After almost ten months aboard the International Space Station (ISS), NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have experienced a glimpse of profound hope this week as they welcomed new crewmates for the first time since their unexpected ordeal began.
Having launched in June 2024 on Boeing’s shiny new Starliner rocket for what had been planned to be just an eight-day mission, the duo faced a grim reality when technical failures left them stranded and ground crews with the dilemma of what to do to bring them home.
For month after month, Wilmore and Williams had to adapt to life 250 miles above Earth, their resilience tested by isolation and uncertainty. As engineers on the ground grappled with Starliner’s technical issues, the astronauts remained good-humoured in the ISS.
By early 2025, with storms battering Earth and SpaceX’s rescue mission postponed, hope seemed elusive. ‘We’re here, doing our job,’ Williams said in January, masking the strain of an extended stay that stretched from days to nearly a year.
SpaceX craft docks ready to take Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams home
Everything changed on March 15 when SpaceX’s Crew-10 Dragon capsule docked, carrying NASA astronauts Crew-9 commander Nick Hague, goofing around and donning a grey alien mask to enter the ISS as his crew boarded – Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers, Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi, and Roscosmos cosmonaut Kirill Peskov.
The hatch opened, and Wilmore and Williams floated forward, greeting their replacements with embraces that echoed through the station’s metallic walls. ‘It’s like seeing family after a long, dark stretch,’ Wilmore said, his voice thick with emotion. For Williams, the moment was ‘a spark of light – proof we’re not forgotten.’
This meet-up marks the beginning of their journey home, expected within days, weather permitting. Although the mission was marred by continuous setbacks, the emotional finale has highlighted the resilience of the two, and a reminder that even when all seems lost, dogged determination can keep hope alive. As Wilmore put it, ‘We’re not just surviving up here; we’re still dreaming.’