An astronaut who spent 178 days in space has revealed the âbig lieâ he discovered while he was up there.
Former NASA astronaut Ron Garan spent 178 days in space and has accumulated more than 71 million miles in 2,842 orbits of Earth.
Basically, heâs spent a lot of time up in space, and has since spoken about one moment in particular, in which he looked down at our planet â which is known as the âOverview Effectâ.
The âOverview Effectâ often takes place when astronauts go into space and look down and see Earth from that perspective for the first time.
The experience âshift[s] [âŚ] the way astronauts view and think about our planet and life itself,â NASA explains.
Garan explained that it was during this time that âcertain things become undeniably clearâ.
In an interview with Big Think, Garan explained: âWe keep trying to deal with issues such as global warming, deforestation, biodiversity loss as stand alone issues when in reality theyâre just symptoms of the underlying root problem and the problem is, that we donât see ourselves as planetary.
âWhen I looked out of the window of the International Space Station, I saw the paparazzi like flashes of lightening storms, I saw dancing curtains of auroras that seemed so close it was as if we could reach out and touch them and I saw the unbelievable thinness of our planetâs atmosphere.
Ron Garan spent 178 days in space and has accumulated more than 71 million miles in 2,842 orbits of Earth (Erika Goldring/Getty Images)
âIn that moment I was hit by the sobering realization.â
Garan was hit by the realization that our planet â and every living thing on it â is being kept alive by a âpaper thin layerâ.
âI saw an iridescent biosphere teaming with life, I didnât see an economy, but since our human-made systems treat everything including the very life-support systems of our planet as the [âŚ] subsidiary of the global economy, itâs obvious from the vanish point of space that weâre living a lie,â he continued.
Garan spoke about experiencing the âOverview Effectâ (Getty Stock Photo)
The astronaut reflects on the moment as being a âlight bulb that pops upâ when he realized âhow interconnected and interdependent we all areâ.
Since returning from his mission, Garan âcontinues to work towards a cleaner, safer and more peaceful planet,â urging others: âWe need to move from thinking, economy, society, planet to planet, society, economy. Thatâs when weâre going to continue our evolutionary process.
â[âŚ] Weâre not going to have peace on Earth until we recognize the basic fact of the interrelated structure of all reality.â