Michael Anderson: From the Ground to the Sky
Ladell Robbins, Special Contributor
Issue date: 2/10/03 Section: Black History Month
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The first is being true to your passion. As a child, Anderson developed an early fascination with science and flying. Recognizing that flying and science were his passions, he wanted to have a career where he could be true to both. Anderson stated in a pre-flight interview, "How can I combine my two strongest interests, science and aviation. At that time, we were going to the Moon and doing some really fantastic things with the space program and to me that was just the best combination of the two, it just seemed like the perfect mix and the perfect job. So, very early on, I just thought being an astronaut would be a fantastic thing to do." Thus, Anderson decided to major in Physics and prepare for a career in the Air Force by joining the ROTC. While in the Air Force, he realized that Astronauts were the engineers that were having the most fun flying, so he returned to school at Creighton to earn his Masters in Physics and also applied to NASA.
In addition to being focused and true to his passions, Anderson gives credit to the impacts others have had on his success. When asked who inspired him, Anderson stated "First of all, you can't forget your parents and all they've done to help you to get here. But it's really the people that you don't think about every day that influence you. Teachers, ministers that you worshiped under, and the people that you just came into contact with at the right time that may have said something that turned a light on in your head and led you down a certain path. Those people you really just cannot thank enough. And as you look back at your life, there are just a million different things that have happened, just in the right way, to allow you to make your dreams come true. And you know someone has all that under control."

