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Charlie Duke

Episode: 73

Twelve people in history have ever walked on the moon. Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we’re joined by one of them. Charlie Duke served as the Lunar Module Pilot for Apollo 16 and became the tenth person to walk on the moon. In this episode, Charlie shares what it was like to be part of one of the most extraordinary missions in human history, but explains that his life was changed far more by what happened after he returned to Earth.

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Eating Astronaut Food

0:00
What was it like eating astronaut food

0:02
on the moon and and like you see all the

0:04
videos of it. Was that just a crazy

0:06
experience for you? On the moon it was

0:09
even worse because we had no hot water.

Introducing Charlie Duke

0:17
12 people in history have ever walked on

0:19
the moon. Today we're speaking with the

0:22
10th person to do so and still the

0:24
youngest person to ever do it, Charlie

0:26
Duke. Charlie was the lunar module pilot

0:28
on Apollo 16, one of NASA's final moon

0:31
landings. He also played a critical role

0:33
in helping others get there. Charlie

0:35
served as the capsule communicator for

0:37
Apollo 10 and Apollo 11. He was the

0:40
astronaut in mission control, speaking

0:42
directly with Neil Armstrong and Buzz

0:44
Aldrin when they landed on the moon.

Charlie's Apollo Contributions

0:46
Charlie played key roles in five Apollo

0:48
missions, including Apollo 13, where the

0:51
lunar module was used as a lifeboat to

0:53
slingshot the crew around the moon and

0:55
return them safely to Earth. Join us as

0:58
Charlie reflects on humanity's most

0:59
ambitious endeavors, addresses the

0:01:01
questions people still ask about the

0:01:03
moon landing, and explains why his life

0:01:05
was changed far more by what happened

0:01:07
after he returned to Earth.

Welcome Charlie Duke

0:10
Charlie, thank you for joining us on the

0:12
Servant Leadership Podcast.

0:14
It's great to be with you, Chris.

0:15
looking forward to this interview.

Charlie's Journey to Astronaut

0:17
I I am so excited. Uh it's not every day

0:20
that you get to talk to one of the very

0:22
few people in history who have ever

0:24
walked on the moon. This is such an

0:26
honor. I'm curious, what was your

0:28
journey like to actually become an

0:30
astronaut?

0:32
Well, I started out at the Naval Academy

0:35
uh and graduated in 1957.

0:38
Uh I wanted to fly airplanes but I

0:41
didn't qualify for naval aviation but

0:43
the air force took me and I became a

0:46
fighter pilot and then a test pilot and

0:49
uh after 1965

0:53
when I graduated from test pilot school

0:55
I saw an article in the paper said

0:57
NASA's looking for more astronauts

0:59
please apply. So, uh, I went through the

0:02:02
Air Force channels and applied and was

0:06
selected, uh, uh, and, uh, we I started

0:10
out with a group of, uh, 18 other guys

0:12
and, uh, a April 196,

0:16
let's see, it was 1966.

Apollo Mission Involvement

0:19
Uh, and was astronaut for 10 years. Uh,

0:22
worked mostly on Apollo.

0:25
uh and was involved in uh let's see five

0:29
of the uh six missions. No, we had nine

0:33
missions to the moon. So I worked on

0:34
five of them but flew on Apollo 16 was

0:37
the 10th man to walk step onto the moon.

Apollo 11 Capcom Role

0:41
Wow. And you had a pivotal role in

0:44
Apollo 11. How did that come about?

0:48
Well, I was uh what was called Capcom. I

0:51
was back in Apollo. We had three crews.

0:54
We had a uh prime crew who was going to

0:57
fly the mission. We had a backup crew

0:59
that would take their place if they

0:01
couldn't make it. And then we had a

0:03
support crew. And the support crew were

0:06
the gophers. You know, you go do this,

0:08
you go do that, you take care of

0:10
everything. And as a result of that, I

0:12
was Capcom for Apollo 10. First time we

0:16
took the uh lunar module to the moon.

0:19
And Capcom is the guy in mission

0:21
control, always an astronaut, who talks

0:25
to the crew uh when they're in flight.

Mission Control Communication

0:29
It's the only B person in mission

0:30
control can actually transmit uh uh

0:34
information and talk to the I mean

0:37
actually speak to the crew. So I was uh

0:41
did that on Apollo 10 and it went so

0:44
well that Neil Armstrong asked me said,

0:46
"Well, Charlie, why don't you do the

0:47
same thing on Apollo 11?" I said, "Well,

0:50
that'd be a great honor. I'd be happy to

0:52
do that for you." So that's how he asked

0:55
me to do it. And so that's how it turned

0:57
out.

