Before my grandfather died, accidentally struck by a 16-year-old driver in broad daylight as he walked to his Wednesday-afternoon bowling league, he built a 6-foot-long telescope to study the heavens. It took a year just to grind the lens. When completed, he mounted the telescope on the wheel drum of a Model A Ford so it could rotate. I was 12 when he was killed so we didn’t have a lot of time together. I wish I could have known better the man who built a telescope longer than I was tall, to see out into space and backwards in time.
I carry on his legacy as an Astro-fan—a participant in an ongoing astronomy class that originated at the local community college. We are retired NASA scientists, physicists, biologists, and one embarrassingly exuberant math-challenged writer. We seem to have nothing in common except a fascination with the grandeur of space, the beauty of the cosmos, and an unending curiosity about where it all came from and how it will end.
Every week I learn something new about the origins of the universe, rogue planets, dark energy and quasars. Fascinating facts I presumptuously assume everyone will want to know. A charismatic writing client once asked, “What lights you up?” And I thought, “Well now, that’s a cool phrase,” and I knew the answer immediately—learning is the light– and like our ancestors before us we have learned to carry the fire when we travel, and, like Herb and Denise, who teach this course, to share the flame.
My astronomy class has seen the black hole at the center of the Milky Way and studied the evidence that smaller galaxies have merged with ours at least 7 times.
Ten billion years ago, Gaia Enceladus crashed through the Milky Way and more recently we collided with Sagittarius Dwarf galaxy, although to say we collided is a misnomer. In the vast reaches of space, galaxies pass through each other routinely with virtually no direct impacts —just wild disruptions of orbits and redistribution of planets. It’s a cosmic dance, and our next partner, the much larger spiral galaxy Andromeda, will lead.
Astronomers estimate there are 20 sextillion planets in the visible universe. I memorized that fact last week, so I could imagine the immensity and so I could tell you.
So much wonder in the world. I like to stun myself with remarkable discoveries so I can experience one of the few characteristics that is unique to humans.
Self-awareness, language, altruism?
What sets us apart is our ability to feel awe.
We grow silent in the giant redwood forest—catch our breath at a mountain vista. There is a documented universal outcry at the moment of totality in a solar eclipse and a feeling of communal euphoria afterwards.
Wait! Did you know that our ability to witness a total solar eclipse is time-limited?
Cup the match. Pass the flame.
You witness the totality of the moon blocking out all but the ring of the sun’s corona because of a mathematically uncanny synchronicity. The sun’s diameter is 400 times greater than that of the moon, while the moon orbits precisely 400 times closer to the earth than the sun.
But the moon is moving away from the earth at a rate of 1.48 inches a year. In some distant future she will slip from earth’s embrace and set sail into infinity. Some discoveries are about letting go.
The James Webb telescope will begin sending back to earth its first pictures this week. We will be able to see almost to the beginning of time—back 13 billion years to what astronomers call the “wall of last scattering”—the impenetrable plasma that existed until some 380,000 years after the Big Bang when photons were released to begin their journey from then to now. From there to you.
Prepare to be astounded.
Prepare to feel your intense insignificance and your connection to what is limitless at the same time. Prepare to be awed.
A friend once said to me at a dinner party, “Oh I get it. You study this stuff because you think you are special— that you are somehow connected to something infinite.” It was simply an observation and not a wrong one. Why did it feel like a challenge? There is nothing to argue. Ever. Only new things to learn.
Light me up.
I took a sip of my wine and admitted, “True. And I think that love powers the universe in ways we don’t understand. And that love is refracted in the human spirit.”
So, let’s look at the numbers again because reverence is evoked by vastness. There are 7.7 billion of us on this planet—the only planet in the solar system not named for a god. That’s 7.7 billion of us looking up at 400 billion stars in a Milky-Way sky.
It’s not that I think I am special.
It’s that I think you are. As is the mysterious, uncanny, ever-changing universe that holds us in its arms.
And I’m in awe.
Laura J. Oliver is an award-winning developmental book editor and writing coach, who has taught writing at the University of Maryland and St. John’s College. She is the author of The Story Within (Penguin Random House). Co-creator of The Writing Intensive at St. John’s College, she is the recipient of a Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award in Fiction, an Anne Arundel County Arts Council Literary Arts Award winner, a two-time Glimmer Train Short Fiction finalist, and her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Her website can be found here.
Lin says
Great article; I just finished listening to the TED hour on public radio with this same topic. Fascinating stuff! Can anyone take this course at Chesapeake College?
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks, Lin! This is a special interest class or on-going group that meets on zoom and yes, you can certainly join us! It originated at Anne Arundel Community College but anyone can join by registering with the Peer Learning Partnership at AACC. All of this can be done online, I believe. I think the annual fee is about $35-$60–something in there. Come. You’ll know who I am, because I’m the one who always prefaces my comments with…”Now this is a dumb question…!”
John Fischer says
Splendid.
Laura J Oliver says
Thank you, John.
Jo Merrill says
I love awe. Thanks for reminding me.
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks for writing Jo. There are so many sources of awe–I’ve found that it’s a great way to start the day.
LynnDee says
GREAT article! Very thought-provoking and beautiful 💜
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks for commenting, LynnDee! When I was little I was frequently told “You think too much!” It’s why I have to keep my office organized now…there’s so much going on inside the outside can’t afford clutter:) Writing this column is like bringing someone else into that interior room. Writing and reading is how we all know we are not crazy and we’re not alone.
Gretchen says
Written with a depth of soul and limitless beauty for life. I am grateful for this article on this evening to remind me to never lose touch with my sense of awe. That sense can get one through so much in life. Thank you.
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks for writing, Gretchen. I totally agree–awe and gratitude can get you through. I think we can’t have one without the other, so you can start on either end of that equation.
Sarah Heuck Sinclair says
“Love is refracted in the human spirit.” Beautiful. I love classrooms and remember that yours lit me up.
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks, Sarah. But the work of writers like you, makes teaching a conversation, a give and take, a back and forth, that probably fuels the rotation of the planet–mine anyway!
Michael Pullen says
Thank you for a wonderful journey through time, space and the cosmos, and the universe of thoughts they evoke by devoting our attention.
Amanda A. Gibson says
Laura, I love this essay! A few years ago when we took the kids to the Udvar-Hazy Center in Virginia, we watched the presentation on the galaxy in their immersive exhibit. By the time it concluded, I was in tears from the sheer magnitude of awe I felt. (Our kids were shriveling with embarrassment over my tears of course.) Not only were the facts astounding but the photos of galaxies were stunning! I’ll be looking out for the results from the James Webb telescope. I appreciate your amazing ability to remind us to think and feel. Thank you!
Laura J Oliver says
Thanks for sharing your experience, Amanda. I totally relate! What a connection we all have–all we have to do is look up!
JAMES PAUL FULCHER says
awe-inspiring
Laura J Oliver says
Thank you, James.