Dish Pit to NASA
After finishing my
satellite calibration internship at DigitalGlobe, I was at a loss of what to do
next. I interviewed for a full-time position at the company, but the particular
position was not quite the correct match for where I was at that point.
After that I continued
to apply for similar positions in GIS and Remote Sensing for another two
months. I wasn't having much luck and I was getting frustrated and depressed
over the situation, so I decided I needed to do something different for a
while. I applied to go back and work at one of my previous jobs at the YMCA of
Rockies in Estes Park, CO.
I moved up to Estes
Park, CO from Lafayette, CO after two frustrating months of applying for full
time jobs in my field. These were mainly all located along the front range of
Colorado in Denver, Boulder, and Fort Collins areas. I started at the YMCA of
the Rockies in the middle of October. I had a lot of fun touring the property
and I ran into a few friends from the first time I had worked there three years
before. It was fun to have a tour of the property and to be able to see what
had changed. This is no normal YMCA property. It is the largest YMCA property
in the world, with over three hundred buildings. It's its' own functional city.
They purify their own water for up to four thousand people in the summer! The
property is located right next to the town of Estes Park, CO and Rocky Mountain
National Park. This area is my favorite place in the world, and it's no secret
to the tourists and seasonal workers who take advantage of the area's
mountains. They go climbing, running, hiking, cycling, wildlife watching, etc...
It's a wonderful place to be.
The YMCA of the Rockies
is a hidden gem in the winter. That's especially true if you're looking for a
Thoreau-like experience. You're on a property with plenty of other employees
around, but it's at minimum functional capacity for the winter to keep
everything up and running. There are regular 80 mph gusts of wind that make the
buildings rattle and shake. It gets dark very early in the day and it tends to
get relatively cold in the winter. The jobs are simple, washing dishes, cooking
for the other employees, and trying to stay entertained. It's very easy to live
simply and just relax alone in your room. The first time I was there at the Y,
I spent my free time reading mountaineering books, training for a
half-marathon, and applying to six different universities around the state of
Colorado. I was also allotted a generous amount of time off from work to go and
visit the different universities. I also know someone who wrote a good portion
of his dissertation during a single winter in Estes Park, CO. In short, it's a
good place to get stuff done and reinvent/re-evaluate life. That was my plan
for my second winter there in Estes Park.
After touring the property,
I got everything set up in my room, and went to work at the little cafe in the
main building the following day. I had difficulty adjusting to the altitude and
the new situation after being unemployed for a few months. I started work at
the cafe the next day in the administration building. I wasn't feeling well
about halfway through the shift and I was having trouble breathing. I went to
the front desk to talk to the manager for a bit and I told him that I thought I
might be having a panic attack. I could barely speak or breath and everything
around me seemed very intense. I went and sat down in the back for a while and
talked to the front desk manager for fifteen minutes. At first, I didn't
remember him, but then I remembered that he had started working there full time
back in 2014 which was when I had worked here before. He said he used to have
trouble with anxiety as well and reassured me about it. After twenty minutes or
so I started feeling better and went back to close out my shift for the day. I
could not sleep that night and was feeling so awful that I started to write a
suicide note and then halfway through I turned it around into a more positive message. I called into work the next day and eventually had to go to the emergency
room in Estes Park a few days later. I could hardly walk after I got back from
the ER and for the next couple of days after that. I felt absolutely horrible,
but I ended up going back to work in less than a week and I switched over to
the main cafeteria so that I could be on a regular schedule.
After I started working
in the main cafeteria I felt better and started meeting new people. That's
always been one of my favorite things about Estes Park is that you meet people
from all walks of life. I met Bobby from Estes Park, who was a very interesting
character. He was both interested in science and spirituality. His wife was
some type of a psychic who wrote about also wrote about nature and informed
others about climate change when it was first coming out several decades
before. I had some interesting conversations with Bobby while preparing food
for the cafeteria. I also met Laura who wanted to be an aerospace engineer. I
told her that I had applied to the NASA DEVELOP program. She was as excited
about it as me! I shared my portfolio with her and talked about all of my
experiences and accomplishments in a short two years at the University of
Colorado Boulder. She was interested and impressed.
After that I started
working in the dish room with other characters such as a retired teacher named
Bob, a retired English teacher and traveler Robert, and several other well-educated
characters. I heard a story about a woman who had worked there a few months
before me. She had worked for SpaceX and had become stressed out with her work
and wanted to be in the mountains for a bit. She worked at the YMCA for a few
months and then ended up going back to work at SpaceX. I found out that there
was a retired Space Shuttle Commander who lived in Estes Park, as well as a
former NASA rocket engineer. And the staff in the dish room was one of the most
well-educated dish room staff around. This was true of several departments on
the property. Some people had started working there as seasonals and never
left. They ended up making 40-year careers out of it. I knew one of the front
desk managers had been a commercial airline pilot in the past. He was also in
need of change and started working on property several years before. At the
time I was thinking to myself maybe I'm not meant to work at NASA. Maybe just
sticking around Estes Park and living a simple life would be okay. After all it
is one of my favorite places in the world. There are some things which are
appealing to me about being able to stick to one place of work for your entire
career. That's almost impossible in the twenty-first century. The YMCA of the
Rockies in Estes Park is its own little "bubble" isolated from the
rest of society in the Rocky Mountains.
