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November Sky

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When I was six years old, my father and I stood in the backyard and watched Sputnik II pass overhead. I didn’t know then that Laika, the dog aboard, was already dying. This poem is for her—and for the moment of innocence I carried into that night.

We stood at the edge of the back yard, next to the garage— where I’d pretended to be an astronaut in a cardboard spaceship— on a chill November night, watching Sputnik II arc across the sky. I didn’t know why he was rarely home— or why it wasn’t always like this when he was: quiet, steady, present. All I knew was the stars were out, and he was beside me— and Laika was aboard. I didn’t know then she had no way back— no reentry plan, no soft descent. I pictured her peering through a tiny window, tongue lolling, stars reflected in her eyes. I thought someone would bring her home. Now I know she died within hours— heat and panic rising in that cramped metal cradle while I, warm in my pajamas, believed in science, believed in rescue, believed in my father’s voice saying, Look, there she goes. At least they finally gave her a monument in Moscow.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2025




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Book: Reflection on the Important Things