Witnessing Apollo 11 Landing

0:58
Wow. when when Neil Armstrong and Buzz

1:01
Aldrin stepped on the moon for the first

1:03
time, what was going through your mind

1:06
after walking them through it for the

1:08
last few days before that and talking to

1:10
them so consistently? Well, I was uh our

1:14
shift was on duty when they landed. Uh

1:18
and uh we were uh uh you know uh you can

1:23
listen to the landing and transmission

1:25
and and and I heard Buzz Aldron say

1:28
contact engine stop and we were within

1:31
30 seconds of calling them on abort. Uh

1:35
they were running out of gas and so uh

1:38
when I heard Buzz Alder say contact

1:41
engine stop I knew they were on the

1:43
ground and Neil came back and says uh

1:45
Eagle Tranquility base here the Eagle

1:47
has landed and that's when I got

1:49
excited. I couldn't even pronounce

1:51
Tranquility. it came out twang

1:55
and I corrected myself but anyway uh so

1:58
they were on the ground but then we went

2:00
off duty our shift and another group so

2:05
when actually he actually stepped on the

2:07
moon I was at home watching on TV with

2:10
my family it's like 10 11:00 at night if

2:13
I recall and so I his first steps was uh

2:17
I just was wow just sit watching like

2:21
billion other people uh that first step

2:24
onto the moon.

Servant Leadership Insights

2:26
Wow. What we talk a lot on this podcast

2:29
about servant leadership.

2:31
What did you learn in that process up

2:34
through Apollo 11 and working with Neil

2:36
and Buzz about servant leadership and

2:38
just working for NASA in general?

2:41
Well, I uh I think when servant

2:43
leadership is is to me uh you get a task

2:48
and you uh do it to the best of your

2:51
ability to serve everybody else. Uh

2:54
Capcom and support crew is to help the

2:58
prime crew get ready uh to launch and

3:01
then it uh that's the support crew side

3:04
of it. And then the Capcom side is to

3:07
learn and train and be there uh in

3:09
mission control and do something that's

3:12
um don't make a mistake. You know,

3:14
listen carefully to the flight director,

3:17
listen to everybody else, talk listen to

3:19
the crew, and you got to stay focused.

3:22
And uh and we did that with uh training

3:26
uh in um in mission control. We we'd

3:29
link up with the crew in the simulator

3:32
and all the team would be in mission

3:34
control. So we'd practice the landing,

3:36
we would practice the rendevous, we

3:39
would practice

3:41
uh all of that stuff and so it was

3:44
necessary and uh you got really good at

3:46
it. And so uh we were very confident

3:49
when the actual

Training and Simulations

3:53
flight came because you know it's not

3:55
not something that you say well we've

3:57
never done this before. Uh but because

3:59
we had practice and practice and

4:01
practice and uh you know in in the

4:04
simulations we crashed a couple of times

4:06
and uh we couldn't lift off a couple of

4:09
times and so you get used to

4:12
understanding the the the problems that

4:16
could could arise and uh you're trained

4:19
to respond in a in um uh expeditious and

4:24
a correct manner.

Simulation vs. Reality

4:26
How accurate was the practice compared

4:28
to what actually reality was like?

4:31
Because there surely had to be some

4:32
differences, right?

4:34
Well, it simulations were really pretty

4:36
good. Uh and yeah and uh they were a

4:40
simulator at Kennedy Space Center and we

4:42
were in mission control and we were tied

4:44
together by telephone and uh we do uh

4:48
various uh scenarios and we had a person

4:52
called Sim Soup and the simulator soup

4:56
he would say okay on this session we're

4:58
going to practice this and so we we'd

5:01
agree all to the schedule and uh so we'd

5:04
practice landing or we'd practice lift a

5:06
rendevous school and we'd practice

5:07
whatever. And um so uh we knew what was

5:12
coming. Uh we knew that uh the

5:15
simulation was going to be about landing

5:18
uh for instance. And so we would get

5:20
involved in very various uh different

5:23
scenarios and problems would come up.

5:26
How do you respond to the problems?

5:28
Sometimes we crash, sometimes we made

5:30
it. And so when we got through with the

5:33
simulation, we'd have a debriefing.

