![Buzz Aldrin on the Moon](https://www.astronomy.com/uploads/2025/01/Buzz-Aldrin-Apollo-11.jpg)
In probably the most well-known images in historical past, Buzz Aldrin – Lunar Module Pilot of Apollo 11 – stands on the Moon. Credit score: NASA
Unusual as it could sound, the place the astronauts sat (or “sat” – the crew truly stood) within the Apollo Lunar Module could have profoundly impacted the best way the expertise of strolling on the Moon affected them.
Mission commanders have been in what’s referred to in aviation because the “left seat” place and lunar module pilots have been within the “proper seat,” the place the co-pilot historically sits. The commanders returned from the missions seemingly largely unchanged. All however one of many lunar module pilots, in distinction, underwent deep and lasting private transformations (a few of which have been profoundly disagreeable) after their Moon missions.
Apollo 11
Apollo 11 noticed Commander Neil Armstrong within the left seat, and Lunar Module Pilot Buzz Aldrin in the suitable seat. After piloting the lunar module Eagle all the way down to the first-ever Moon touchdown, Armstrong emerged to develop into the primary human to ever set foot upon the Moon. A short time later, Aldrin joined him on the floor within the Sea of Tranquility. Upon returning to Earth, Armstrong, Aldrin, and Command Module Pilot Michael Collins took half in ticker tape parades, addressed a joint session of the U.S. Congress, and accomplished (some would possibly say endured) a round-the-world tour of twenty-two international locations in 38 days.
Armstrong, at all times a quiet and reticent particular person, quickly retired from flight standing and took an administrative submit with NASA in Washington, D.C. After a 12 months, he left to develop into a professor of engineering earlier than ultimately transferring on to pursue enterprise and talking alternatives. Based on historian James Hansen’s e-book First Man, Armstrong at all times stored a low profile, hardly ever gave interviews or autographs, and (aside from serving on a number of high-profile NASA commissions) largely stayed out of the limelight till his loss of life in 2012 on the age of 82.
Aldrin, nonetheless, had fairly a special post-flight expertise. As detailed in historian Andrew Chaikin’s e-book, A Man on the Moon, and astronaut John Younger’s autobiography Ceaselessly Younger, Aldrin lobbied arduous inside NASA to be the primary individual to stroll on the Moon however had been bluntly overruled by NASA. Aldrin coped along with his disappointment, the stress of the world tour, and his subsequent notoriety by way of ingesting and descended into alcoholism, despair, infidelity, and divorce from his first spouse, Joan. Aldrin wrote about these struggles in two autobiographical books, Return to Earth and Magnificent Desolation, stating, “At first the alcohol soothed the despair, making it at the very least considerably bearable. However the state of affairs progressed into depressive-alcoholic binges wherein I’d withdraw like a hermit into my condo.” Different marriages and divorces adopted. Aldrin made a sluggish climb again to sobriety and psychological well being. Aldrin is alive and continues to make public appearances at present, aged 94.
![Alan Bean](https://www.astronomy.com/uploads/2025/01/Alan-Bean-2-938x1200.png)
Apollo 12
Apollo 12, commanded by Pete Conrad with Alan Bean as lunar module pilot, touched down within the Ocean of Storms in November of 1969. Conrad, a infamous prankster, retained his light-hearted character and infrequently insisted that going to the Moon didn’t change him. In actual fact, Conrad advised Chaikin that when he was chosen as an astronaut in 1962 that he promised his spouse Jane that it might not change him, and he was true to his phrase. Conrad went on to command the primary crewed Skylab mission. Bean, alternatively, advised Chaikin that he determined earlier than he even returned to Earth to transform his life and pursue his passions, most notably portray. After commanding the second crewed Skylab mission and dealing in NASA administration, Bean left to develop into a full-time artist. Bean advised Chaikin that when he was requested by his puzzled colleagues if he may make a residing by portray, his response was, “If I can go to the moon, I can study to be a great artist.”
