Sharing a bed with another astronaut? I thought that solo sleeping bags were the standard.

    • @mkwt
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      4126 days ago

      Most of the regular crew gets a sleeping bag in a cupboard with some small locker space for personal effects.

      Wilmore has just the bag, off in the Japanese module. And I guess he has to store personal effects in the Starliner. Though presumably he only packed for 8 days.

      In climate controlled zero gravity, there’s no point to having more bedding than a light sleeping bag just to keep you from floating off somewhere. My guess is the big selling point on the cupboards is some noise damping, and maybe some protection from lighting. Spacecraft have noisy machines running all the time to keep you alive

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        I know they have earplugs and masks available, so it doesn’t really sound like this is a big deal. I think the article is just trying to farm views.

      • @Cocodapuf
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        626 days ago

        Wilmore has just the bag, off in the Japanese module.

        He gets a private suite?!

        • @rollerbang
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          326 days ago

          Are you expecting him to get an invoice for above standard accomodation? 😁

    • @Agent641
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      526 days ago

      Better than sleeping on the front porch.

  • @lath
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    626 days ago

    Can you get cabin fever in space?

    • @[email protected]
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      1226 days ago

      They’ve each done longer missions on ISS than their current stay. Suni once held the record among female astronauts.

    • Flying SquidOP
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      926 days ago

      Considering they’re trapped in a place the size of a couple of buses? I’d say absolutely.

  • @[email protected]
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    -226 days ago

    Am I missing something? I thought their lives were in danger or something. We’re here talking about sleeping arrangements and clothing? From what they described, I put up with FAR worse while camping in various weather conditions here on earth. Am I confused about what they’re going through?

    • @evidences
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      1326 days ago

      Essentially the chance of something wrong happening on there return is high than like 1/270 or something, Scott Manley said 1/270 in a video so that’s where I’m getting that number, so they’re keeping them up there until they can either bring that chance down or get them another way home. If shit were to hit the fan in their orbit and they had to come home right now they could hop in Starliner and return but the risk for non emergencies is higher than NASA wants to accept right now.

    • @Maggoty
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      626 days ago

      They aren’t stranded on a desert island, but they are stranded.