5:35
Okay, this is what we you should have

5:37
done and this is what you didn't do or

5:40
this is what you you did do and

5:42
shouldn't do. You know, you go over it

5:44
all. So, you got really really good at

5:46
at understanding procedures and the

5:49
ability of of what the crew could do and

5:52
the spacecraft could do and everything

5:53
like that.

Continuing Moon Missions

5:55
Wow. So, with Apollo 11, I understand

5:58
the race to the moon and and the push to

6:01
do that. What was the drive to keep

6:03
going back multiple times after?

6:06
Well, we'd spent a lot of money on

6:08
Apollo and nobody knew that Apollo 11

6:10
was going to be successful. Uh and uh we

6:13
had uh simulator, we had spacecraft

6:17
ready. Uh we had uh uh uh different

6:21
areas of the moon we wanted to explore.

6:24
uh and all of that uh was uh let's go

6:28
learn more about the moon and let's

6:30
spend the money uh on the missions uh

6:33
that we had planned and um and and bring

6:37
back all of the uh information we can

6:40
from the moon. You can't you know each

6:42
area of the moon is slightly different.

6:44
Uh for instance, our landing spot was in

6:46
the mountains of the moon about 8,000 ft

6:49
above where Neil Armstrong landed. Well,

6:52
the rocks were different and terrain was

6:54
different and so uh it took four or five

6:58
missions uh let's see it was five

7:01
landings and uh no six landings uh on

7:05
the moon and uh and then at that point

7:09
we had gained so much knowledge uh that

7:12
NASA cancelled the last three missions

7:14
Apollo moon landings were very very

7:17
successful and so they canled the last

7:19
couple of missions because they were

7:20
running out of things to too.

Apollo 16 Opportunity

7:23
Well, at after Apollo 11, correct me if

7:27
I'm wrong, but I don't think you had any

7:29
idea that you would be on Apollo 16 at

7:31
that point. How did it come up that you

7:33
ended up on Apollo 16?

7:36
Well, uh, with being involved in um, uh,

7:40
mission control on uh, Capcom on Apollo

7:43
10 and 11, uh, I got put on the backup,

7:46
not the backup crew, but the uh, yeah,

7:48
the backup crew for Apollo 13.

7:51
And so generally it was a support crew

7:55
role and then a backup role and then a

7:58
prime crew role uh three flights later.

8:00
So uh after 11 I was selected a backup

8:04
for Apollo 13 and um and was uh uh

8:10
helped a lot with the um uh recovery

8:15
when they had the explosion uh on the

8:18
way to the moon. And uh fortunately we

8:21
still had the lunar module and we use

8:23
that as a lifeboat if you will to swing

8:26
them around the moon and bring them back

8:27
safely. Uh it was a tremendous uh task

8:33
for mission control. And you know you

8:36
had a spacecraft that was the lifeboat.

8:38
The lunar module was built for um two

8:41
guys for three days. Now we got three

8:44
guys three guys for four days. How do

8:47
you make it last? uh the electrical

8:50
power, the water, drinking water, all of

8:53
those things we had to ration. We had to

8:56
we had batteries, so we had to make sure

8:58
the batteries didn't give out. So, all

9:01
of that took a real effort on the part

9:03
of uh mission control to uh figure it

9:07
all out. So we did and uh everything

9:10
lasted till re-entry and they abandoned

9:13
the uh spacecraft and uh the lunar

9:16
module and got into the command module

9:18
and powered it up and the batteries uh

9:22
were good and the lunar and the command

9:25
module and so you could use it to

9:27
re-enter but you couldn't use it to come

9:29
back home in because the battery the

9:32
electrical power was gone except for an

9:34
8h hour battery and you had to save that

9:36
8 hour battery for re-entry. That's why

9:39
we had to make sure that the lunar

9:41
module was going to work for uh 4 days.

Apollo 13 Movie Accuracy

9:46
Wow. What when you saw the Tom Hanks

9:50
movie for Apollo 13, I'm guessing you've

9:53
seen that. Did you feel like it was

9:54
accurate, not accurate? I mean, because

9:56
you kind of were living a lot of that.