![Edgar Mitchell](https://www.astronomy.com/uploads/2025/01/Edgar-Mitchell.png)
Apollo 14
After Apollo 13’s near-disaster and aborted Moon touchdown, Apollo 14 (1971) noticed America’s first astronaut, Alan Shepard, because the commander with Ed Mitchell as lunar module pilot. Shepard, famously stern and extreme, returned dwelling from his go to to the Fra Mauro lunar highlands to maneuver proper again into his previous submit as chief of the Astronaut Workplace at NASA. Joking about how little the journey had modified him, Shepard stated, “Earlier than I went to the moon, I used to be a rotten S.O.B. Now I’m simply an S.O.B.” Mitchell, already within the paranormal, famously carried out secret psychic experiments through the Apollo 14 mission. Mitchell said, “I had a knee pad with columns on it the place I may randomize the numbers and symbols, so-called Zinner symbols, and get them organized randomly and give it some thought for 15 seconds. I then took them again [to Earth] and let the individuals on the bottom that have been receiving it at said instances ship me their solutions.” In the course of the mission, Mitchell had a robust religious expertise and said, “The presence of divinity grew to become nearly palpable, and I knew that life within the universe was not simply an accident based mostly on random processes . . . The data got here to me instantly.” After the Moon mission, he left NASA to pursue his curiosity in paranormal matters. He based the Institute of Noetic Sciences to review parapsychology, experimented with psychedelic medication, publicly said that UFOs with extraterrestrials have been commonly visiting Earth, and wrote extensively on psychic phenomenon. Lots of the astronauts distanced themselves from Mitchell for these actions, however he remained steadfast in his beliefs till his loss of life in 2016.
Apollo 15
Apollo 15 (1971), commanded by Dave Scott with Jim Irwin as his lunar module pilot, discovered the crew caught up in a scandal upon their return to Earth. The pair, together with Command Module Pilot Al Worden, have been accused of conspiring to promote postal covers that they had delivered to the Moon. The ensuing inquiry significantly broken the reputations of all three males. Nonetheless, Scott went on to have a profitable profession as a NASA administrator and businessman, later turning to consulting. Irwin, who skilled a critical cardiac arrhythmia on the Moon, additionally underwent a profound non secular expertise through the mission. Irwin said that he was a “silent Christian” earlier than his Moon mission, however advised creator Harry Damage (For All Mankind) that he “felt the presence of the Lord on the Moon.” Irwin grew to become a deeply observant Christian after the mission. He based an Evangelical Christian group, Excessive Flight, wrote a e-book about Christ-centered residing, and later made a number of expeditions to Mount Ararat in Turkey searching for items of Noah’s Ark.
![Charlie Duke](https://www.astronomy.com/uploads/2025/01/Charlie-Duke-1001x1200.png)
Apollo 16
Apollo 16 (1972) was commanded by John Younger with Lunar Module Pilot Charlie Duke. Referred to as “the astronaut’s astronaut” by Emerita Curator Valerie Neal of the Nationwide Air and House Museum’s Division of House Historical past, Younger returned from the mission to be head of the Astronaut Workplace, grew to become the primary individual to command an area shuttle mission, and remained an lively astronaut till he completed his second shuttle flight in 1983. Duke felt a marked sense of vacancy after the Moon mission and started seeking to fill the void. Leaving NASA, he discovered wealth within the enterprise world nevertheless it did nothing for him emotionally. Duke discovered faith and dedicated his life to Jesus, which he felt saved his marriage and his relationships along with his kids. Duke said that his time on the Moon “lasted for 3 days. However a stroll with Jesus lasts ceaselessly.” Now 89 years previous, Charlie Duke nonetheless attends church commonly.
Apollo 17
Apollo 17 (1972) broke the mildew a bit. Gene Cernan commanded the mission and Harrison “Jack” Schmidt, a geologist and the one scientist to fly on Apollo, was the lunar module pilot. In contrast to the opposite 11 moonwalkers, Schmidt was not a army pilot earlier than changing into an astronaut. After NASA, Cernan had a profession within the petroleum business and was a frequent commentator on spaceflight for information media. Schmidt later ran for, and gained, a Senate seat in New Mexico and labored extensively as a marketing consultant. Schmidt, alone among the many lunar module pilots, seems to not have undergone a radical transformation after his flight. This can be as a consequence of the truth that, as a geologist on the Moon, he was completely immersed within the work of analyzing and amassing Moon rocks and soil samples and, just like the mission commanders, could have merely been too mentally engaged throughout his moonwalks to have been affected by it emotionally. In his autobiography, The Final Man on the Moon, Cernan emphasizes Schmidt’s complete dedication to geology.
Many theories
So why did the astronauts’ experiences after the Moon appear so decided by their seat (or moderately their position)? Maybe the commanders, with much more work to do and bearing the majority of the duty for the touchdown, have been just too busy with all of their duties to let the expertise sink in and have an effect on them. The lunar module pilots, though busy, had far much less to do and maybe merely had extra time to look out the literal (and metaphorical) window, thus experiencing the Moon touchdown and the moonwalks in a deeper and extra life-altering method, illustrating simply how profound such an expertise might be.
There’s no technique to know for certain, after all, however collectively, these crews and their experiences on the Moon present how transformative and deeply impactful such an expertise could be – in case you let it.