11/04/2026
Exactly 56 years ago today — April 11, 1970 — Apollo 13 lifted off. The timing of this post couldn't be more poignant.
What strikes me most about Apollo 13 is not the explosion, but what happened after it. The mission became a masterclass in something no training manual can fully capture: the refusal to accept defeat as the final answer. Jim Lovell, Fred Haise, and Jack Swigert — orbiting the Moon in a crippled spacecraft, rationing power, breathing recycled air, guided home by a team on the ground armed with nothing but slide rules, ingenuity, and sheer will.
The five lessons woven into the reflection — redundancy, creativity under constraint, clear communication, humility before circumstance, and practised calm — aren't relics of the Space Age. They live in every modern spacecraft design standard, every hospital emergency protocol, every crisis management framework. Apollo 13 didn't just survive; it became a curriculum.
And perhaps that is the most human thing of all: we take our hardest moments and turn them into the foundation for everything that comes next.
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