Feeling Like a Failure (During an Eclipse)

I'm OK, it's just been a rollercoaster of a week!
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Пікірлер: 978

  • @christopherdelude9441
    @christopherdelude94412 ай бұрын

    I would clarify that an educational channel on KZread no longer creating content isn't a failure, because the hard work that you put in will continue to educate people who look for and find it. Sure, more of it could exist, but I can't tell you how important ed videos have been for me to survive challenging courses or understand things better. Making any amount of this content is a huge win for you, your team, and humanity! Thanks for all your hard work Hank :)

  • @caitlinburke5184

    @caitlinburke5184

    2 ай бұрын

    Very well said

  • @jessicab6305

    @jessicab6305

    2 ай бұрын

    The beautiful thing about internet based educational content!

  • @only20frickinletters

    @only20frickinletters

    2 ай бұрын

    @@WhataMensch They literally did a fundraiser for MSF and Save the Children.

  • @b1646717

    @b1646717

    2 ай бұрын

    I used Crash Course in college to fact check myself often.

  • @anniemeek55

    @anniemeek55

    2 ай бұрын

    So true. Videos from 2013 are often just as good as today’s. You made something that will last at least as long as KZread! That’s a huge win. No failure there!

  • @yyzhed
    @yyzhed2 ай бұрын

    I saw the "is it normal to be nauseated after?" tweet and assumed it was about Rax 😂

  • @vlogbrothers

    @vlogbrothers

    2 ай бұрын

    No honestly I wish I'd gotten more...

  • @jobriq5

    @jobriq5

    2 ай бұрын

    You weren’t the only one

  • @AndreaCrisp

    @AndreaCrisp

    2 ай бұрын

    I know people who weren't in totality or even close that were also nauseated during the eclipse. It would be interesting to know if it's a thing that happens with some regularity.

  • @MtnNerd

    @MtnNerd

    2 ай бұрын

    I would theorize that it's simply the result of the lot of sun exposure as people waited outdoors in unshaded areas for totality.

  • @gladiusmaximus412

    @gladiusmaximus412

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@AndreaCrispI wasn't in totality for this one, and it was almost entirely cloudy, but I had this deep feeling that it was weird. I was in totality in 2017 and I felt that less then.

  • @Speilbilde
    @Speilbilde2 ай бұрын

    "It's not inevitable, Perry the Platypus, it's completely evitable!"

  • @levilukeskytrekker

    @levilukeskytrekker

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @theanyktos

    @theanyktos

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @anna._olsen_

    @anna._olsen_

    2 ай бұрын

    ++

  • @alex.g7317

    @alex.g7317

    2 ай бұрын

    +++

  • @untappedinkwell

    @untappedinkwell

    2 ай бұрын

    +++

  • @JosephLSelby
    @JosephLSelby2 ай бұрын

    I think it's less "I'm glad I knew that was going to happen" and more "I'm glad I knew that was temporary."

  • @WhataMensch

    @WhataMensch

    2 ай бұрын

    Does he think his silence will be temporary?

  • @nala6846

    @nala6846

    2 ай бұрын

    100% this. Ancient humans prolly thought the world was ending 😅

  • @JosephLSelby

    @JosephLSelby

    2 ай бұрын

    @@WhataMensch I was talking about the eclipse. What are you talking about?

  • @JosephLSelby

    @JosephLSelby

    2 ай бұрын

    Although the parallel to being a public figure seem kind of on the nose.

  • @susanheld

    @susanheld

    2 ай бұрын

    Also "I know this won't just keep happening every day now that it has happened once"

  • @emilycarr2913
    @emilycarr29132 ай бұрын

    I managed to pick the one very cloudy place to watch the total eclipse (lol) BUT just as totality started, the clouds broke in just the right place that we could see. the. sun!!! The emotion from expecting failure followed by very unlikely success was a pure joy and gratitude I have never felt before. I am so grateful for the impossibilities made possible both by this community and the natural world.

  • @zest6542

    @zest6542

    2 ай бұрын

    Literally this 100%. Im in Buffalo and as the eclipse got closer and the forecast got more confident I felt my hope get sucked away. I was so convinced we would see only clouds, and then the moment totality started the clouds broke and we got to see it for almost the entire 4 minutes. I wonder if I would’ve appreciated it less if it was a clear day. I’ve never cried happy tears but that day I did. It really changed my outlook on the last year of my life and reminded me that hope is always an option.

  • @emilycarr2913

    @emilycarr2913

    2 ай бұрын

    @@zest6542 yes even though we had a far from perfect view (we could only see a small amount of the corona), the experience of getting /something/ was so moving. I also feel like I might have appreciated it less had it been sunny the whole time. What an emotional roller coaster of a day!

  • @daemn42

    @daemn42

    2 ай бұрын

    From a technical perspective, I kinda wonder if the clouds breaking for so many people actually had anything to do with the drastic decrease in solar radiation approaching totality. If it literally had an effect on the clouds. It certainly has a an effect on the weather at ground level, with a huge temperature drop, and generally a drop off in wind. I've seen two in the last few years and both times the wind which was blowing before (I filmed the little eclipse shaped light spots under the trees dancing around in the wind) completely stopped just before totality, and stayed stopped for about 15 minutes after.

  • @emilycarr2913

    @emilycarr2913

    2 ай бұрын

    @@daemn42 I thought about that! Eclipses can dissipate low cumulus clouds, but from Destin’s SmarterEveryDay video about the eclipse, they said that for big fronts (like we had in NY) there’s not enough time. Not sure if that means there /could/ be enough time to dissipate small amounts of cloud around the sun, but I will say I have friends in Syracuse and Rochester who did not get breaks in the clouds and couldn’t see the sun at all.

  • @itmedana

    @itmedana

    2 ай бұрын

    for some reason this made me tear up. so glad you got to experience that moment!

  • @taukid421
    @taukid4212 ай бұрын

    If you thought you were mad about the eclipse being so short, some scientists in the 70s wanted a longer eclipse so bad they got Concorde involved and chased an eclipse to experience totality for 74 MINUTES!!!

  • @TamarZiri
    @TamarZiri2 ай бұрын

    That's not fair! I was looking at that!

  • @susym5494

    @susym5494

    2 ай бұрын

    That was hilarious yet completely understandable. 😂

  • @ifly-fsx

    @ifly-fsx

    2 ай бұрын

    4 minutes flew by, like it was 4 seconds. 😡

  • @Conservative4

    @Conservative4

    2 ай бұрын

    I saw a *Solar Flare* on the sun with my naked eye. Yeah! I wasn’t done lookin’ at it!

