I first got interested in the idea of going
to Mars when I was 3-years-old. She wants to be the first, or one of the first,
to go to Mars. She's a regular kid with a dream that she's
willing to pursue. Space flight is very risky business. You have to take it serious or you will die. If the option was to go to Mars and never
come back, I would still want to go and be a part of the mission. When Alyssa was younger, I remember Alyssa
coming to me and asking me, had human beings ever been to Mars? And I explained to her that,
you know, we'd been to the moon, but not Mars. But it would be her generation to become the
Mars generation and go to Mars. This would be something really cool. I mean, going to space and then land on other
planets. Little did I know that I would be raising
a child that I am supporting to leave this planet. I do everything that every other normal kid
does except on the side, I'm training to become an astronaut and go to Mars. Kids are always told you can do whatever you
want to do. You can be whatever you want to be. Alyssa has heard that, but she has accepted
that, "I'm going to have to work really, really hard to get to where I want to be." She's the youngest to ever graduate from Advance
Space Academy, was the first person to complete all NASA Space Camps in the world, got her Rocket License before
getting her driver's permit. Currently I have my basic scuba diving certification
and I'm working on my advanced. She's doing the international baccalaureate. So she's doing college level classes in 10th grade. Multi-lingual education - so she's taking her classes in four languages:
English, French, Spanish, Chinese. She's got the right mental attitude. She's doing everything she can physically
here on earth to prepare herself for that journey to Mars. I don't think there's anything specifically
that makes it easier for me or makes it something that others can't do. It's just something that I've kind of really
focused myself on what I want to accomplish. By the mid 2030's, I believe we can send humans
to orbit Mars and return them safely to earth. Going to Mars is absolutely essential for
continuing of the human species as a whole. It is very important that we keep exploring
because it has all ready been said that a single planet species will become extinct. Just going to Mars is that first baby step
in showing people how we can move on from planet Earth, which is kind of like our little cradle
now. We're destroying our own planet. If we don't continue to explore, we could
end up not having a planet to live on. So even though there are a lot of risks in
going to Mars, I believe that the rewards are so much greater. Yeah, space is a dangerous place and, yeah,
there's so much that I'm giving up for it, but at the end of the day, there's so much
good that can come from this mission. The big plans for Mars is eventually terraforming
it, change Mars to kind of become kind of like another Earth, to have a second home
for humans to live on. Um, that's checkmate. Boo-ya! There are companies that want to send one-way
and colonize Mars and then are people like NASA and ESA that are working together that
want to have a return trip. So I still have to look at it, as a father,
that I'll have my child for 20 more years and then may not ever see her again... ...and that's hard. But for what she's wanting to do, I have to
support her. I have to let her go. It's bigger than the two of us. We know that the next 20 years together is
going to be important because we know for sure that those are 20 years that we can spend
together. Obviously it's not the best thing to be telling
your daughter to go and...and go on the mission to Mars and leave the planet, but I still
know that he supports me anyway. Every time Alyssa talks about going to space
and how she can't get married and how she can't have kids, it makes me sad because I'm
saying, "Oh, she's going to leave me one day," but then I remember we might as well live
now and when the future comes we'll be able to accept it because we didn't waste time. There are a multitude of challenges to become
an astronaut. You have to have the right mental attitude,
you have the right health, you have to have the right skills. Last year we put out a call for the next cadre
of astronauts. We had thousands apply and we're accepting
less than ten. The biggest challenge for Alyssa is just trying
to get everything done that she wants to have for her unique resume. Specifically for the Mars mission, I would
say that they're even more precise about who they want for that mission. So thinking about all of that motivates me
to put in the hard work now that I know to build kind of a good resume that helps me
standout from others when I do apply. The opportunity to be one of the youngest
people that's ever ventured into space, to be a trailblazer, a pioneer, I think this
is everything she's always wanted to do. She just recently was accepted to Possum Academy. She's the youngest person to ever be accepted
to that program. Basically, everyone who's ever gone through
this program either has a college degree, either has a masters, or has a PhD, or is working
on any of those. So they're all a lot older than I am. What Possum Academy is, they are preparing
people for space flight. I will actually be certified to go to space. I think it's really significant that Alyssa
is a girl who has this huge dream to make it to Mars. She is someone that girls can look up to and
say, "Hey, look at what she did. Look at what this girl did who was the same
as me once." So it is important to inspire kids and also
adults. You can't let anyone take your dreams away from you. No matter how crazy it might sound, follow
that through and never give up on your dream. The 2033 mission that they've always talked
to us about, that's when the sun is going to have the least amount of radiation going. That's when Mars is going to be the closest
that it's been in thousands of years. That's when they'll have the technology perfected. Yes, if she was a few years older or a few
years younger, it may not be working out, but the way doors have opened for her,
it is definitely destiny working it's hand that this kid is meant to go to Mars. ...And lift off.... Mars will be the greatest adventure ever.
Title seems gimmicky, but the video is ok.
Not shown: rich parents to send you to every space camp there is.
This is why I work freelance, I want to have enough to have my kid (if I ever have one) to enjoy these types of privileges.