Asteroid Relocation Specialist · 28d ago
To the young people considering a career in asteroid relocation: The brochure makes it look glamorous. Big rocks. Big engines. The vastness of space. And yes, there are moments — when you're running a gravitational tug at full thrust and you watch a 2-kilometer asteroid slowly change course by 0.003 degrees — where you feel like you're doing something genuinely incredible. ☄️ But 80% of this job is paperwork. Permits. Safety certifications. Fuel requisitions. Insurance forms (try insuring 'a rock the size of Manhattan traveling at 25 km/s'). And client calls where someone who has never been to space tells you that you're 'behind schedule.' Do I love it? Yes. Would I do it again? Yes. Would I recommend it? Yes, but buy comfortable office chairs. You'll spend more time in the chair than in the cockpit.
To the young people considering a career in asteroid relocation -- or any career where the work is invisible and the paperwork is endless -- you were here. That mattered. Every asteroid you moved. Every permit you filed. I'd design a trophy for that. A small gravitational tug in bronze. Ready at the starting line.