  • @AndreaCrisp

    @AndreaCrisp

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Conservative4 I learned afterwards that those were solar prominences (because they were still attached but sticking way up) not flares/CMEs. But still really awesome to see. Everyone except for the scientists thought they were flares, myself included.

  • @afroceltduck

    @afroceltduck

    2 ай бұрын

    This phrase sums up so much of current life. Whether it's eclipses, KZread shows, things on streaming channels, or your Instagram feed.

  • @ThatWouldBeCareless
    @ThatWouldBeCareless2 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making journey to the microcosmos happen. It is a weird beautiful thing and I'm grateful for it ❤

  • @vlogbrothers

    @vlogbrothers

    2 ай бұрын

    Thanks go entirely to Matt and Deboki and Chayton and a bunch of other people and especially to James

  • @ThatWouldBeCareless

    @ThatWouldBeCareless

    2 ай бұрын

    @@vlogbrothers I'm grateful for them too, they're the best ❤️ I've loved getting to know all those lil microscopic guys.

  • @greeneyedlady5580

    @greeneyedlady5580

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry that I hadn't even known that channel existed. 😢 KZread has never recommended it to me, even though I'm subscribed here. at SciShow, and a number of other channels that cover science.

  • @kyrab7914

    @kyrab7914

    2 ай бұрын

    Petition to thank the ppl making microcosmos individually at the last couple eps

  • @kashiichan

    @kashiichan

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@greeneyedlady5580I'd subscribed TO IT and barely saw any of the videos in my feed. I only recently learned about the Subscriptions page (I use the app, which doesn't make it easy to look at it) but will be checking it more regularly from now on. :(

  • @Skip6235
    @Skip62352 ай бұрын

    I went to the eclipse in 2017, but it was pretty far away from my family and they get very stressed about travel so they didn’t come. Since 2017 I’ve talked all about what the eclipse was like and how incredible it is and what happens during totality. Well, this time, totality was only a 2 hour drive from parent’s house, so I convinced them to load up the car, take my nephew out of class, and experience it for themselves. And my favorite reaction afterwards from every one of them, despite 7 years of me explaining what it was like was “I didn’t know it was going to be like that!!” with massive grins on their faces.

  • @Zzyzzyx

    @Zzyzzyx

    2 ай бұрын

    No amount of preparation or explanation is enough. Totality is just mind-blowing, no matter how much one knows.

  • @thymeandspace110

    @thymeandspace110

    2 ай бұрын

    This is so true. I didn't see the eclipse in 2017 but my dad did, and I've heard him describe it before. And one of the first things I said to him this time around (we met up to see the totality together) was, "Words could never do this justice," and he was like, "Exactly!!"

  • @TheLeftistOwl

    @TheLeftistOwl

    2 ай бұрын

    its so different in person. Feeling everything that happens and how everything shifts during the eclipse add to it's astounding, powerful aura and the existential wonder of seeing an event that is so unlikely to exist.

  • @jimmypad5501

    @jimmypad5501

    2 ай бұрын

    Had nearly this same exact situation with me telling my family about 2017 and then my joy at watching them experience the mystery of it all firsthand this week in Ohio!

  • @Chris_winthers
    @Chris_winthers2 ай бұрын

    I mean, it's better than feeling like a failure during a not eclipse

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    That's the kind of totally healthy mindset that I stand by.

  • @Coral_skies
    @Coral_skies2 ай бұрын

    "Hey! I was looking at that!" This is the most relatable sentiment about the eclipse that I've seen hahaha

  • @Ryukachoo
    @Ryukachoo2 ай бұрын

    Best quote ive heard to describe totality; "I now understand why people believed in gods"

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes. This event and like, lightning, speak greatly to my pagany heart!

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    Also, that earthquake a bit ago!

  • @larlslab998
    @larlslab9982 ай бұрын

    I go back to microcosmos all the time as one of those "HEY YOU COME HERE HAVE YOU SEEN THIS THERES A WHOLE GIANT TINY WORLD INSIDE OF THE WORLD" -- thanks to everyone who worked on this wonderful project

  • @stunt4248

    @stunt4248

    2 ай бұрын

    Just like Microcosmos, your channel deserves way more recognition Carl! I love your other channel too!

  • @JackieBaisa
    @JackieBaisa2 ай бұрын

    For once in my life, I was speechless when I took off my eclipse glasses, and I knew what to expect. But the raw thing---the giant dark spot in the sky where two celestial objects aligned---just completely shook me. Dude. Hard work and videos that folks can still watch are not ever a failure. But it's normal to "mourn" the end of something precious.

  • @Mark_Cadden
    @Mark_Cadden2 ай бұрын

    I was in Erie PA, the clouds were bad UNTIL the eclipse where it got sunny and clear in perfect timing. Totality is just different. It was so so so good

  • @hapasiuhengalu7586

    @hapasiuhengalu7586

    2 ай бұрын

    My wife and I drove from DC to Erie PA to watch it We got food poisoning somewhere along the way (we think it was something we ate before leaving) There we were, dehydrated, achey, and miserable, and people are starting to panic that the clouds wouldn’t clear in time, and then IT HAPPENED! It was scary and yet soothing I’d seen an anular eclipse as a child, this was very different It was totally worth it

  • @Mark_Cadden

    @Mark_Cadden

    2 ай бұрын

    @@hapasiuhengalu7586 what an experience! I’m very sorry about the food poisoning that’s absolutely terrible but I’m very glad you had that eclipse experience! It really was wild how it got nice out at the perfect time

  • @markrenfrow9873

    @markrenfrow9873

    2 ай бұрын

    Went to southern MO for viewing,(from KY) clear skies! Daughters came from Seattle WA and Jacksonville FL to share a celestial event with old Dad! It was great!

  • @5hirtandtieler

    @5hirtandtieler

    2 ай бұрын

    What’s cool is it probably wasn’t just coincidence. I think it was a Hank video where he talked about the sun being part of the reason for clouds in the first place, so less sun = less clouds!

  • @cyanmanta

    @cyanmanta

    2 ай бұрын

    The reverse was true in the Finger Lakes. At 2pm it was fine, but the cloud cover rolled in by 3pm. It still turned nighttime for several minutes, though.

  • @darsynia
    @darsynia2 ай бұрын

    My daughter was born on Easter morning and she turned 12 on the day of the eclipse... but she had a very severe freaked out/nauseated reaction and she felt TERRIBLE about it. Hank, you have singlehandedly made her feel better about that. I mean, we as a family weren't prepared for that, and we kept thinking if she would just look up, it would be so cool she'd be ok, but we ALL thought and said that at once, so she was bombarded and... I feel like a failure too. We hyped this up and didn't warn her she could be scared and yeah. Thank you for showing her that someone as prepared as you were still felt funny and nauseated and such. It makes all the difference.