9:59
We saw a a special showing of it. uh uh

10:03
about 250 of us who actually did it and

10:07
uh and they were watching this. It was

10:09
the first showing of this movie at a

10:11
special uh theater in uh Houston and uh

10:14
Tom Hanks was there and they came he and

10:17
Ron Howard came out and they were really

10:19
really nervous. They said now everybody

10:21
remember this is not a documentary it's

10:23
a movie and so uh we watched it and it

10:27
was really good. And after it was over,

10:29
I told Tom, I said, uh, Tom said, "I

10:32
knew how it was coming, going to come

10:34
out, and I was sitting on the edge of my

10:35
seat. Y'all did a great job."

Apollo 16 Landing

10:38
Oh, that's awesome. So, on Apollo 16,

10:43
you became the 10th youngest person or

10:46
or the 10th person and the youngest

10:47
person to walk on the moon. What were

10:50
you thinking when you guys touched

10:52
ground?

10:54
Well, it was uh I can't say I said

10:58
hallelujah, but it was uh we're finally

11:00
here, Houston. So, we were six hours

11:02
late landing and it was the last it was

11:05
the last revolution of our or when I say

11:09
revolution, our orbit, the last

11:12
opportunity that we had that we could

11:14
steer back to our landing site. If we'

11:17
have delayed another two hours, we'd

11:19
have had an abort and had to come home.

11:22
So mission control saved the day and

11:24
gave us uh fixed a problem that was uh

11:26
not fixed it but they worked around a

11:28
problem with any other spacecraft uh

11:31
that was troubling them. And so we gave

11:34
us a landing, but it was 6 hours late

11:36
landing. And so,

11:39
uh, it was very, very exciting when they

11:41
gave us a go for landing, of course. I

11:44
mean, we trained for 2 years. And, uh,

11:47
and to be, you know, 8 miles above your

11:50
landing spot and somebody says come

11:52
home, uh, would been a bit bitter pill

11:56
to swallow. So, uh I thank um uh was so

12:00
very thankful for mission control and

12:02
their uh decision making. Uh the flight

12:08
director was um Jerry Griffin and he

12:11
made the decision to give us a goal for

12:14
landing. Uh I mean all the top dogs at

12:18
NASA were there, the administrator was

12:20
there and mission control and uh Chris

12:22
Craft the center director and all of the

12:24
these famous guys, all the management

12:28
and the decision came down to the flight

12:30
director. says Chris Craft. I saw later

12:33
on I saw Chris Craft in mission control

12:36
and and um he had a habit of scratching

12:40
his hand and uh he said uh uh to Jerry

12:44
Griffin he says okay Jerry it's your

12:46
decision whatever you want to do. Jerry

12:48
said, "We'll go." And

12:51
and uh so I didn't, you know, I didn't

12:54
realize all that discussion until after

12:56
I got back. But uh uh we were just

12:59
floating around waiting, waiting,

13:00
waiting, waiting. And u then they said,

13:03
"Okay, you we we fixed the other. We

13:06
couldn't fix the other problem, but we

13:07
got a workaround." And so you guys are

13:10
go for landing on the next rail. So

13:12
wow.

First Steps on the Moon

13:12
Down we down we went. So, I know you

13:15
were there to do real work, but when you

13:18
actually stepped foot on the moon for

13:20
the first time yourself and John Young's

13:22
there and you guys are talking, were you

13:25
guys just in absolute disbelief? I mean,

13:27
or were you just so confident that you

13:30
would make it?

13:31
Uh, we weren't in disbelief, but we were

13:34
in awe, I should say. Uh, I'm on the

13:36
moon. You you and we had trained for our

13:40
landing site. We knew the major features

13:43
of our landing site and so uh we um

13:48
um we recognized Stone Mountain and we

13:52
recognized the major craters and the

13:54
various places. Oh, sorry about dropped

13:57
my phone here. Uh we and we recognized

14:01
so we we felt right at home. We had

14:03
trained for this and studied these

14:06
photographs and terrain all for two

14:10
years and so we were very it was like

14:13
being home again. Uh yeah, I've been

14:15
there before from all the training we

14:17
did.

Using the Lunar Rover

14:18
One thing that you guys had that a lot

14:20
of Apollo missions didn't have was you

14:22
also had a rover, right? Where you could

14:24
kind of drive around for a little bit.

14:26
Is that is that accurate? And what was

14:28
that like?

