Cover image of show Distant Perspective Podcast

Distant Perspective Podcast

Podcast by Gary Westphalen

English

Personal stories & conversations

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About Distant Perspective Podcast

Five decades as an objective journalist covering Washington, DC, along with all other aspects of modern life, has left me with insights you need to navigate the world today. Topics will include a wide range of subjects all viewed from my Distant Perspective. distantperspective.substack.com

All episodes

17 episodes

episode Walk The Walk artwork

Walk The Walk

The tightrope stretched across Niagara Falls on June 30, 1859 drew a huge crowd of onlookers. Who would be crazy enough to try to walk a tightrope across one of the world’s greatest waterfalls? To the amazement of the gathering throng, the answer was soon forthcoming. Jean-François Gravelet, who went by the stage name The Great Blondin, soon appeared on the small platform at the end of the rope. “Who believes I can cross over Niagara Falls on this tightrope?” He called out. The crowd cheered in approval. “Who believes I can cross over Niagara Falls on this tightrope while blindfolded?” Excitement grew and they rooted him on. “Who believes I can cross Niagara Falls on this tightrope while blindfolded and pushing a wheelbarrow?” The crowd lost its mind in a wild roar of encouragement. “Who among you will ride in the wheelbarrow as I push it across this rope over Niagara Falls while blindfolded?” he shouted. No one uttered a whisper. It seems they were all too eager to watch him walk the walk, but when it came to putting themselves on the line, well, yeah…No. It is human nature to talk a great game, but when it comes to taking action, we often falter. I have, of course, been guilty of this myself. Specifically, I have been acutely conscious of the damage humans are doing to the precious environment of our planet. At NASA, I studied the evidence gathered by the many satellites that measure this self-destructive path we have been on. I have read the scientific dissertations and observed the damage first-hand. As a journalist, I stood on that public platform and urged those who would listen to walk the walk, lest we find ourselves headed for self-extinction. I was talking the talk, but I wasn’t walking the walk. Over the years, I poured untold gallons of fossil fuels through my trucks, cars and motorcycles. I powered my homes with energy produced by coal, gas, and nuclear sources. Always conscious of the damage I was doing, I tried to minimize my carbon footprint. But, in The United States, it is nearly impossible. This is among the many reasons I chose to move to Costa Rica. This tiny nation takes environmental damage seriously, and walks the walk. Virtually all of our fruits, vegetables, meats and fish are from local sources, eliminating the need for long distance shipping. Geothermal, solar, wind, and hydro sources provide 99% of our electricity. Moving here meant I had one foot out on that high wire, but I had not fully committed to traversing the waterfall. I was still pouring diesel fuel into my SUV. It had to stop. The opportunity to reduce my carbon footprint to virtually zero came a few months ago, with the purchase of a fully electric vehicle. Now my car is powered with the same renewable energy as my home. As an added bonus, because Costa Rica has mandated that by 2035 every new car sold in the country must use clean energy, the incentives to walk the walk are tremendous. Not only is the electricity I feed my new car from green sources, but it is also free. And those free charging stations, by law, are no more than 80 kilometers apart on every highway in the country, meaning I never have to worry where my next green electrons are coming from. It is a proactive stance that every country in the world should adopt. Caring about the world we will leave to future generations matters, and there is no downside. Will my resignation from the carbon footprint society make a difference? Not really, and I know that. I am but a drop in the sea of humanity. But, as more of us drops become proactively engaged in reducing carbon emissions, the collective effort can change the world. I am finally walking the walk I have long espoused, and it feels great. To borrow the words of the Great Blondin, who among you will walk with me?” This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit distantperspective.substack.com [https://distantperspective.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

