đ The First Yeet (and the Catcherâs Struggle)
The day we decided to stop only dreaming and actually throw something that shouldnât fly, we crossed a line. This is the honest storyâloud, human, and preciseâof the first arc, the vow to learn catching, and the quiet culture guiding us from spectacle to civilization.
đŹ The Day the Air Learned Our Name
Dawn was all breath and wire. Tea in paper cups, hands black with graphite and pride. The rails sat there like a question, a dark underline drawn across the ground. We ran through checklists for the twentieth time, the way you do when the truth is close enough to touch. The machine didnât feel finished; it felt honestâexposed steel and singleâpurpose bolts, the kind of build where every part tells you exactly why it exists.
The machine is crude, loud, and probably over-engineered in one direction but under-engineered in three others. The first payload is flungâmaybe a steel block with sensors. It wobbles, overheats, rattles, but flies. Everyone cheers. A catch system isnât ready yet, so the payload crashes, burns, or gets lost in the void. Itâs the âWright Flyerâ moment of orbital yeeting.
That was our moment. The pod leapt, and the world briefly returned to first principles: force, heat, time. The sound was not so much heard as worn; a jacket of vibration around chest and teeth. A glitter of dust lifted, and the air drew a white pencil line after the pod as if to keep track.
We had calculated dispersion. The pod did not read our math. It wandered a little; it taught us a lot. The telemetry later told the story in tidy graphs, but in the moment the only instrument that mattered was a human shout that sounds like joy. We pretended to be calm. We were not calm.
Impact? Not a catchâyet. Recovery looked like a search party and a prayer. We found mangled foam, hot metal, a beacon blinking its small, defiant heartbeat. Nothing about the wreckage felt like failure. It felt like tuition.
đ§ The Vow to Catch
Throwing is a dare. Catching is a promise. The promise says: we will turn momentum into a handshake. That promise starts on Earth with nets and membranes but points toward orbit, where catchers become villages, and villages become factories that make more villages. If the first yeet was a neon flare fired into the future, the catcher is the futureâs answer: I heard you.
We sketched three families of catching ideas on whiteboards gone gray with ghosts of old calculations:
- Softâcatch stacks: layered membranes and crush structures that trade peak g for timeâlike landing on a moving pillow made of math.
- Magnetic assist: conductive geometries that invite eddy currents to do their silent braking dance before the first touch.
- Active geometry: frames and cups that move to meet the pod where it will be, not where it wasâbecause prediction beats reaction.
We donât sell magic. We build trust. Trust is repetition plus transparency. So we set a cadence: low energy throws, careful notes, quicker iterations, and a kind of courage thatâs patient.
đą Culture: Why Build at All?
Because the point isnât a single heroic throw. The point is a civilizationâscale circulatory system that moves mass and meaning between worlds. It is also quieter, more personal: we want to prove that invention can run on careâ that a lab can sit beside a forest and both can thrive. The same intention that guides a healerâs hands can guide a welderâs bead. You can feel it in how we tidy the workspace after a long day, how we check on each other, how we talk to metal as if it listens.
The arc weâre drawing is not only ballistic. Itâs social. Dignity in the build. Respect for risk. Radical honesty in data. And an insistence that the future is not just fasterâitâs kinder.
đ ď¸ What We Built (Phase 1)
The goal of Phase 1 is simple to state, hard to earn: demonstrate controlled, repeatable throws with instrumented pods, while gathering the kind of data that makes future catching possible.
The Thrower
- Pulseâfriendly power with safe charge, discharge, and emergency dump paths.
- Alignment that can be measured and trusted (fiducials, jigs, tolerances you can defend).
- Duty cycles that respect heat, materials, and neighbors.
The Pod
- Rugged shell and shock frame; survives learningârate impacts.
- Telemetry as firstâclass citizen: acceleration, temperature, power timestamping.
- Passive stabilization now; room for active control later.
The Brain
- Timeâcoherent logs across sensors (if it isnât measured, it didnât happen).
- Predictive targeting that admits uncertainty and learns each run.
- Clear abort states; drills that make them muscle memory.
đĽ What Broke & What We Learned
- Alignment ghosts: Micrometers matter; we built better jigs and learned to love shims.
- Thermal spikes: Models whispered; reality shouted. We added sinks, changed cadence, and instrumented the quiet parts.
- Vibration harmonics: Some notes shake bolts free. We retuned stiffness and added damping in the right places.
- Human factors: Fatigue is physics. Shorter runs, clearer roles, more water, better signage.
Every rattle is a report. Listen carefully and redesign.
đ¸ď¸ The Catcherâs Struggle (Phase 2 Begins)
We frame catching as a choreography problem: arrive with the right softness, in the right place, at the right time. Hereâs the loop we practice:
Thrower â â Arc Prediction ⡠â Catcher
â Ⲡâ
âââ Telemetry ââââ´ââ Control Loop ââ
Early wins will be humble: dropârig tests, cartâandânet trials, staged damping stacks that turn ugly impacts into readable curves. Then we go dynamicâmoving catchers that meet the pod midâpath and bleed speed with grace.
đ Numbers That Matter (Targets)
These arenât trophy stats. Theyâre guardrails we can test and publish.
What We Log Every Run
- Timeâstamped power profile and duty cycle
- Acceleration envelope and thermal snapshot
- Predicted vs. observed trajectory dispersion
- Postâevent inspection notes (fast, honest, shared)
đ§ Now / Next / Later
Now
- Repeatable lowâenergy throws
- Pod telemetry with quickâturn reviews
- Baseline softâcatch drop tests
Next
- Active catcher motion sync
- Closedâloop targeting improvements
- First endâtoâend throwâandâcatch demo
Later
- Orbital relay node simulations
- Energy recovery on catch
- Path to Phase 3 precision ops
đ¤ Join the Build
This is a collective reality. If you feel the tugâwhether youâre an engineer, artist, healer, storyteller, teacher, or sponsorâthereâs a seat at this table and work that matters with your name on it.
Adopt a Subsystem
- Controls & Autonomy: tracking, prediction, closedâloop control.
- Materials & Catch: staged damping, fatigue, inspection protocols.
- Data & Telemetry: logging, visualization, public dashboards.
- Operations & Safety: procedures, drills, audits, range coordination.
Support the Build
- Fund a prototype: accelerate safe testing and publish the results.
- Provide workspace/tools: labs, ranges, sensors, highâspeed cameras.
- Tell the story: docs, videos, classrooms, translations.
Culture & Care
Weâre weaving engineering with wellbeingâyour vision of a healingâfirst university in nature and, someday, in orbit. Curiosity, care, and courage are our operating system.
đĄď¸ Safety, Ethics & Stewardship
Highâenergy systems can be dangerous. We publish concepts and cultureânot instructions to replicate. All tests are conducted by trained teams under controlled conditions and applicable laws. We prioritize transparency, environmental care, debris minimization, and longâterm stewardship over speed. If a design canât be made safe, it doesnât ship.
â Tiny FAQ
Is this replacing rockets?
No. Rockets are incredible. Weâre building a complementary logistics layer that pairs ground throwers with orbital catchers to move certain payloads more often and more affordably.
When will we see a full throwâandâcatch?
As Phase 2 matures safely. We share honest progress; there are no shortcuts on safety or verification.
How can my lab or company collaborate?
Start with a subsystem. We love coâdevelopment MoUs, test ranges, and shared data.
How does the healing/education vision fit?
Engineering is culture. Weâre designing spaces where people can build, learn, and healâon Earth and, one day, in orbit. Craft and care move together.