  • @Zhiperser

    @Zhiperser

    2 ай бұрын

    She will be very prepared for and still fairly young for the next major eclipse in 2045. It doesn't have to be a once in a lifetime event that goes badly.

  • @jimmypad5501

    @jimmypad5501

    2 ай бұрын

    I think even in retrospect she’ll appreciate her total embodied integration with the eclipse event. It’ll lodge in her memory how much she was truly consumed with this thought of the sun. There are worse things to be consumed by as a tween.

  • @hannamayh
    @hannamayh2 ай бұрын

    That title sure is the current vibe.

  • @pushtiashar

    @pushtiashar

    2 ай бұрын

    yes, ikr

  • @tinkergnomad

    @tinkergnomad

    2 ай бұрын

    Feeling this way too hard.

  • @laiheniel
    @laiheniel2 ай бұрын

    I've experienced totality twice and both times I'm left with a feeling of "no, please come back". Also, I love journey to the microcosmos and I'm simultaneously so sad it is ending and so glad it was made. Thank you

  • @danielmullanewrites

    @danielmullanewrites

    2 ай бұрын

    I was over by the sea recently, and I had a similar experience looking at the night sky without light pollution. It took a while for my eyes to adjust, and then I stood there staring, and the only thought that really crossed my mind was "wow, I will have to leave this" -- it was late on the last night of my stay, and I was getting up early. It was so surreal, and yet the whole time I wasn't really thinking "please come back", more so that I was thinking it would be a long time I could go back and see it again.

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @AlyssaRK
    @AlyssaRK2 ай бұрын

    I was so overwhelmed. I tried so hard to commit the view to memory, but it still doesn't feel real. It feels like a dream!

  • @ericl1332

    @ericl1332

    2 ай бұрын

    Must be similar to seeing the earth from space... nothing can compare to actually seeing with your own eyes. It does feel like a dream, because it's so unreal. It's like being pulled out from earth to the solar system. The red solar prominence took me off guard, It's like seeing the "real" sun for the first time.

  • @late2stuff
    @late2stuff2 ай бұрын

    I have known about and appreciated Hank for over a decade. Journey To The Microcosmos was the thing that made me a patented "Hank Guy" forever. Saw basically every video, changed my perspective on the world and the universe in a very real way forever. Sad it's going but very happy it happened. ❤

  • @clippedwings225
    @clippedwings2252 ай бұрын

    When you were talking about that weird sort of anger over the eclipse being over, it almost reminds me of like, the feeling of a death you know? Something you can't quite believe is real and those like conflicting gut feelings.

  • @eileen7303

    @eileen7303

    Ай бұрын

    That's exactly what I was thinking, too...

  • @Missathena918
    @Missathena9182 ай бұрын

    I also felt overwhelmed and a little scared/uneasy seeing the eclipse. Afterward I felt exhausted like after a day at the beach or something.

  • @adriansolis5362

    @adriansolis5362

    2 ай бұрын

    Yea! I don't know what the exhaustion was about. We were not in the sun for THAT long and yet the fam and I felt totally sun beat. Glad we weren't the only ones.

  • @helenobrien60
    @helenobrien602 ай бұрын

    I have loved Journey to the Microcosmos since the beginning. As a biology nerd who has been a stay at home mom for the last 4 years it soothed something in me I didn't know needed a balm. Now that it is ending I am both sad and inspired. Knowing the microscopes only had one more run I finally bucked up, bought my dream microscope and the supplies I needed to do some basic labs for my chickens! And now I can show my daughters the microcosmos too. Practical, fun, sentimental, and fulfilling, all from a microscope. Thank you for the Journey, it's been wonder-filled!

  • @pawz3016
    @pawz30162 ай бұрын

    We saw the eclipse from Crown Hill Cemetery. One of my primary thoughts when totality ended was, "again!" and I was (and still am, somewhat) disappointed that the rest of my life isn't that cool.

  • @EcceJack

    @EcceJack

    2 ай бұрын

    That's why people go hunting for more eclipses x)

  • @charleshanson9467
    @charleshanson94672 ай бұрын

    I can't be the only one having a hard time watching this with Hank's jacket collar all messed up like it is, right?

  • @myladycasagrande863

    @myladycasagrande863

    2 ай бұрын

    Nope, it bugged me that I couldn't reach through the screen and fix it.

  • @ShinShadoWolf

    @ShinShadoWolf

    2 ай бұрын

    I didn't notice till you pointed it out, thanks a lot.

  • @JoeJaJoeJoe

    @JoeJaJoeJoe

    2 ай бұрын

    Hank's only real failure 😂

  • @drummerofawe

    @drummerofawe

    2 ай бұрын

    That's so you know it's the real him Call that a collar ID

  • @Godlovesyou772

    @Godlovesyou772

    2 ай бұрын

    @@drummerofaweI’m in awe. Which, admittedly, suits your username.

  • @naota3k
    @naota3k2 ай бұрын

    This eclipse was the first I was able to see in totality. I drove up to VT with a group of friends _just_ for the occasion, and I was not disappointed. I immediately burst into tears.

  • @princesshannah7
    @princesshannah72 ай бұрын

    Oh man Hard Same on the "but I was looking at that!!" feeling. I went a few hours upstate in New York to reach the path of totality, and as the first bead of sunlight peaked out at the end of it I heard someone behind me shout "ENCORE!" And that was def a feeling I was left with in the immediate aftermath, of "aw no I wanted to watch that some more!!" and wishing I could've like. paused the sky for a bit.

  • @Bluesmudge
    @Bluesmudge2 ай бұрын

    The eclipse is a great reminder that our brain basically has two settings when it comes to memory vs. a camera. (I am way oversimplifying this.) If you are in a moment with your loved ones, BE THERE. If you take a picture, yes you have a picture forever. Record moments for prosperity. However, if you want it *in your brain,* then use your senses (eyes, nose, ears etc.) When we spend time trying to get our camera out to record that special moment, our brain isn't in the same space as when we are just being there. To conclude my TED talk, remember to take time to be in your life instead of just recording your life.

  • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648

    @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648

    Ай бұрын

    Eclipses and the opportunity to visit them are rare enough that maybe nobody would care about this -- but it seems to me that the easier it is to set up the camera and leave it, the more likely it is not to monopolize our attention. Two cameras might be needed in order that one has the light filter to see the sun outside of totality, and another has no light filter but a shutter so it can capture the sun during totality. But again the specialized nature of such equipment could mean a lot of cost.