14:29
Well, uh it re the rover uh was the last

14:32
three missions. So Apollo 6 16 was the

14:36
second to have the rover and it really

14:38
revolutionized

14:40
uh the rover revolutionized lunar

14:42
exploration. Uh you could drive out four

14:46
or five miles and do geology. Whereas

14:50
before the rover you walked and you

14:52
never were able to walk more than four

14:54
or 500 meters away from where you

14:56
landed. And so uh uh walking and

14:01
collecting rocks and dragging them back

14:03
to the rover was I mean the lunar module

14:05
was very difficult. But with the rover

14:08
you could load up and you know could

14:10
have 50 60 lbs of rock on the back of

14:13
the rover and uh you drive all over four

14:16
or five miles. you you you you did a big

14:20
circle, if you will, a big loop uh in

14:23
exploration and every uh of the three

14:27
excursions we did, they were all in

14:29
different directions. So, uh uh we you

14:32
could just cover the whole landing spot

14:35
with the rover and it really uh was an

14:38
outstanding u machine. it. You never

14:43
worried about getting stranded. Uh and

14:46
uh and the and the uh rover. Uh and so

14:50
the last three missions with the rover

14:52
collected by far the biggest majority of

14:55
the rocks uh that we brought back from

14:58
the moon.

Notable Lunar Discoveries

14:59
What What was the And maybe there is

15:02
nothing, but was there anything that you

15:03
found up there in terms of rocks or

15:05
other things that you were like, "Wow,

15:07
I'm really proud of that one thing that

15:09
we found." or was there anything that

15:11
really stood out to you as extra

15:12
notable?

15:14
Well, one uh

15:16
yeah, the we call it a the biggest rock

15:20
we got weighed down here about 20

15:22
pounds. And uh it was a big sample ever

15:25
bought back from the moon. And uh we

15:27
called it the the our chief geologist

15:30
was a guy named Bill Mullberger who

15:33
headed a geology department of Texas at

15:36
the time. And uh we called it big muy.

15:40
He said, "Pick up that rock." And he

15:42
told us to pick it up. I said, "You sure

15:43
you want that rock? It's so big as a

15:45
watermelon." "Yeah, pick it up. Pick it

15:47
up." So it was so big I couldn't get my

15:52
hands around it. So I had to go down

15:54
sort of down into a crater a little bit.

15:57
So to get the rock closer and I had to

16:00
roll it up my leg uh and carry it like a

16:03
baby uh till I got back to the lunar

16:06
module. And uh it was all it was the

16:10
biggest rock we ever brought back. And

16:12
uh uh the rocks where we landed were

16:15
supposed to be volcanic but most of them

16:17
were not. So they were very excited

16:20
about the uh uh lunar highlands rock

16:23
where we landed was unique that they'

16:28
never seen anything like them uh from

16:31
the previous missions. And so the lunar

16:35
landing in the lunar highlands were um

16:38
uh a a big step for for NASA and the

16:42
exploration of the moon. I might I don't

16:45
know whether I said it or not, but we

16:47
landed about um 8,000 ft above where

16:50
Neil Armstrong landed on on the lunar

16:54
surface. So the rocks were different and

16:57
uh we had been briefed that there were

16:59
going to be this kind of rocks, but they

17:00
weren't. They were totally different and

17:02
they uh they were uh geologists were

17:05
very very excited.

Moon Landing Skepticism

17:07
Wow. One thing that I didn't realize

17:09
until recently is that there are people

17:12
out there who are skeptical of if we

17:15
went to the moon. I I've never

17:18
I I had never heard that when somebody

17:20
first told me. I thought they were

17:21
kidding. And then I started researching.

17:23
I'm like, "Wow, people actually think

17:25
this." A lot of people I've seen you

17:27
even debate people about this of if you

17:29
were there or not, which is just

17:31
comical. Um, but at the same time, how

17:34
do you respond when people are

17:35
skeptical? Why do you think they're

17:37
skeptical? And what do you say?

