You owe it to yourself to experience a total solar eclipse David Baron

Before I get to bulk
of what I have to say,

I feel compelled just to mention
a couple of things about myself.

I am not some mystical,

spiritual sort of person.

I’m a science writer.

I studied physics in college.

I used to be a science
correspondent for NPR.

OK, that said:

in the course of working
on a story for NPR,

I got some advice from an astronomer

that challenged my outlook,

and frankly, changed my life.

You see, the story was about an eclipse,

a partial solar eclipse
that was set to cross the country

in May of 1994.

And the astronomer – I interviewed him,

and he explained what was going to happen
and how to view it,

but he emphasized that, as interesting
as a partial solar eclipse is,

a much rarer total solar eclipse
is completely different.

In a total eclipse,
for all of two or three minutes,

the moon completely blocks
the face of the sun,

creating what he described
as the most awe-inspiring spectacle

in all of nature.

And so the advice he gave me was this:

“Before you die,” he said,

“you owe it to yourself
to experience a total solar eclipse.”

Well honestly,
I felt a little uncomfortable

hearing that from someone
I didn’t know very well;

it felt sort of intimate.

But it got my attention,
and so I did some research.

Now the thing about total eclipses is,

if you wait for one to come to you,

you’re going to be waiting a long time.

Any given point on earth
experiences a total eclipse

about once every 400 years.

But if you’re willing to travel,
you don’t have to wait that long.

And so I learned
that a few years later, in 1998,

a total eclipse was going
to cross the Caribbean.

Now, a total eclipse is visible
only along a narrow path,

about a hundred miles wide,

and that’s where the moon’s shadow falls.

It’s called the “path of totality.”

And in February 1998,

the path of totality
was going to cross Aruba.

So I talked to my husband,
and we thought: February? Aruba?

Sounded like a good idea anyway.

(Laughter)

So we headed south,

to enjoy the sun
and to see what would happen

when the sun briefly went away.

Well, the day of the eclipse
found us and many other people

out behind the Hyatt Regency,

on the beach,

waiting for the show to begin.

And we wore eclipse glasses
with cardboard frames

and really dark lenses that enabled us
to look at the sun safely.

A total eclipse begins
as a partial eclipse,

as the moon very slowly makes its way
in front of the sun.

So first it looked the sun
had a little notch in its edge,

and then that notch grew
larger and larger,

turning the sun into a crescent.

And it was all very interesting,
but I wouldn’t say it was spectacular.

I mean, the day remained bright.

If I hadn’t known
what was going on overhead,

I wouldn’t have noticed anything unusual.

Well, about 10 minutes before
the total solar eclipse was set to begin,

weird things started to happen.

A cool wind kicked up.

Daylight looked odd,
and shadows became very strange;

they looked bizarrely sharp,

as if someone had turned up
the contrast knob on the TV.

Then I looked offshore,
and I noticed running lights on boats,

so clearly it was getting dark,

although I hadn’t realized it.

Well soon, it was obvious
it was getting dark.

It felt like my eyesight was failing.

And then all of a sudden,

the lights went out.

Well, at that,

a cheer erupted from the beach,

and I took off my eclipse glasses,

because at this point
during the total eclipse,

it was safe to look at the sun
with the naked eye.

And I glanced upward,

and I was just dumbstruck.

Now, consider that, at this point,
I was in my mid-30s.

I had lived on earth long enough
to know what the sky looks like.

I mean –

(Laughter)

I’d seen blue skies and grey skies

and starry skies and angry skies

and pink skies at sunrise.

But here was a sky I had never seen.

First, there were the colors.

Up above, it was a deep purple-grey,

like twilight.

But on the horizon it was orange,

like sunset,

360 degrees.

And up above, in the twilight,

bright stars and planets had come out.

So there was Jupiter

and there was Mercury

and there was Venus.

They were all in a line.

And there, along this line,

was this thing,

this glorious, bewildering thing.

It looked like a wreath
woven from silvery thread,

and it just hung out there
in space, shimmering.