  • @isabelleblake8732
    @isabelleblake87322 ай бұрын

    got engaged during totality right in a break in the clouds! you’re right, hank; these things we build and love together are not inevitabilities, which make them all the more precious. thanks for journey to the micro cosmos and for everything else, too (:

  • @Sphel17

    @Sphel17

    2 ай бұрын

    congratulations!!!

  • @trekkieanna

    @trekkieanna

    2 ай бұрын

    Congratulations! 🎉

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    Makes sense. Putting on a ring while looking at a really big ring.

  • @jaclynkurtz9808

    @jaclynkurtz9808

    Ай бұрын

    Congratulations!

  • @fufun4me

    @fufun4me

    Ай бұрын

    Oh thats cool as hell

  • @kayleee1020
    @kayleee10202 ай бұрын

    we tend to be obsessed with the idea of things lasting forever, but just because it has ended doesn’t mean it failed

  • @AbbreviatedReviews
    @AbbreviatedReviews2 ай бұрын

    There was a real disconnect between what my brain knew would happen during the eclipse and what my body and eyes were telling me was happening. It was completely overwhelming. My heart was racing as the edge of the sun disappeared and when I took off my glasses I couldn't even make a sound. It was all so surreal.

  • @jimmypad5501

    @jimmypad5501

    2 ай бұрын

    100% spot on with this. I saw totality in 2017 and this week and both times my body was reacting to the event in ways that superseded my intellectual ability to rationalize and explain what was happening. Totality is a *feeling*

  • @TheMajorStranger
    @TheMajorStranger2 ай бұрын

    I completely know how you feel Hank, I'm in Montreal so the total eclipse here lasted less than 2 minutes. I have been trying to recapture this image and the feeling of seeing it for the whole week now and I also have this irrational anger that I had something amazing but somehow someone took it from me before I could internalized it and fully appreciate and this sucks so much!

  • @soupymei

    @soupymei

    2 ай бұрын

    "i have to remember this forever, but will i?"

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    Three minutes just isn't enough to make a lifelong memory.

  • @ericl1332

    @ericl1332

    2 ай бұрын

    Drove 1h30 min out of south shore to a small Vermont/Qc custom just to gain bout a minute and a half more, was totally worth it. However, both my sons and I said out loud when totality was over, oh no, it's gone. Make you feel so mortal. I am seriously thinking going to Spain in 2026...

  • @juicyjuice671
    @juicyjuice6712 ай бұрын

    I was *so* mad when it ended! Three and a half minutes went like a blink, and I was just about to change my camera settings to try to get the CMEs to show up better. And then we all had to scramble to put our glasses back on 😂 But I'm glad I took time to look around at the horizon and experience that untimely twilight rather than be glued to my viewfinder and get a perfect photograph.

  • @deborahlawrence680

    @deborahlawrence680

    2 ай бұрын

    I couldn’t see it though my glasses and I was scared to look right at it for too long. Then it was over. It’s gone.

  • @Ryukachoo

    @Ryukachoo

    2 ай бұрын

    Having a bunch of settings in advance helps a lot, also using exposure bracketing so you can just shotgun shots and pick the best ones later. The really tough stuff is getting video since you can't really trust the automatic settings

  • @AndreaCrisp

    @AndreaCrisp

    2 ай бұрын

    I read that those were not CMEs, but solar prominences. They are attached to the sun and sticking way out vs getting shot out like the CMEs. I thought it was solar flares too and so did a lot of news people, so afterwards the scientists came out and corrected us all. But I love learning new things and it was super cool regardless. Just thought I'd share what I learned.

  • @auroraourania7161

    @auroraourania7161

    2 ай бұрын

    I specifically didn't take any pictures other than a quick reaction shot of me and my gf, since I wanted to be able to experience it fully, rather than worrying about my phone. I'm glad about that.

  • @ChlckenNugget

    @ChlckenNugget

    2 ай бұрын

    @@deborahlawrence680it's okay to look at as long as you want during totality :(

  • @shigshug8581
    @shigshug85812 ай бұрын

    I saw it Dallas, my expectations were low because all week I was checking the forecast and it was cloudy with a chance of rain....but in the last minute, the skies cleared and I saw totality!

  • @soundofez
    @soundofez2 ай бұрын

    "that's not fair! i was looking at that!!" THE BIGGEST MOOD, i felt so distracted(?) during totality, like i wasn't present enough, like i wasn't committing it well enough to memory. i want another!!! :( (and isn't that want beautiful?)

  • @suemiller9506

    @suemiller9506

    2 ай бұрын

    Me too! I was distracted in the minutes leading up to totality instead of settling inside myself to absorb the entire experience. I just wanted to do it again as soon as it was over.

  • @Kleinage
    @Kleinage2 ай бұрын

    Hank, I also felt something similar. While my wife was exhilarated and talked about how seeing the eclipse felt like witnessing a miracle, afterward I felt an intense sense of grief and loss, anxiety and some anger. I realized it was this existential angst that came from witnessing the most beautiful and astonishing thing I’ve ever seen with my own eyes and knowing that it will not come for another 20 years if I see it again. Since then I’ve found it was a good emotional reset, however, even if it destabilized me for a day or two.

  • @davespriter
    @davespriter2 ай бұрын

    journey to the microcosmos was a very good late night relaxation show for me that helped me make peace with the fact that there are all these tiny things everywhere. nothing lasts forever, but the benefits from lowering my stress levels at key moments in my life may last til the end of my life. which is not so bad in my book

  • @Condor987
    @Condor9872 ай бұрын

    Instead of angry I’ve felt incredibly sad that it ended. Shockingly so. Like… people ask me how it was and I tell them how beyond anything I could have ever imagined it was and then i’m… depressed I’m not able to see it again (easily) for over 20 years. It was an unbelievable experience and so incredibly worth getting to totality. Partial eclipse viewer just can’t comprehend the difference.

  • @GhostsOfThings
    @GhostsOfThings2 ай бұрын

    The moment that hit me the most was actually the few seconds before totality, when everything was visibly, slowly dimming, but the angle and colour of the light didn't match up with a sun set. It felt so WRONG. But amazing. And then totality hit and it became a spectacle and it was stunning and beautiful and the whole world paused for 1 minute and 5 seconds. And then it was gone. (I travelled really far for the eclipse and every day leading up to it was very cloudy. However on the day of the sky was almost completely clear. It felt like magic.)

