The Morning: To the moon
Gaining the insight of an astronaut.
The Morning
April 4, 2026

Good morning. We don’t have to travel to the moon to gain some of the insight that astronauts do.

In an illustration, two people and a cat float through a living room that lacks gravity. Earth and the moon can be seen out their window, implying they are in space.
María Jesús Contreras

Living space

Vacation photos: Instant postcards of you, your family, on the beach, or on skis, somewhere enviable. Snap the picture, post it or text it and you’ve cemented the experience — I am here right now, and now my friends and followers know, can ogle or envy or delight in my adventures. Even when we’re far away, we’re in constant contact, sending pictures, texts, voice memos, phone calls.

In a couple of days, the four astronauts of the Artemis II mission will fly by the far side of the moon, getting perspectives on the lunar surface that have never been observed by human eyes. And when the moon is between the spacecraft and Earth, the astronauts will be completely incommunicado for 30 to 50 minutes. No radio signals, no instructions from Mission Control, no transmissions of any kind. Once the astronauts pass beyond the moon’s visible edge, known as the lunar limb, they will be as far from Earth as humans have ever been, the least contactable people in the solar system.

Buzz Aldrin characterized the moon’s surface as “magnificent desolation.” Is there any desolation more profound to our 21st-century proclivities than a total communication blackout? While we may joke that we wish we could flee to some far-off island where no one can contact us, we know that we are always tethered to Earth, that we can get our phones from the hotel room if we need them. We may decide to be offline for a certain amount of time, but we’re in control of the duration. No matter how far we travel or how disconnected we feel, we are always grounded in certain constants: our weight on the earth, the blue sky above, twilight, the sound of the wind.

The Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen, part of the Artemis crew, said at a news conference this week that in the lead-up to the launch, he would go out at night and look up at the moon. “I really feel like, gosh, that is really far away,” he said. “And it just gives me great appreciation for it.” He gazed up at the moon as we all do, admiring its brightness, pondering its distance with his feet planted on the ground beneath him. But he moongazed with the knowledge that he would soon be seeing it up close, that the world as the rest of us know it is only part of the picture.

The change in perspective, the feeling of awe that people experience when they see Earth from space, is called the overview effect. Astronauts speak of recognizing the beauty of the planet, a feeling of interconnectedness, a deep understanding of Earth as home. These are insights we, forever terrestrial, may understand intellectually but have a hard time truly embodying. Christina Koch, another of the astronauts on the mission, described the phenomenon: “You don’t see borders, you don’t see religious lines, you don’t see political boundaries. All you see is Earth and you see that we are way more alike than we are different.”

The Artemis II astronauts are the first who’ve been permitted to bring smartphones into space. Will we see selfies at Earthrise, TikToks in zero gravity? And NASA has made it possible for anyone with an internet connection to track the crew, celestial Find My Friends. Even in outer space, the phone abides. Here’s hoping that the astronauts will be able to capture, whether with their cameras or their consciousness, some of the insight that the Apollo 9 astronaut Rusty Schweickart described experiencing when he looked at Earth from space:

You realize that on that small spot, that little blue and white thing, is everything that means anything to you. All of history and music and poetry and art and war and death and birth and love, tears, joy, games — all of it on that little spot out there that you can cover with your thumb. And you realize that that perspective has — that you’ve changed. That there’s something new there. That relationship is no longer what it was.

What’s good today?

One of the best parts of putting together the Good List newsletter each week is hearing how readers are finding joy and meaning in their lives. Sarah Morford of Fort Worth, Texas, wrote:

Last year, my 8-year-old son was diagnosed with acute leukemia. My friends decided that asking me “How are you?” was just straight-up banned. My friend Tricia replaced it with, “What’s good today?” It stuck. To this day, one year later, we still say, “What’s good today?” It’s how I frame my conversations with my friends, how I share my day on social media, and it has shaped my thinking. Even on my darkest, lowest days, I could find something good. Sometimes, that was three minutes of sunshine on my shoulders, or a hot coffee, or a hug, or a preferred nurse, or that he was still here; sometimes, it was way better. What’s good today, April 1st? A year of remission. Crawling roses on the fence. A smoothie for my dog. A glass of crisp rosé. Falling asleep in a house with everyone under its roof.