That was the sun’s outer atmosphere,

the solar corona.

And pictures just don’t do it justice.

It’s not just a ring or halo
around the sun;

it’s finely textured,
like it’s made out of strands of silk.

And although it looked
nothing like our sun,

of course, I knew that’s what it was.

So there was the sun,
and there were the planets,

and I could see how the planets
revolve around the sun.

It’s like I had left our solar system

and was standing on some alien world,

looking back at creation.

And for the first time in my life,

I just felt viscerally connected
to the universe

in all of its immensity.

Time stopped,

or it just kind of felt nonexistent,

and what I beheld with my eyes –

I didn’t just see it,

it felt like a vision.

And I stood there in this nirvana

for all of 174 seconds –
less than three minutes –

when all of a sudden, it was over.

The sun burst out,

the blue sky returned,

the stars and the planets
and the corona were gone.

The world returned to normal.

But I had changed.

And that’s how I became an umbraphile –

an eclipse chaser.

(Laughter)

So, this is how I spend my time
and hard-earned money.

Every couple of years, I head off
to wherever the moon’s shadow will fall

to experience another couple minutes

of cosmic bliss,

and to share the experience with others:

with friends in Australia,

with an entire city in Germany.

In 1999, in Munich,
I joined hundreds of thousands

who filled the streets and the rooftops
and cheered in unison

as the solar corona emerged.

And over time, I’ve become something else:

an eclipse evangelist.

I see it as my job

to pay forward the advice
that I received all those years ago.

And so let me tell you:

before you die,

you owe it to yourself
to experience a total solar eclipse.

It is the ultimate experience of awe.

Now, that word, “awesome,”
has grown so overused

that it’s lost its original meaning.

True awe, a sense of wonder
and insignificance

in the face of something
enormous and grand,

is rare in our lives.

But when you experience it, it’s powerful.

Awe dissolves the ego.

It makes us feel connected.

Indeed, it promotes
empathy and generosity.

Well, there is nothing truly more awesome
than a total solar eclipse.

Unfortunately, few Americans
have seen one,

because it’s been 38 years

since one last touched
the continental United States

and 99 years since one last crossed
the breadth of the nation.

But that is about to change.

Over the next 35 years,

five total solar eclipses will visit
the continental United States,

and three of them
will be especially grand.

Six weeks from now, on August 21, 2017 –

(Applause)

the moon’s shadow will race
from Oregon to South Carolina.

April 8, 2024, the moon’s shadow
heads north from Texas to Maine.

In 2045, on August 12,

the path cuts from California to Florida.

I say:

What if we made these holidays?

What if we –

(Laughter)

(Applause)

What if we all stood together,

as many people as possible,

in the shadow of the moon?

Just maybe, this shared experience of awe
would help heal our divisions,

get us to treat each other
just a bit more humanely.

Now, admittedly, some folks consider
my evangelizing a little out there;

my obsession, eccentric.

I mean, why focus so much attention
on something so brief?

Why cross the globe –
or state lines, for that matter –

for something that lasts three minutes?

As I said:

I am not a spiritual person.

I don’t believe in God.

I wish I did.

But when I think of my own mortality –

and I do, a lot –

when I think of everyone I have lost,

my mother in particular,

what soothes me

is that moment of awe I had in Aruba.

I picture myself on that beach,

looking at that sky,

and I remember how I felt.

My existence may be temporary,

but that’s OK because, my gosh,

look at what I’m a part of.

And so this is a lesson I’ve learned,

and it’s one that applies
to life in general:

duration of experience
does not equal impact.

One weekend, one conversation –
hell, one glance –

can change everything.

Cherish those moments
of deep connection with other people,

with the natural world,

and make them a priority.

Yes, I chase eclipses.

You might chase something else.

But it’s not about the 174 seconds.

It’s about how they change

the years that come after.

Thank you.