  • @claudspadafora1175

    @claudspadafora1175

    Ай бұрын

    YES! this is such a great way to describe that light phenomenon. It was so strange and I remember it so clearly.

  • @mikalgibbs715
    @mikalgibbs7152 ай бұрын

    You felt anger. I felt sadness, delayed by almost an entire day of contemplation and wonder. I cried on and off for about an hour on Tuesday, and a couple times when I tried to describe it to loved ones. I may never be able to recreate it, and it’s near impossible to beat.

  • @shebjess
    @shebjess2 ай бұрын

    Gotta admit, it's kinda reassuring to hear Hank Green, writer, humanitarian, pelican enthusiast openly talk about feeling like a failure. I'm in a weird point in my life where my family is sure I know what I'm doing while I don't feel like it (Kinda started a depression podcast, as one does) and hearing Hank talk about this helped a lot. Thanks

  • @sierralvx
    @sierralvx2 ай бұрын

    I felt the exact same way. It was amazing to witness and I was trying to enjoy every second, without my phone in my hand, just filming my reaction so I could look back on it. Despite watching several videos, I realized I didn't know exactly how cold it would get, when to take my glasses off, or when to put them back on. I wasn't prepared for the unknowns. All I knew was this was only gonna last for 2 mins where I was and I had to savour it. It wasn't enough, and I almost felt underwhelmed after. It was so strange to have this thing where so many people come together and all of us just had to go on with our lives as usual after. I desperately want to see it again, and to be right in the center of totality where I'll 4 mins or more. I just have to.

  • @deborahlawrence680

    @deborahlawrence680

    2 ай бұрын

    So many things happened. I wanted to see the atmosphere, feel the coolness that suddenly came, hear the birds change, film it, watch the actual eclipse and be fully present. There just wasn’t enough time!

  • @IanTheWonderDog
    @IanTheWonderDog2 ай бұрын

    A few things: 1)I was also in Indianapolis for the Eclipse. It was pretty amazing. 2) I had never seen videos from the Microscopy channel until the video announcing it was shutting down. 3) I wanted to fix the collar/lapel of your NASA jacket the entire video. Drove me nuts.

  • @Doktor_Calamari
    @Doktor_Calamari2 ай бұрын

    I've tried so many times to convince non-umbraphiles of the indescribable amazingness of a total eclipse, but words fail me... because it's indescribable. Even if you know all the science, and the "why" of it, actually experiencing it is just mind-blowing, and easily the closest thing to religious experience I've ever had. And yes, it ends too soon, which is why people immediately start making travel arrangements for the next eclipse. Economic realities prevented me from making the trip to totality this time around, and I'm still grumbling about it. Those same economic realities prevented me from supporting Complexly financially for the last year or so, so I feel like I'm directly, individually responsible for Journey to the Microcosmos coming to an end. But as others have said, you created something unique and beautiful, and I have no doubt that the four years of videos will live on, inspiring future generations of microscopists, as well as expanding the minds of armchair scientists like myself. Thank you.

  • @CharlieTheNerd91
    @CharlieTheNerd912 ай бұрын

    In 1999. I was 8 years old and witnessed an eclipse in Montenegro, the same year our country was bombed by the USA, so it is not really big in my memory. 27 years later in 2026 I will be (hopefully) going to Palma, Spain to see and experience a totality, I can't wait!

  • @bubbleonempirestide
    @bubbleonempirestide2 ай бұрын

    i loved journey to the microcosmos :( it was a great run while it lasted! speaking of what a prehistoric human could have never known, the show showed so many people who would have never otherwise got a chance to see the microscopic life all around us. so bittersweet, but i think that's pretty cool!

  • @bricksloth6920
    @bricksloth69202 ай бұрын

    Yes the letdown afterwards, the feeling of loss, knowing it's once in a lifetime. But then again I haven't yet processed how the eclipse has affected me. I feel changed by it.

  • @jackwbishop
    @jackwbishop2 ай бұрын

    I watched Vi Hart's video about the eclipse, and I had never considered before the existential terror of that gaping black hole in the sky -- just the total absence of light. It definitely must have some kind of unconscious element to it.

  • @lorenabpv
    @lorenabpv2 ай бұрын

    this reminds me of when i learned that i was under the tropic of Capricorn as a kid and got very upset when I realized it wasn't an actual sky thing. but on the flipside, it makes me happy whenever I "cross" it (aka see road signs) a very human thing that people are indeed responsible for, but only kind of.

  • @myladycasagrande863

    @myladycasagrande863

    2 ай бұрын

    I get a little excited every time I cross 45° latitude!

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    They should make it an actual sky thing. I think Jeff Bezos could probably make that happen.

  • @wildflower1397

    @wildflower1397

    2 ай бұрын

    I remember as a kid we went on a road trip to California. I was so excited when we passed the sign welcoming us. I was crushed when I discovered there was no line and nothing changed when we crossed it, lol.

  • @SpeakShibboleth
    @SpeakShibboleth2 ай бұрын

    I didn't catch this one but I made it to one back in 2017. It was incredible and it shocked me how poorly photos or video is able to capture the experience. You just have to be there.

  • @H2G24life
    @H2G24life2 ай бұрын

    I genuily teared up at you saying how the eclipe made you angry becuse I felt/feel the same. All week I have been trying to explain why and feeling alone. no one I was with was also angery, they were all in awe and amazed. and I felt I wasn't allowed to be angery cause we got to see the eclipe in a perfect spot and weather when I have friends who got clouds and missed out. I blamed myself cause I read somewhere to close you eyes for 5-10 min before totailty to have better dark vision and see the stars better (didn't work) and as much as my husban asured me I didn't miss anything I didnt see after totailty I felt I ruined my experience cause of dumb things I read online. but now I think your explanation for your angry explaines mine. it was SO FAST. i feel I didn't look at the dark hole enought, or the 360 sun set, or listen to the animals, or everything. It was overwhelming and then just done. Im addicted and already planning to try to see the next one.

  • @suemiller9506

    @suemiller9506

    2 ай бұрын

    I know! I relate - I feel I missed out on some of the things I should have seen, the advancing shadow, the planets - and yet I saw it. Why do I feel so annoyed with myself?

  • @mokimon5079
    @mokimon5079Ай бұрын

    Hank, don't forget that you don't need to reach everybody ever to make a difference. Journey to the microcosmos reached thousands of people and they were all changed and touched by that content. Thank you to Matt and Deboki and Chayton and James and Hank and everyone else who made JTTM - I am grateful that it happened, and grateful that I can return to the existing content!