23 Jun 2025 - 5 min
episode Tenacity Rules artwork

Tenacity Rules

Winter in North America always sends huge flocks of birds south to our Central American paradise. While the peskiest of these snowbirds fly in on the aluminum wings of jetliners, uncountable hoards of real birds do it by flapping their real wings. It’s an amazing feat of nature that, despite its annual re-occurrence, always enthralls me. How these spin-offs from the dinosaur era, that weigh a mere hundred-or-so grams, can generate enough energy to fly thousands of miles is an accomplishment man can only dream of. If you live in that northern, wildly oscillating climate, you may not give much thought to exactly where the birds go when they “fly South for the winter”. Although there are numerous destinations, the rain forests and jungles of Costa Rica are popular with many of these feathered travelers. Our own compound hosts scores of these seasonal vagabonds. They fill our palm trees with intricately engineered nests, hatch their eggs, and then go to war with each other. Yes, war. There are Starlings and black birds of several varieties that mix with the native Golden-Bellied Flycatchers and chatty parrots as they compete with each other for the prime nesting spots in our palms. A palm, you see, can really only support a single nest at the very crown of the tree. Build your nest on a lower frond and you’re likely to see it collapse to the ground before those babies are ready to take wing. As a result, competition for the prime penthouses is fierce, and never ending. I have seen birds clash with each other mid-air, and literally fall to the ground in an entangled mesh of mad birds. I’ve even broken up a few of these battles as they happened right at my feet while drinking my morning coffee. What I never gave much thought to is where these birds came from and how they ended up here. Yes, they flew south from someplace cold, and landed someplace warm. Specifically, here. But is there more to it than that? Do they, like the human snowbirds, begin and end their voyage in an exact location? I have evidence that suggests the answer is an emphatic, “Yes!” Four North-American winters ago, a Starling with a unique challenge appeared around the edge of our swimming pool. I don’t know if it’s a he or a she, but I’m going to simplify the story by naming the bird “Wingnut”. I immediately felt sorry for Wingnut because, while the other birds strolled around the cement watering hole, Wingnut had to limp. It’s left leg, from the backward-bending ankle on down, was missing. The most likely explanation is that the handicap was the result of a viscous battle to protect it’s babies. But Wingnut, rather than curling up and dying, was undeterred. It popped around on one leg almost as deftly as the two-footed birds, only occasionally putting its stump to the ground to maintain balance. When it flew up to the trees, Wingnut managed to perch on the palm fronds in a one-footed stance that practically defied gravity. Spring came to the northern hemisphere and Wingnut, apparently, went with it. Imagine my surprise when, the next January, I saw a bird with a missing left leg hopping around the pool. Could it possibly be the very same bird that had flown away eight months ago? After watching its behavior for a few days, I had to conclude that, yes, Wingnut had returned to the very same spot it had wintered the year before. Wingnut had a partner and successfully raised a nest full of babies. During that time I watched Wingnut valiantly hop on one leg as it gathered shredded palm fronds to build the nest, find food for the brood, and defend its homestead. Not one time did that missing appendage seem to deter Wingnut’s expeditions. Ditto for last year. There was Wingnut again, going about life as though birds were meant to pop around on a single leg. This year, for the fourth time, Wingnut is spending the winter months with us. I would love to know where this bird spends it’s summer months, but I know for certain that the same bird spends every late December through April at the very same address. Wingnut’s tenacity is truly inspiring. The lesson I take from this tiny observation of nature is that we all have it in us to succeed. You have it within you. No matter the challenge. No matter the handicaps you endure. No matter the difficulty of your personal journey. There is a way to succeed. And if you latch onto life with every fiber of your being, you will find that way. A little birdy told me so. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit distantperspective.substack.com [https://distantperspective.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