(Applause)

在开始我
要说的大部分内容之前,我不得不

提一些关于我自己的事情。

我不是那种神秘的、

属灵的人。

我是一名科学作家。

我在大学学习物理。

我曾经是 NPR 的科学
记者。

好吧,就是说:


为 NPR 撰写故事的过程中,

我从一位天文学家那里得到了一些建议,这些

建议挑战了我的观点

,坦率地说,改变了我的生活。

你看,这个故事是关于一次日食,

一次日偏食

将于 1994 年 5 月横穿全国。

天文学家——我采访了他

,他解释了会发生什么
以及如何观察它,

但是 他强调,尽管
日偏食很有趣

,但更罕见的日全食
却完全不同。

在全食中,
在两三分钟的时间里

,月亮完全挡住
了太阳的脸,

创造了他所说的自然界
中最令人敬畏的奇观

所以他给我的建议是这样的:

“在你死之前,”他说,

“你应该为
自己体验一次日全食。”

老实说,

从一个
我不太了解的人那里听到这句话,我感到有点不舒服。

感觉有点亲密。

但它引起了我的注意
,所以我做了一些研究。

现在关于日全食的事情是,

如果你等待一个来找你,

你会等很长时间。

地球上的任何给定点

大约每 400 年经历一次日全食。

但如果你愿意去旅行,
你不必等那么久。

所以我
得知几年后,即 1998 年,

一场日全食
将横穿加勒比海。

现在
,只有沿着大约一百英里宽的狭窄路径才能看到日全食

,这就是月亮的影子所在的地方。

它被称为“全然之道”。

而在 1998 年 2 月,

全食之路
将穿越阿鲁巴岛。

所以我和我丈夫谈过
,我们想:二月? 阿鲁巴?

无论如何,这听起来是个好主意。

(笑声)

所以我们向南走

,享受阳光
,看看

太阳短暂消失后会发生什么。

好吧,日食那天
我们和许多其他人

在凯悦酒店

后面的海滩上

等待表演开始。

我们戴着
带有硬纸板框架

和深色镜片的日食眼镜,使我们
能够安全地看太阳。

日全食以偏食开始

因为月亮非常缓慢地
在太阳前面移动。

所以首先它看起来太阳
的边缘有一个小凹口,

然后那个凹口
越来越大,

把太阳变成了一个新月形。

这一切都非常有趣,
但我不会说它很壮观。

我的意思是,天仍然很亮。

如果我不知道
头顶上发生了什么,

我就不会注意到任何异常。

好吧,在日全食开始前大约 10 分钟

奇怪的事情开始发生。

一阵凉风吹来。

日光看起来很奇怪
,阴影变得很奇怪;

它们看起来异常清晰,

好像有人调高
了电视上的对比度旋钮。

然后我向近海望去
,我注意到船上的行车灯,

很明显天越来越黑了,

虽然我没有意识到。

很快,很明显天
已经黑了。

感觉就像我的视力下降了。

然后突然间

,灯灭了。

嗯,就在那时,

海滩上爆发出欢呼声

,我摘下日食眼镜,

因为
在日全食期间,用

肉眼看太阳是安全的

我向上瞥了一眼

,我只是目瞪口呆。

现在,考虑一下,在这一点上,
我已经 30 多岁了。

我在地球上生活了足够长的时间
,知道天空是什么样子。

我的意思是——

(笑声)