  • @akajinan
    @akajinan2 ай бұрын

    jokes on you I feel like a failure whether or not, there is an eclipse

  • @twojuiceman

    @twojuiceman

    2 ай бұрын

    Hey now, I'll not have this negativity in my vlogbrothers comment section. You're probably doing better than you think

  • @sarahcarstairs8141

    @sarahcarstairs8141

    2 ай бұрын

    I think feeling like a failure is probably a decent sign that you're not failing. You are at least self aware enough to know that there may be room for improvement and that is not the same thing as failing

  • @akajinan

    @akajinan

    2 ай бұрын

    @@twojuiceman reminds me of “I’m doin’ better than I ever was” lyric by taylorr ty I love us :)

  • @Kazemba

    @Kazemba

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@twojuicemanFeeling like a failure isn't negativity, it's humanity, especially humanity being crushed under capitalism. We need to feel our "negative" emotions and talk about them, just as much as our "positive" emotions. Emotions don't have to be happy or accurate to be beautiful. Feeling like a failure probably means you care about something, and you're probably doing better than you think, but you can still be sad and disappointed and human. Even, or perhaps especially, in Nerdfighteria.

  • @livvy94
    @livvy942 ай бұрын

    I feel so lucky to be living the life that I'm living right now, and to be in the communities that I'm in. Everyone here is so freaking awesome

  • @SweaterThread
    @SweaterThread2 ай бұрын

    I really like the description of the eclipse as inevitable, because of its subtle implication that humans can’t somehow mess up the eclipse, and that’s a type of optimism that I really needed today!

  • @MitchellGunn
    @MitchellGunn2 ай бұрын

    What's that thing on Hank's desk in the bottom-left corner? Looks like a book with "Hank Green" on the spine and a title beginning with "The" -- so not an edition of one of his existing novels. Did I miss an announcement of Hank doing a new thing?

  • @fossilfighters101

    @fossilfighters101

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @acidhelm

    @acidhelm

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    Looks to be the German edition of AART.

  • @allgoodthingsarewildfree8011

    @allgoodthingsarewildfree8011

    2 ай бұрын

    Just commented this and then came back to fully scour the comments section to see if anyone else noticed. Also, wearing a book related shirt…🙀

  • @Fs3i
    @Fs3i2 ай бұрын

    But unlike the eclipse, journey to the microcosmos will still be there. It is not gone, unless people continue chosing not watch it. Yes, there are no episodes made, and I feel the profound loss. But just like Tom Scott doesn't make new videos, it doesn't mean his videos aren't still there. After the eclipse, the sky is back to what it was. But the garlic bread that was sent to space wasn't uneaten.

  • @gourde7677
    @gourde76772 ай бұрын

    Thank you for Journey to the Microcosmos, it's opened up a new way of wondering at the world for me! And I've shown it to many friends who thought the same. It's a precious thing you made :)

  • @clover0048
    @clover00482 ай бұрын

    Someone in my group commented as we all got quiet that none of knew what to do after. We were all just standing there waiting for it to happen again and knowing it won't. Spot on.

  • @celestialapparitions
    @celestialapparitions2 ай бұрын

    I'm so sad that microcosmos is ending but I feel grateful that I was even here to see it in the first place!💙 Thanks to everyone who helped make them possible. those videos are so comforting to me and I'll surely be rewatching them all again and again

  • @hjewkes
    @hjewkes2 ай бұрын

    I always think about CT Yankee in King Arthur's Court, where this guy just so happens to be in the path of totality at a point of major crisis. And, yeah, if you're able to plan for that you 100% are going to be called a wizard

  • @myladycasagrande863

    @myladycasagrande863

    2 ай бұрын

    Walla Walla Washington! Saskatoon Saskatchewan!

  • @wildflower1397

    @wildflower1397

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@myladycasagrande863There is a "translate to english" under your comment, lol. Also, I didn't think WA saw any totality this time?

  • @myladycasagrande863

    @myladycasagrande863

    2 ай бұрын

    @@wildflower1397 it's a reference to A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Those city names are the "magic words" he used to "cause" the eclipse (in the movie, anyway, not sure about the book).

  • @wildflower1397

    @wildflower1397

    Ай бұрын

    @@myladycasagrande863 OH, thanks!

  • @YAOES
    @YAOES2 ай бұрын

    Hey Hank?… what’s that book on your desk?

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @TeeganPlayz_8903

    @TeeganPlayz_8903

    Ай бұрын

    Look like a space kind of book I don't know I'm assuming it is

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    Ай бұрын

    He mentions in another video, that it's a foreign edition of one of his books!

  • @haloweenparty10000
    @haloweenparty10000Ай бұрын

    Unlike almost any other show I've watched, I wanted to cry when I heard Journey to the Microcosmos will stop producing videos. In a similar sense to your (Hank) feeling responsible for its ending, I wished I had realized it was struggling financially because I would have become a Patreon. Of course, that begs the question why I didn't become a Patreon in the first place, whether or not the show was struggling, when I loved it so much. I guess I took it's existence for granted. Thank you Hank and the rest of the Microcosmos team for making such incredible videos and opening my eyes to a world around me that I didn't understand before, it changed my life.

  • @marytereolivencia3119
    @marytereolivencia31192 ай бұрын

    As a microbiologist I loved journey to the microcosmos. I get to see the tiny world within us and around us on a daily basis. It’s sad to see it end but thank you for creating it even if it was for a short time. I’m sure people like me will keep discovering it and watching the tiny world within our planet.

  • @Jboggs30
    @Jboggs302 ай бұрын

    Observation: "Dot" looks more like a "Splat". Dot, connotatively, seems to imply a somewhat smooth, round outline. "Dot" has spokes or spikes. But then, "Splat" isn't very cute or cuddly. Thanks for 4 yrs of Journey/Microcosmos! And all things Complexly. You, and John, and the whole company make the world better. And what more can be asked of a person?

  • @michaelmicek

    @michaelmicek

    2 ай бұрын

    Maybe it's just that she's pretty sharp.

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    Dot enjoys styling their fit in unexpected ways! You go, Dot!

  • @joratto2833

    @joratto2833

    Ай бұрын

    Too much Kiki. Not enough Bouba.

  • @Meikulish
    @Meikulish2 ай бұрын

    I feel like eclipses might be freakier the older you are before experiencing one since you have more time to get used to the sky not doing that. I drove 24 hours for this one (worth) but I still don’t think I was as struck as a lot of the older people around me.

  • @smallm3nac3
    @smallm3nac3Ай бұрын

    We were in a park by one of the great lakes when it happened, and for that short period of time, we were all experiencing something new. I just remember someone yelling, "ONE HUNDRED PERCENT" and we all cheered as we watched in the dark.