4 Apr 2025 - 5 min
episode NASA artwork

NASA

I believe that I can quite safely say no other federal agency comes close to the brainpower of the staff at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Throw in an enormous dose of bravado combined with positive attitude toward the common mission to explore space (and what it means for our planet), and you have an invigorating workplace. I was fortunate enough to serve a four-year-plus stint as NASA-TV Senior Special Projects Producer, starting in 2008. I was involved in the photography and public distribution of the scores of camera feeds involved in shuttle missions. I, with the help of a brilliant editor and an equally talented graphic artist, also created videos and programs that made NASA-TV actually worth watching, even for the non-space geek. My two largest projects were to create a documentary for the 40th Anniversary of the Apollo moon missions, [https://garywestphalen.com/videos/] and the other was a celebration of the 50 years of NASA [https://plus.nasa.gov/video/armstrong-50th-anniversary-documentary/] that included stories of all the aviation, as well as rocketry and space missions that have enriched humanity. What would you do? [https://garywestphalen.com/] See the full trailer and get your copy of the book. Just click here. [https://garywestphalen.com/] [Launch Time-Shift software_Set the Earth date to 16 February, 1962] I was not yet six years old when I watched John Glenn climb aboard a giant, (hopefully) controlled bottle rocket the size of a water tower. They lit the fuse. (Seriously! With a machine called a NASA Standard Detonator (NSD). It is not unlike the spark wheel on a regular lighter.) It took Mr. Glenn less than five hours to circle the globe three times and safely return to earth in a spectacular moment caught on live television. I was hooked. I cut out every newspaper story about the moon race and pasted then into scrapbooks. I wrote my own story about the pictures I kept. I cried when the Apollo I mission crew of Gus Grissom, Ed White II, and Roger Chaffee died in that horrible launch pad fire. I cried again, this time tears of joy, as did Walter Cronkite on national television [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMF58ZP681A], when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the moon. It wasn’t just the manned missions that captured my imagination. A phenomenal array of robotic spacecraft have been flung into space from this planet and each one (Yes, even the failures) has contributed to our knowledge base in ways that defy belief. [Launch Time-Shift software_Set the Earth date to {Nominal}, January 2025] Yes, NASA pays for itself in hardware innovations created for these missions. You know all about the thousands of products that originated from NASA technology. But the part I like best is rarely spoken about, even within NASA. The wealth of knowledge contained in the brains of this team is incalculable. And to no one’s surprise, some of the oldest hands still on deck have some of the most valuable knowledge that modern computers don’t understand. I highly recommend you read a Pocket Story, written by Richard Hollingham [https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-ancient-technology-keeping-space-missions-alive?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us].Titled “The Ancient Technology Keeping Space Missions Alive,” [https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-ancient-technology-keeping-space-missions-alive?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us] it is an amazing tale of how some of the oldest spacecraft still serving their missions decades after their expiration dates are being kept in a modern computer loop. Imagine having a microscopic onboard RAM Memory of 2 MB aboard a spacecraft that is millions of miles away. Oh, and it’s operating on Windows 98 PC software. And it’s running out of fuel. But you don’t really know that because there is no “fuel gauge”. And the conversation involves a lot of waiting because of the time it takes for the signals to get from here to that robot, and back. This is a skillset that the younger generations never needed to learn. Call it Computer Code History 101. But because the people of NASA are willing to postpone their retirements in deference to their mission’s conclusion, the knowledge still catalogued in these ripening minds is still on the job. Now, these pioneers of computerized space travel are teaching new engineers how to fly these dinosaurs of space travel using computer software that dates back to the 1960’s. Someday, an AI computer will learn how to mix the science, art, and voodoo it takes to fly these craft. But for now, the knowledge pass-down to the incoming generations is a gift that needs to be respected. In my time at NASA, I got to rub elbows with Nobel Prize in Physics laureate John C Mather, Neil Armstrong, John Glenn, Gene Cernan (the last man to step on the moon), and countless more heroes and geniuses. My role came to a natural end for me when the Shuttle missions were cancelled. An enormous part of my work had just been moved to the attic. But in the days before that transition, walking through the doors of NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. every day (unless we were on mission somewhere) is a highlight my life, of which I am enormously proud. Please join the conversation by sharing this post, taking advantage of the free subscription, and leaving a comment. Also, please pick up a copy of one or more of my books, all available on amazon. You’ll find descriptions and links, as well as many of my documentary videos, on my website at garywestphalen.com [https://garywestphalen.com/]. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit distantperspective.substack.com [https://distantperspective.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19 Jan 2025 - 6 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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