我在日出时见过蓝天、灰色的天空

、繁星点点的天空、愤怒的

天空和粉红色的天空。

但这里是我从未见过的天空。

首先,有颜色。

上面,是深紫灰色的,

就像暮色一样。

但在地平线上,它是橙色的,

就像日落一样,

360 度。

在上面,在暮色中,

明亮的恒星和行星出现了。

所以有木星

,有水星

,还有金星。

他们都排成一列。

沿着这条线,

有这个东西,

这个光荣的,令人困惑的东西。

它看起来就像一个
银线编织的花环,


在空中,闪烁着光芒。

那是太阳的外层大气

,即日冕。

而图片就是不公平。

它不仅仅是围绕太阳的环或光晕

它质地细腻,
就像是用丝线制成的。

虽然它看起来一点
也不像我们的太阳

,但我当然知道它就是这样。

所以有太阳
,有行星

,我可以看到行星是如何
围绕太阳旋转的。

就像我离开了我们的太阳系

,站在某个外星世界,

回望创造。

在我的生命中,

我第一次感觉到与

宇宙的浩瀚无边无际的联系。

时间停止了,

或者只是感觉不存在,

而我用眼睛看到的东西——

我不只是看到它,

感觉就像一个幻象。

我在这个涅槃中站了整整

174 秒——
不到三分钟——

突然间,一切都结束了。

太阳爆发了

,蓝天又回来了

,星星、行星
和日冕都消失了。

世界恢复了正常。

但我变了。

这就是我如何成为一个喜欢阴影的人——

一个日食追逐者。

(笑声)

所以,这就是我如何度过我的时间
和辛苦赚来的钱。

每隔几年,我
都会前往月球阴影将落下的任何地方,

再体验几分钟

的宇宙幸福,

并与他人分享这种体验:

与澳大利亚的朋友,

与德国的整个城市。

1999 年,在慕尼黑,
我加入了成千上万的

人,他们挤满了街道和屋顶
,在

日冕出现时齐声欢呼。

随着时间的推移,我变成了别的东西

:日食传道者。

我将

多年前收到的建议付诸实践,这是我的工作。

所以让我告诉你:

在你死之前,

你应该为
自己体验一次日全食。

这是敬畏的终极体验。

现在,“真棒”这个词
已经被过度使用

,以至于它失去了原来的含义。

真正的敬畏,面对巨大而伟大的事物时的惊奇和微不足道的感觉,

在我们的生活中是罕见的。

但是当你体验它时,它是强大的。

敬畏溶解了自我。

它让我们感到有联系。

事实上,它促进了
同理心和慷慨。

好吧,没有什么比日全食更令人敬畏的
了。

不幸的是,很少有美国人
见过它,

因为距离上一次触及
美国大陆已有 38 年,距离

上一次跨越美国大陆已有 99 年

但这即将改变。

在接下来的 35 年里,

五次日全食将造访
美国大陆,

其中三次
将特别盛大。

六周后,即 2017 年 8 月 21 日——

(掌声

)月亮的影子
将从俄勒冈州飞向南卡罗来纳州。

2024 年 4 月 8 日,月亮的影子
从德克萨斯州向北移动到缅因州。

2045 年的 8 月 12 日,

这条路从加利福尼亚到佛罗里达。

我说:

如果我们过这些假期呢?

如果我们——

(笑声)

(掌声)

如果我们都站在一起,

尽可能多的人,

在月亮的阴影下呢?

只是也许,这种共同的敬畏经历
将有助于治愈我们的分歧,

让我们以
更人道的方式对待彼此。

现在,诚然,有些人认为
我在外面传福音有点过分;

我的痴迷,古怪。

我的意思是,为什么要把这么多注意力
集中在这么简短的事情上?

为什么要跨越地球
——或者说国界线——

持续三分钟?

正如我所说:

我不是一个属灵的人。

我不相信上帝。

但愿我做了,可惜我没有。

但是当我想到自己的死亡时——

而且我经常这样——

当我想到我失去的每一个人

,尤其是我的母亲时,

让我感到安慰的

是我在阿鲁巴岛的那一刻敬畏。

我想象自己在那个海滩上,

看着那片天空

,我记得我当时的感受。

我的存在可能是暂时的,

但没关系,因为,天哪,

看看我是其中的一部分。

所以这是我学到

的一个教训,它适用
于一般的生活:

经验的持续时间
不等于影响。

一个周末,一次谈话——
见鬼,一眼——

可以改变一切。

珍惜那些
与其他人、与自然世界建立深厚联系的时刻

并将其作为优先事项。

是的,我追逐日食。

你可能会追逐别的东西。

但这与 174 秒无关。

这是关于他们如何改变

之后的岁月。

谢谢你。

(掌声)