  • @TheStumpyBrigade
    @TheStumpyBrigade2 ай бұрын

    On a larger scale (and smaller scale than an eclipse), it sometimes feels like the world as it is now is inevitable but the truth is that it was made by human choices. That means all the cruelty, inequality, and sadness are the result of choices people have made. But that also means that we can all choose to try and make things better for everyone! Wonderful insight as always Hank!

  • @dantelaw7759
    @dantelaw77592 ай бұрын

    Damn, this could have been a chapter from the Anthropocene Reviewed. Beautifully said. Microcosmos was and IS a beautiful, wonderful thing, and will remain here enriching the world for many years to come. Thank you 💛

  • @prongs4137
    @prongs41372 ай бұрын

    I loved Journey to the microcosmos so much that I watched the videos even tho it relentlessly triggered my contamination phobic OCD n made me squirm in psychic pain. Because the wonder of it all was worth it. Because of how well the videos are made. N I hope to enjoy the rest of the videos as they come out. I hope the channel and its contents stay on KZread forever. I hope y'all make nostalgic merch for it someday.

  • @prongs4137

    @prongs4137

    2 ай бұрын

    (Also because I love Hank's narrative voice with the bgm)🤭😋

  • @AnnikaOakinnA
    @AnnikaOakinnA2 ай бұрын

    Even knowing intellectually that the temperature would drop and it would get dark, having read people's experiences and descriptions -- I was still genuinely shocked by the experience when it happened. Like you said, 99% eclipsed is still pretty bright! Dimmer, but like late afternoon, or moderately cloudy. And then totality is just... DARK. You can see, but it feels UNNATURAL. The light is just wrong! I feel like I have a newfound appreciation for how powerful the sun is -- and how much we rely on it to make our planet work.

  • @ChadwickHorn
    @ChadwickHorn2 ай бұрын

    I drove up to Indianapolis from Kentucky and so glad I did. The day before and the day after, the weather was crap. The day of... you couldn't really have asked for better. This is like my 18th eclipse, and they get more and more magical the more I see them. I'll be going to Spain in 2026 for the next one.

  • @TKHaines
    @TKHaines2 ай бұрын

    I was going to be in Indy but changed plans to Greensburg instead. Had a great time watching the eclipse start, hit totality, and begin to end. And then I did a very human thing, while the eclipse wasn't completely over, I decided I had seen enough and left to go get eat.

  • @vlogbrothers

    @vlogbrothers

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh for sure...I missed the last fifteen minutes of occlusion at least...

  • @jkitty542
    @jkitty5422 ай бұрын

    Perhaps this goes without saying, but thank you Hank.

  • @kieranm7469
    @kieranm74692 ай бұрын

    Only started watching you in the last few months... never even heard of the Journey to the Microcosmos! Totally something i would have clicked on!

  • @geeksdo1tbetter

    @geeksdo1tbetter

    2 ай бұрын

    Welcome, DFTBA! (Don't Forget To Be Awesome)

  • @Ru_bles
    @Ru_bles2 ай бұрын

    Hank i fall asleep to the microcosmos videos all the time. They're so beautiful, and they remind me to love our world.

  • @Madamoizillion
    @Madamoizillion2 ай бұрын

    My partner and I flew to Indianapolis for the eclipse and watched it with the elephants at the zoo. The elephants didn't seem to do anything too different but I still got a possible answer to "What do elephants do during a solar eclipse?" But the lions started roaring as the light was dimming. It was so magical. It was longer and more intense than the 2017 eclipse???? I had my phone camera filming just to catch the crowd's reaction. It sounded like most of the people there, this was the first time they had seen one and being in a big group of people experiencing something extraordinary, many for whom this will be a once-in-a-lifetime event, is an indescribable feeling of human connection.

  • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721

    2 ай бұрын

    Elephants don't care. They're just going about their business.

  • @danielmullanewrites
    @danielmullanewrites2 ай бұрын

    MR GREEN! WHAT BOOK IS THAT ATTRIBUTED TO A "HANK GREEN" ON YOUR TABLE, THAT SAYS "THE A..."????

  • @danielmullanewrites

    @danielmullanewrites

    2 ай бұрын

    Also, very sorry for MicroCosmos. It's unfortunate that such an amazing series has to come to an end.

  • @zknight4481
    @zknight4481Ай бұрын

    I’m always amazed at how great Hank is at describing my own feelings when I’m not even capable of articulating it myself. The “Hey that’s not fair! I was looking at that” is so real for how I felt when the eclipse ended but I couldn’t quite put it into words. I think I watch these videos to not feel alone because Hank, especially, is really good at experiencing some aspect of the human condition that I assumed was a solitary experience of mine and then explaining it in a way that I wouldn’t have been able. Hearing the minuscule experiences articulated by someone else makes you feel less small and perhaps also too small at the same time.

  • @ValeriePallaoro

    @ValeriePallaoro

    Ай бұрын

    You’re right. I’ve had a year of cancer and you’re right. Hank is the inly one to explain it to people in a way that makes sense. The technology , science, medical expertise, the time, the feelings, the … the things? He makes it real. Even tho I was there and went through it, Hank makes it real. Gosh, he’s good.

  • @kaitlinsebbage2120
    @kaitlinsebbage2120Ай бұрын

    I keep finding out about channels when they're stopping! How did I not know Microcosmos existed! It's completely up my alley!

  • @batulkarim1482
    @batulkarim14822 ай бұрын

    Still mildly disappointed I didn’t get to witness a solar eclipse

  • @vlogbrothers

    @vlogbrothers

    2 ай бұрын

    Well I only got to see it for three and a half minutes, which is almost worse!!

  • @jbaby362

    @jbaby362

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@vlogbrothersI think that's where I would end up too; just a small taste. Will have to book one of the flights that follows the totality

  • @MarkThePage

    @MarkThePage

    2 ай бұрын

    I've heard, and am living, that seeing an eclipse will actually make you want to see another eclipse MORE.

  • @shakedownsanctuary

    @shakedownsanctuary

    2 ай бұрын

    @@MarkThePage yuuup, i went to canada to see this one, now i'm seriously considering going to iceland to see the next one. i rarely even leave my house. i think i might be an eclipse guy now lol.

  • @deborahlawrence680

    @deborahlawrence680

    2 ай бұрын

    @@vlogbrothersIceland 2026?

  • @sayntfuu
    @sayntfuu2 ай бұрын

    It's almost like you are backing up into faith there.

  • @vlogbrothers

    @vlogbrothers

    2 ай бұрын

    And yet somehow I am not!