17:38
Well, well, I ask them, why don't you

17:40
believe it? And they say, well, I just

17:42
don't believe it. Well, I says, you're

17:44
willfully ignorant then because the uh

17:47
and I'm not in trying to insult them,

17:49
but I'm just saying the evidence is

17:51
overwhelming. We landed on the moon. Uh

17:54
the lunar reconnaissance orbiter, which

17:56
is a satellite uh mapping the moon has

17:59
taken pictures of every Apollo landing

18:03
site with a a camera that has uh

18:07
resolution like 8 ft. So you can see the

18:10
descent stage in our landing site. You

18:12
can see the descent stage. You can see

18:14
the car. You can see the experiments

18:17
package. You can see all of the not

18:18
individual footprints, but you can see

18:20
where we when you walk uh on the moon,

18:23
you the bright color turns dark. So, you

18:27
can see the dark areas where we've been

18:29
walking and working. And uh it's and

18:32
every landing site has been photographed

18:35
by this LRO

18:37
uh lunar reconnaissance orbiter. And you

18:39
can see it all there on the lunar

18:41
surface. It's uh uh and uh it's it's

18:46
obvious that we landed on the moon with

18:48
all of the pictures that were taken and

18:52
every object

18:54
you you see that we left up there. And

18:57
uh so um anyway,

Broadcasting from the Moon

19:00
the the video and picture back to Earth

19:02
so quickly that that's I think one of

19:04
the big surprises that people have. We

19:07
had a camera uh that was a TV camera was

19:10
mounted on the car. Uh and uh and as we

19:15
stopped, we pointed the antenna up at

19:18
the Earth and turned on the camera and

19:20
then the camera was operated remotely

19:23
from mission control. So, and they could

19:26
focus it, they could pan it, they could

19:28
tilt it, they could do it all uh

19:31
remotely from mission control. So all of

19:34
the photographs on the lunar surface uh

19:37
were taken well not the photographs but

19:40
the videos were through that camera. Uh

19:43
we did have a video camera. We had a

19:45
movie camera that I took some pictures

19:48
and uh as we drove along and we also had

19:52
a a hustleblot a 70 mm camera that I

19:55
took pictures as we drove every 50

19:58
meters. And so we the traverses we did

20:02
were photographed and documented because

20:06
when you driving across the rover it's

20:08
real I mean driving AC in the rover

20:11
across the moon it's bouncy and it's

20:13
going everywhere and the antenna uh that

20:16
gets a TV camera wasn't wouldn't stay

20:20
pointed at the earth. So we didn't have

20:21
any TV when we were driving. So when we

20:24
stopped, we would focus the ant I mean

20:27
point the antenna, turn on the TV, and

20:29
then they had we had TV.

Thoughts on Mars Exploration

20:32
That's crazy. So I I know that you've

20:34
been able to see what Elon Musk has done

20:37
with going to space and SpaceX. When he

20:41
talks about going to Mars, what are your

20:44
thoughts on people going to Mars?

20:47
I'm not a big proponent of people going

20:50
to Mars. I think we ought to do it with

20:53
robotics. Uh because nobody you can't

20:56
you can't overzeap uh radiation on a

21:00
piece of equipment. But a person going

21:03
to Mars is going to be subjected to a

21:05
tremendous uh exposure to uh cosmic

21:10
radiation. And to me uh robotics and AI

21:15
and everything, it's getting so good.

21:17
Why risk a life of a person going that

21:22
far uh with the radiation exposure that

21:25
they're going to receive? Uh and no

21:29
telling what what what would happen.

21:32
Whereas we send a we can send a a a

21:35
robot and a uh with AI and everything

21:39
else and and they're doing a tremendous

21:42
job on Mars right now with just

21:45
robotics. and we programmed to do these

21:48
experiments. And so I uh you know I

21:52
think somebody's going to eventually if

21:55
we can solve the radiation problem and

21:57
protection uh for a crew on the way to

22:00
the moon I mean on the way to Mars

22:02
somebody will go but I don't think in my

22:04
lifetime and uh

22:07
and I'm 90 and I don't think I I don't

22:09
see anything going to the Mars right now

22:12
with people. We got Artemis

22:15
uh which is uh next year and we're going

22:18
to have uh tremendous uh opportunities

22:22
to return to the moon on Earth just but

22:25
to the moon and they're going to have a

22:27
big orbit and they're going to go out uh

22:30
6,000 miles or so beyond the moon uh

22:34
next year uh with Artemis 2 and and

22:38
they're going to see the moon, Earth all

22:41
in one view and something we didn't we

22:45
couldn't do cuz we were so close to the

22:47
moon. But being far behind the moon, you

22:51
can look out and you can see the moon

22:53
and on beyond the earth. It's going to

22:55
be very spectacular and I'm very excited

22:58
about it.

Life After NASA

22:59
Wow. Well, I know you've talked about

23:03
this publicly from some of the stuff

23:04
I've seen about what happened with your

23:07
life after NASA and how you had some

23:10
radical conclusions you came to. What

23:12
was life like once you got back?