After a few weeks though
I became bored at work. I enjoyed meeting all the new people and hearing
Bobby's stories, but I was bored with the work and the situation. So, I signed
up to take some short online courses. I signed up for "Special
Relativity" from Stanford, "Python for Beginners" from the
University of Michigan, an astrophysics course from the University of Colorado
Boulder, "Computer Modeling of Natural Processes" from the University
of Geneva, and "Geodesign" from the Penn State University. Every
night after work I studied for a couple of hours or more until at least
midnight, and sometimes until 3 am. I also started hiking and running on
occasion and building up my physical strength again.
Then one day while
working in the dish room I got an email on my smart phone saying that I had got
an interview for the NASA DEVELOP program! I was really excited and told people
about it. I asked for the day off of work from Sara the departmental manager.
The night before the interview I drove down to Lafayette, CO to stay at the
place I was still renting. The day of the interview it was snowing and I left a
couple of hours before so that I could make sure to make it up to Fort Collins,
CO on time. I had worked on my portfolio beforehand and wore my suit and tie.
The interview was short and only lasted 25 minutes. Tim, the Center Lead, told
me I'd have to wait and he sent the interview sheet to the National Program
Office in Langley, Virginia. I drove back up to the YMCA that night and went
back to work the next day.
I waited a week..., then two weeks..., then three weeks... It was really
very tough to wait that long. "The Fear of the Unknown is the Greatest
Fear of All", comes to mind. I was starting to get down on myself again a
bit, and be less excited after having waited a month. Then a few days after that
I got an automated email from the National Program Office. Automated emails are
never a good thing when applying for a government job, or any job in general. I
didn't get the position... I was disappointed, but I figured I would just apply
again in a few months since the program takes applications three times a
year.
I continued working in
the dish room and studying every night. I also started to make plans like
pursuing an online data science certificate, and getting a commercial drone
license. Both would be useful side certifications in my field of study. I kept
talking to Bobby about NASA and to Laura as well. Laura ended up applying to
several engineering schools and decided to go to the Embry Riddle Aeronautical
University in Florida. She was really impressed by my attitude and desire to
work for NASA. I hope I showed her that anything is possible at any age.
It was nearing the end
of my seasonal contract at the YMCA of the Rockies and I decided to apply for
an extension of three months. I signed the new agreement and kept up the same
work. I ran into my professor who had come up for a weekend with some of the
University of Colorado Boulder staff. She is the Director of Earth Lab which is
a big data analytics hub for climate adaptation and natural hazards on the East
Campus of the University of Colorado Boulder. She said hello and I told her
that I had applied for the NASA DEVELOP position, as well as fifty other jobs
and positions. She told me to keep on trying and continue networking.
I was working in the dish
room and it was a busy day because there had been a wedding that day. We were
all eating shrimp, wedding cake, and leftover steaks after the wedding. I was
tired and went back to my room to sleep, and decided not to study that night. I
checked my email on my phone and scrolled through the automated job alerts and
saw an email from the NASA DEVELOP program. I was a little confused about why
I'd be getting an email after I had been rejected. I opened it up and it
basically stated that someone had dropped out for some reason and that I had
received an offer in that person's place! I was so excited and went down the
hall to my friend Robert's room from the dish room. He's the retired English
teacher and traveler. I showed him the email and he read it. The email said I
had to start on Monday and it was now Thursday at midnight. It was all the way
down in Fort Collins and I needed a place to live. I would have to break my
contract at the YMCA, move back down to the apartment in Lafayette, CO and
figure out how to get to work in Fort Collins fifty miles away. My nerves were
definitely acting up that night, but it really didn't matter because I was
super excited!
The next day I went to
work and I told Sara and Chris, the manager's, about it. They were sorry to see
me leave, but they were also very excited for me. It turned out that the food
service staff appreciation dinner was in a couple of days. I stayed on property
and got to go to that. People were singing lines from David Bowie's song "Space
Oddity" at the dinner. I was in the middle of filling out an extensive
amount of electronic hiring paperwork and couldn’t stay for the entire the
time.
The next day in the dish
room, Bob, Val, and a few other employees had written some goodbyes on the dry
erase board for me. It's not that often that someone gets to go and work for
NASA out of the so-called "Dish Pit" at the YMCA of the Rockies, but
it happened that day!
I had learned to make
the best out of a fairly bad situation of being severely depressed after having
put in fifty applications and working in a seemingly meaningless job of washing
dishes. It's all about turning things around and pursuing those dreams and
meaningful work in life.
Charles N. Whittemore
20th June, 2018
Part II: "NASA and
Beyond" coming soon...
.....