It may be
the mother lode of all bad timing: Atlantis shuttle astronaut Randy Bresnik is stuck
at the International Space Station, hundreds of miles from his pregnant wife
Rebecca, who is expected to give birth to a baby girl as early as today.
Bresnik and
his crewmates will spend their Friday hauling cargo between Atlantis and the space
station, but NASA has set aside some time for the 42-year-old astronaut to call
his wife for updates of his second child's arrival, mission managers said.
"I think
like most parents, I would prefer to be there for the birth," Bresnik said
during a NASA interview with his wife. "But you know, we don't pick this timing
and so it's to be a bit disappointing not to see her in person right when she
enters the world."
Bresnik, a
Marine Corps lieutenant colonel from Santa Monica, Calif., is making his first
spaceflight on
Atlantis' trip to the International Space Station. Bresnik's wife works at
NASA's Johnson Space Center and the couple has one adopted son Wyatt, who is 3 1/2 years
old.
Bresnik is
poised to make his first spacewalk on Saturday, so he and Rebecca worked hard
to try and arrange their first daughter's birth around his schedule. Atlantis
is delivering tons of spare parts to the space station and due to return home
the day after Thanksgiving.
"I'm just
working with my doctors and working with Randy's schedule to make sure that, if
possible, that we can do it on the day where he's not out doing [a spacewalk]
and maybe have a little more communication that day," Rebecca said before her
husband launched into space on Monday.
A
blessing, even in space
The birth
of Bresnik's daughter is a welcome miracle for him and his wife, especially
since they thought Rebecca could not have children, ABC News has reported. But
just months after adopting Wyatt last year, they learned she was pregnant.
"We're
fortunate enough to witness the miracle of adoption as well as the miracle of
child birth all in one year," Bresnik said. "We're just amazingly blessed."
Bresnik's
crewmates said early Friday that the
expectant father – and indeed all 12 people living on the linked shuttle and
space station – are excited for the baby's arrival. Shuttle pilot Barry "Butch"
Wilmore said that Bresnik has managed to remain calm ahead of the baby's birth.
"There's
been minimal bouncing, maybe a tad bit," Wilmore told CBS News via a video
link. "He's excited about that, so are we. It's a great thing to share in this
environment."
Bresnik,
like all astronauts, is a professional and committed to the mission during his
baby's arrival, Wilmore said.
Eleven of
the astronauts aboard the
shuttle and station have children, 10 of them are fathers. Astronaut Nicole
Stott, mother of one son, is returning home next week after more than two
months at the station. Wilmore said they do plan to celebrate.
"Probably
no cigars, but maybe some chewing gum," Wilmore said. Smoking and flames are
not allowed on the space station.
While
Bresnik is in space, family members are with Rebecca to help her with the
upcoming birth.
"We very
much appreciate what everyone has offered to do with helping us through this,"
she said.
Dads in Space
Bresnik is
only the second American astronaut to be in space when his wife is expected to give birth.
Astronaut
Mike Fincke's second child – a baby girl named Tarali Paulina – was born while
he was flying aboard the International Space Station in 2004. Fincke coached
his wife through the delivery from space using a telephone connection.
Shuttle
mission flight director Mike Sarafin said this week that Bresnik's daughter was
due to be born as early as today, and NASA has taken steps to keep the
expectant dad in the loop. A live communications link to the delivery room is
possible, but depends on timing.
"We do have
some time set aside for him to talk to his wife, as appropriate. We'll do what
we need to make that happen," Sarafin said, adding that the calls would be
private conferences. "We'll just keep our fingers crossed that everything goes
well for them."
Bresnik
said he does expect to be able to see videos and photos of the new baby soon
after she is born. But he'll settle for good news, plain and simple.
"You know,
anything we have is far more than most military families get when somebody's
deployed and they're not there for the birth," Bresnik said. "So if I can get a
simple radio call that she's entered the world safely and Rebecca's doing great
– everything above me on that is gravy."
SPACE.com
is providing complete coverage of Atlantis' STS-129 mission to the
International Space Station with Staff Writer Clara Moskowitz and Managing
Editor Tariq Malik based in New York. Click here for shuttle mission
updates and a link to NASA TV.