23:15
Well, it was um uh

23:19
very uh uh challenging for another six

23:22
eight months because uh we were backup

23:25
crew for Apollo uh 17 and um and after

23:30
that training was over in December, I

23:32
went to work on space shuttle and uh it

23:35
was not as exciting and so I began to

23:38
get frustrated and uh my daddy was and I

23:42
were having a real problems in our

23:44
marriage. marage uh at that point and uh

23:47
she was very depressed and um suicidal

23:51
in in a way and uh so uh things were

23:55
pretty tough at home. Uh and that was

23:58
from 72 to 75

24:02
in the in the fall of 75

24:05
we went to we were in church but we

24:10
Jesus was really not real to us. It was

24:13
just, you know, you grew up in church,

24:16
so you went to church, but Jesus was in

24:19
our minds, but not in our heart. And so,

24:22
uh, uh, uh, some people came to our

24:25
little Episcopal church in Leaport,

24:27
Texas on a weekend. They told us how

24:30
Jesus had changed her life. And she'd

24:32
never heard a testimony before and never

24:34
seen people so vibrant and excited about

24:37
a relation, a heart relationship with

24:40
Jesus. And uh after that weekend was

24:43
over, she went and prayed by herself and

24:46
said, "Uh, Lord, I've tried everything

24:48
but you." And Jesus, if you're real,

24:50
come into my heart. If you're not, I

24:51
want to die. Well, Jesus just he

24:54
responded to that invitation and came in

24:57
and she began to change.

24:00
uh and and and

24:03
uh changed her attitude about divorce

24:05
and changed her attitude about suicide

24:08
and she became just glowing. Then at 6

24:14
months later we left NASA and uh and we

24:18
came to uh I started a business and

Life-Changing Bible Study

29:22
then uh at that point um two years later

29:26
two and a half years later uh after I

29:29
sold my business uh uh I uh decided to

29:34
go to a Bible study and at that Bible

29:36
study I met Jesus and uh it was called

29:39
Walk Through the Bible And so I'd seen

29:42
what happened to Daddy. And so I said

29:46
after that B

Memorable Bible Verses

29:48
after that Bible study, I remember two

29:51
verses from John. Jesus says, "I am the

29:54
way, the truth, and the life, and nobody

29:57
comes to God except through me." Now

30:00
that's either true or the biggest lie

30:03
ever perpetrated on humanity. And we get

30:06
to decide, is it true or is it not? God

30:10
gives us all a free will and we get to

30:12
decide whether Jesus is the son of God,

30:15
the savior of the world or we get to

30:17
deny it. And so uh at that point um

Personal Faith Declaration

30:21
sitting in my automobile after that

30:23
weekend, I said, "Lord, I believe it. I

30:25
believe everything that you say that you

30:27
are." And I said, "Come into my life."

30:29
And at that point, sitting in my

30:32
automobile in a parking lot of T-Barm

30:34
Tennis Ranch, uh I felt the peace of God

30:38
for the very first time. And I knew that

30:40
I knew that I knew that it was real and

30:44
my life wasn't going to be the same. So

Desire to Read the Bible

30:46
I had this insatiable desire to read the

30:48
Bible. So I began to read the Bible and

30:51
and God began to I I wasn't convicted as

30:56
a sinner. I just knew I needed Jesus.

31:00
You know, I I wouldn't know different

31:02
than anybody else. You know, I knew this

31:04
wrong. I did that wrong. But everybody

31:06
did those things, you know.

Conviction and Repentance

31:07
So, but Jesus began from the scriptures

31:10
began to convict me about u my sin about

31:14
loving my wife. Husbands love your wives

31:16
as Christ loved the church. God says you

31:19
don't love your wife that way. That mean

31:22
when I say God said I just in my heart I

31:24
knew that. And uh and so I repented and

31:29
I told we started building our

31:31
relationship.

Parenting and Critical Spirit

31:33
Then I was very hard on my boys and um

31:36
and God and the scriptures it said in

31:38
Proverbs you have you can you have the

31:41
power of life and death in your tongue

31:43
and you can speak life or you can speak

31:45
death and God showed me I'd spoken death

31:48
to my kids because of my critical spirit

31:51
and I mean I was in tears because I love

31:54
these kids and uh and so that and then

God's View on Money

31:57
money he talked to me start talk to me

31:59
about money about what God's attitude

32:02
towards money and uh and so we begin to

32:05
build our relationship and I began to

32:08
build my life on the foundation of Jesus

32:10
and and what the scripture wants us to

32:13
do. And uh it's it's that was 1977

Walking with the Lord

32:20
six. Yeah. 77. And now we've been

32:22
walking with the Lord ever since. And uh

32:26
and it's gotten stronger and stronger.

