Astronaut Whose Return to Earth Keeps Getting Delayed Says She's Been 'Trying to Remember What It’s Like to Walk'

Suni Williams made some candid comments about her extended stay in space while on a call with students from Needham High School

NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test Pilot Suni Williams greets people as she walks out of the Operations and Checkout Building on June 01, 2024 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Williams, along with Commander Butch Wilmore, is heading to Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which sits atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket at Space Launch Complex 41 for NASA's Boeing crew flight test to the International Space Station.
NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test Pilot Suni Williams greets people as she walks out of the Operations and Checkout Building on June 01, 2024 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Williams, along with Commander Butch Wilmore, is heading to Boeing's Starliner spacecraft, which sits atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket at Space Launch Complex 41 for NASA's Boeing crew flight test to the International Space Station. . Photo:

Joe Raedle/Getty

Astronaut Suni Williams, who has been stuck in space since June, is opening up about some of the things she hasn't done in months.

Speaking with students at Needham High School from the International Space Station (ISS) on Monday, Jan. 27, Williams opened up about life in the space station, according to CBS affiliate WBZ-TV.

"I've been up here long enough right now I've been trying to remember what it's like to walk," the Needham native told the students. “I haven't walked. I haven't sat down. I haven't laid down. You don't have to. You can just close your eyes and float where you are right here."

Williams, 59, and fellow NASA astronaut Butch Wilmore, 61, have been at the ISS since June 2024 after their spacecraft experienced mechanical issues and was eventually sent back home without them.

Williams also told students her extended time in space came as “a little bit of a shock."

"We knew that it would be probably a month or so, honestly. But the extended stay was just a little bit different,” she explained, according to WBZ-TV.

Suni Williams, Expedition 72 flight engineer and commander, pose for a fun holiday season portrait while speaking on a ham radio inside the International Space Station’s Columbus laboratory module.
Suni Williams, Expedition 72 flight engineer and commander, pose for a fun holiday season portrait while speaking on a ham radio inside the International Space Station’s Columbus laboratory module.

NASA

Currently, Williams and Wilmore are expected to return to Earth in the spring. In December 2024, NASA announced that the spacecraft that will bring them home won’t be ready to launch until “no earlier than late March 2025.”

The pair of astronauts have celebrated multiple holidays in space, including Thanksgiving and Christmas — and in January, Williams went for her first spacewalk since arriving at the ISS months prior.

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Williams and Wilmore even voted in the 2024 U.S. elections from space, a process that NASA made "very easy," according to Wilmore.

The Dragon capsule that will take Williams and Wilmore home arrived at the ISS in late September 2024.

A handout picture made available by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) on 24 August 2024 shows NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts (from top) Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams posing for a portrait inside the vestibule between the forward port on the International Space Station's Harmony module and Boeing's Starliner spacecraft on 13 June 2024. NASA announced on 24 August that it will return Boeing's Starliner to Earth without astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams aboard the spacecraft. The Starliner is expected to depart from the space station and make a 'controlled autonomous re-entry and landing' in early September. The agency said the uncrewed return will allow it and Boeing to continue gathering testing data on Starliner during its upcoming flight home. Wilmore and Williams flew to the ISS in June aboard NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test. The two astronauts will continue their work as part of the Expedition 71/72 crew through February 2025 and fly home aboard a Dragon spacecraft with two other crew members assigned to the agency's SpaceX Crew-9 mission, NASA added.
NASA's Boeing Crew Flight Test astronauts (from top) Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams.

NASA HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

NASA previously said it is working with SpaceX to "complete processing” on the Dragon spacecraft for the mission. 

“We appreciate the hard work by the SpaceX team to expand the Dragon fleet in support of our missions and the flexibility of the station program and expedition crews as we work together to complete the new capsule’s readiness for flight,” Steve Stich, manager of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, said in a statement in December 2024.

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