Sign up for The Good List here.

THE LATEST NEWS

War in Iran

An F-15E Strike Eagle jet fighter on the ground as a service member pushes a cart in front it.
An F-15E Strike Eagle, the type of plane shot down in Iran. Maya Alleruzzo/Associated Press
  • Iran shot down an F-15E fighter jet, its first takedown of an American warplane since the war began. The U.S. rescued one of the jet’s two crew members; both the U.S. and Iran continue to search for the other airman.
  • A Black Hawk helicopter assisting in the rescue was hit by ground fire but was able to keep flying. And another U.S. warplane, an A-10 Warthog, crashed at about the same time as the fighter jet; its pilot was safely rescued.
  • Iran is quickly repairing missile bunkers, intelligence reports say, sometimes bringing them back into service just hours after they’re bombed.

Trump’s Budget Proposal

Other Big Stories

The entire globe of Earth seen in space.
Reid Wiseman/NASA, via Associated Press

THE WEEK IN CULTURE

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Yoshi, Mario and Luigi stand confidently in a colorful bedroom. Mario points upward holding a pink gift box.
Nintendo and Illumination/Universal

It was inevitable that there would be a sequel to “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” which earned over $1.3 billion at the global box office in 2023. Less certain was whether that sequel would be any good. Here’s what our critic, Alissa Wilkinson, thinks of the new installment:

The best moments come whenever the characters land on a new planet or enter a new environment. That’s when the animators at Illumination (responsible for unleashing the Minions upon society) let their imaginations loose.

But she adds:

Still, there’s a flat empty nothingness to “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” even more than its flat empty predecessor, and that’s a huge bummer. Even the children in my screening were strangely quiet for longer stretches than I expected.

Read the full review.

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A bready, cheesy casserole in a white dish, garnished with green leaves.
Romulo Yanes for The New York Times

Croque-Monsieur Breakfast Casserole

Easter is tomorrow! If you’re still looking for something to make for a celebratory brunch, Sarah Copeland’s croque-monsieur breakfast casserole is a burnished, custardy beauty, filled with sliced baguettes, ham and a gooey topping of Gruyère cheese. It’s quick to assemble, too, and can easily be done the night before (tonight). Then tomorrow, you can help the Easter Bunny hide eggs while the casserole bakes and let its nutty, cheesy scent greet your loved ones when they arrive at the table.

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A grid of four photos. The top left shows a man and woman, her in a purple top and him in a flannel. The other images show two-story homes.
Lexa Walsh and Daniel Nelson. Kate Warren for The New York Times

The Hunt: Looking for a quieter life in an arts community, a couple left Oakland, Calif., for New York’s Hudson Valley. What house did they choose? Play our game.

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Gathering space: Conversation pits, also known as sunken living rooms, appear in many styles in these homes — built as far back as 1878 and as recently as 2021.

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A cluster of flowers photographed from the side with a bee flying above them.
The bloodroot plant. Shutterstock

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ADVICE FROM WIRECUTTER

Colorful sneakers arranged on a beige background.
Marki Williams/NYT Wirecutter

Wear-anywhere sneakers

A sleek, timeless sneaker can look just as polished as — and feel far more comfortable than — a pair of flats. This is the litmus test I used when I considered more than 50 pairs of chic sneakers for our brand-new guide. Ultimately, I found eight superb pairs that look cool but are still practical enough to tackle a 10,000-step day. Consider styling a lithe silhouette with pooling wide-leg pants or slinky midi skirts for elevated jaunts around town. For a day at the office, try a sleek leather pair with tailored trousers, cigarette jeans or slim pants. It’s sneaker season, at last. — Zoe Vanderweide

GAME OF THE WEEK

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