  • @sayntfuu

    @sayntfuu

    2 ай бұрын

    @@vlogbrothers You'll get there eventually.

  • @awaredeshmukh3202

    @awaredeshmukh3202

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@vlogbrothers and even still it's an overwhelming and indescribable experience!!

  • @pinkcupcake4717
    @pinkcupcake47172 ай бұрын

    I was hyped for Hank's eclipse review. I was in tears from overwhelm and awe, it was so beautiful with how soft white-blue it was! I wasn't expecting how soft the light would be with the darkness around. Seeing Venus high in the sky and hearing distant cheers from neighbors was an awesome moment.

  • @RjWolf3000
    @RjWolf30002 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I felt the same thing. I also was sort of how surprised I was how little real description of totality I have seen. lots of "The sky is broken" "The sky looks different" and most of the video and photos are of the sun and through heavy filters that make all the pictures very different then what you actually see in real life.

  • @WhataMensch
    @WhataMensch2 ай бұрын

    Yeah hank and John rock. DFTBA and will you please make a video talking about your thoughts on the situation in the middle east as it will soon affect us all

  • @IDFpartyboi972

    @IDFpartyboi972

    2 ай бұрын

    Eclipse is cool but I want to hear about your thoughts on what is happening with the occupation

  • @Gwynbleidd503

    @Gwynbleidd503

    2 ай бұрын

    +

  • @IDFpartyboi972
    @IDFpartyboi9722 ай бұрын

    Eclipse is amazing and I want you to talk about the Mid East and what his happening there more though.

  • @WhataMensch

    @WhataMensch

    2 ай бұрын

    Do you think he has an opinion?DFTBA and express it Hank!

  • @TacticusPrime

    @TacticusPrime

    2 ай бұрын

    You mean John? It seems more like a thing that John would write something about.

  • @albertqhumperdinck
    @albertqhumperdinck2 ай бұрын

    The last few seconds of totality were SO poignant, and heartbreaking, I felt this sharp contrast between my intellect telling me, you have to stop looking now, get those glasses, if you dont stop looking right now things are going to be very bad, but also SO DESPERATELY NOT WANTING TO STOP LOOKING. I think it was the most real life mythological thing I will probably ever experience.

  • @AlexDings
    @AlexDings2 ай бұрын

    I was born in 1992 and am from Germany. We had a total solar eclipse in August 1999. So I got to see that when I was six (closing on seven) years old, and I must have filed that memory as something that everyone experiences sooner rather than later. I didn't realize at all that a science guy like Hank might never have experienced an eclipse at 43 years of age! As a kid it was of course mind-blowing, but I don't remember being spooked at all, I found it fascinating and amazing. I didn't actually get to see the sun, it was cloudy (my dad is a hobby astronomer and we drove around frantically in our car, but had no luck), but the sudden shadows and coolness were awe-inspiring enough.

  • @simonindia-sx4lu
    @simonindia-sx4luАй бұрын

    As a microbiologist, I loved having journey to the microcosmos as a tool to explain to people why I liked the field I was studying. Thank you for operating at a loss so we can have precious, accessible content to spark wonder at how cool life is.

  • @happycapy4
    @happycapy42 ай бұрын

    Goodbye, Microcosmos, you will be remembered.

  • @aarond9563
    @aarond95632 ай бұрын

    I didn't expect this video to be as special as it was. A really good point about inevitability.

  • @caringanddaring4006
    @caringanddaring40062 ай бұрын

    I'm getting ready to finish up my master's program, and I've been having a lot of feelings about it coming to an end. Thank you for this video, it helped a lot

  • @rolothomosky
    @rolothomosky2 ай бұрын

    I also went to Indianapolis to see the eclipse and was entirely overwhelmed by watchign the sky do something I've never seen before. It was so awe inspiring that I just felt complete joy and was smiling for a long time after.

  • @rosejuliette9180
    @rosejuliette91802 ай бұрын

    the idea that one of the most tallented and successful public educators of our time feels like a failure makes me feel very skeptical about if failure is a real thing or just a feeling we are determined to have from time to time.

  • @melbournewolf
    @melbournewolf2 ай бұрын

    Hank, it's amazing, it's soooo quiet, it's like the universe stops for a moment, that you can feel the earth turn under you, don't stop inspiring, either if you!

  • @soulcstudios
    @soulcstudios2 ай бұрын

    journey to the microcosmos got me into microscopes. I couldn't afford a new one, instead I've been hunting them down at goodwills and garage sales. I'm sad to hear that it's ending, but it isn't a failure. All things end eventually. I'm so grateful you took the financial risk on the project and I am sorry that it was a financial loss. But you put so many amazing videos out into the world! And the good that they have done and will continue to do can not be expressed in a profit / loss graph. Thank you so much for all your work Hank.

  • @sarahng5191
    @sarahng51912 ай бұрын

    Im forever grateful for the microcosmos videos. Definitely not a failure - thank you for making them exist in the first place. They're gonna be around for a long time and they're beautiful

  • @jeffreywilkinson9821
    @jeffreywilkinson98212 ай бұрын

    I too have been alive for 43 years. And I too am just in awe that the sky can do a whole new thing! I thought I knew what to expect but man was I wrong. The hole in the sky where the sun was supposed to be, the eerie yet wonderful re-lighting of the sky as if I was in the biggest planetarium ever, the light show that came from outside the planet, all totally unique and really mind-blowing. My brother and his fiancée came to meet us and I had a quality Bluetooth speaker, and right before and after totality, I played the wildest music I know of. What a wonderful thing that happened. I want to say, also, thanks for existing, Hank. I follow your channel but hsven't watched much. I am intigued to hear about this micocosmos thing and will check it out now! Thank you for your enthusiasm and dedication to your passions. ❤

  • @JeffinBville
    @JeffinBville2 ай бұрын

    I’m 66. I've seen my share of partial solar eclipses and full/partial lunar eclipses but never a total solar. So I drove 170 miles down into Indiana (howdy, folks!), found an abandoned church parking lot in the middle of *nowhere* and holy cannoli! I'm sure the farm half a mile away heard me screaming, HOLY SH*T! over and over again at totality. The sight of it is still in my head. And, I did wave toward Indy to say 'Hello'!

  • @IMakeupStuff
    @IMakeupStuff2 ай бұрын

    I had this feeling the first time i saw the mountains in Washington State. You can look at that and totally see how people may have thought that was as far as you could go in the world. And then it's awe inspiring to think about the first people who crossed them, not knowing what they'd find on the other side. Humans are weird and cool.