If you are old, about half way done, like me, you might remember the Challenger shuttle explosion. It was broadcast live on plain old television service and they wheeled in a TV for us to watch in my kindergarten classroom, presumably due to the “teacher in space program.”

Needless to say, the launch didn’t go as planned and our teacher abruptly shut off the TV. At 5 years old, I didn’t know what I was looking at…I had seen videos of other shuttle launches and knew the vehicle sort of intentionally fell apart when certain tanks were out of fuel so it wasn’t clear to me that at the time that what happened to challenger wasn’t planned.

Anyhow, a lot of words were spoken to our class but nothing I can remember was said other than our parents would talk to us when we got home. I vaguely recall a serious talk with my parents about the shuttle exploding and me being asked if I understood what they were saying. I totally understood what they said. But what they didn’t say I had no fucking clue about.

Call me stupid, I didn’t realize there were people aboard the rocket. I mean, strapping your ass to a bomb doesn’t sound plausible, right? It didn’t really click with me that the failure of the shuttle to get to space meant that people died. A specific number of people. With names. Identities. Families. But I knew the launch ended in an explosion and the rocket didn’t make it to space. Mission failure. Try again next time.

Sometimes we can be too quick to assume what another person understands.

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Big affirmative on that last statement!!

I can totally understand you not understanding.

But how in the fuck are you about halfway done if you're that young? I'm older than you and I'm just getting started!!

I think I was like 7 or 8 or something when that happened. I cried all day long for days.

Kids are kids, they and get everything but are more informative than ever.

People in the other hand will hear what they want to hear or wait for opportunity for their chance to speak.

We’re not really following or willing to understand in long form. Give it to me in bursts of 160 characters or a headline

uh oh. I'm in trouble. If you are halfway done, I was in high school when it happened.

I’m 3/4 cooked. Was a junior in college.

Super sad day when the announcement came on the news.

I was in music that day. A kid who always watched the launches came in from one of the rehearsal rooms and simply said, "the shuttle just blew up."

The rest of us made him say it two more times before we could process it. We had never considered such a thing was possible. We weren't alive yet when the Apollo 1 fire took place.

9/11 was the same experience for those of us in grade school when it happened

And 9/11 was definitely a media + intelligence hoax

So it’s always made me open to the conspiracy theories about the challenger being one too

Mass trauma of the population to control them

Nobody died that day, all of the astronots are still alive, some even keep working for gov/Nasa even with their real names