32:27
We um we travel all over the world.

32:30
We're not evangelists, but we like to

32:33
share Jesus. And when we get we get

32:35
invited to churches or we get invited to

32:38
uh various organizations to speak, I'm

Sharing Jesus Through Speaking

32:41
motivational speaker. So, I talk mostly

32:44
about um uh you know uh leadership and

32:48
and um and and focus and stuff like

32:52
that. But at the end, if if it's a if

32:56
it's not a Christian organization, I'll

32:58
just say, "Uh, anybody got any

33:00
questions?" And I'll pray, "Lord, have

33:02
somebody ask me a question. Did it

33:04
change your life?" And I usually get

33:06
that question. Well, did going to the

33:08
moon changed your life? I said, "No,

33:09
that didn't, but let me tell you what

33:11
did." And I talk about Jesus for about

33:14
three minutes. and uh so I get to share

Invitations to Christian Groups

33:18
uh the the the reality of God and and

33:22
one's life and uh strictly but sometime

33:25
a lot of times we invited to Christian

33:28
groups conventions and stuff like that

33:30
and there you get to share your whole

33:32
testimony of of the what the power of

33:35
God to change a life.

Leadership and Faith

33:37
Wow. Did your view on leadership change

33:40
or did you learn anything different

33:42
about leadership after you started

33:46
having a personal relationship with

33:47
Jesus compared to the leadership of when

33:50
you were dealing with some of the most

33:51
prominent leaders in the world when you

33:53
were an astronaut and then now you're

33:55
dealing with Jesus? How did your view of

33:57
leadership change if at all? uh servant

Servant Leadership

34:00
uh being a servant leader uh yeah uh

34:03
serving others uh mostly is uh is the

34:07
the change that I saw that uh God wants

34:10
us to be a servant leader uh to lead be

34:13
have a leadership role but to serve

34:17
those who you are leading if you will

34:20
and so the focus is there instead of on

34:24
yourself

Reflecting on Accomplishments

34:27
when you look back at your life and you

34:30
are just amazing in terms of what you

34:33
have accomplished that only now four

34:36
people in the world can ever say that

34:38
they've accomplished right now. Uh what

34:41
do you look back and think about your

34:43
life?

God's Guidance in Life

34:45
Well, I was I can see God's hand in it

34:48
now. And uh he he uh uh opened door uh

34:54
doors were open to me uh uh throughout

34:57
my uh

35:00
especially from well even at at the

35:02
Naval Academy

35:04
and uh and I was able to take advantage

35:09
of of making the right decisions and I I

35:13
can't say that I was so

35:15
uh

Making Key Decisions

35:17
wise that I'm that that the decisions

35:20
were mine only. I I know now that God uh

35:24
he he told he gave me a prophecy. I have

35:27
directed every step of your life and uh

35:31
and so I know that I realize that and I

35:33
say thank you Jesus for everything. But

35:36
uh you know making um

Advice for Young People

35:40
I tell the uh young people when I speak

35:42
to them keep your antennas up and and

35:45
listen to your intuition and your

35:48
thoughts and uh like

Career-Defining Decision

35:53
when I and this was I was in Germany in

35:59
and I was supposed to go to MIT in the

36:02
summer of 62 for a master's degree.

36:06
the Air Force was going to send me. But

36:08
I could have stayed in Germany for

36:09
another year and extend it and say,

36:12
"Okay, I'll put off MIT for another

36:15
year." If I'd have made that decision,

36:18
Chris, I would have never been an

36:21
astronaut and I'd have never

36:24
met my wife.

Choosing Education Over Comfort

36:26
Wow. So I I decided, no, I'm going to

36:29
give up this great job of flying, being

36:32
a bachelor in Germany and uh and go to

36:37
school.

36:38
And that that decision gave me an

36:41
opportunity to become an astronaut and

36:44
to meet my precious wife of 62 years

36:47
now.

Apollo 17 Backup Crew

36:48
Wow. So one thing that you mentioned

36:50
that I I didn't realize I didn't realize

36:52
that you were a backup on Apollo 17. Um,

36:56
after after Apollo 16, were you hoping

36:59
to go back to the moon or how did that

37:01
work for people?

Motivation for Backup Role

37:03
Well, uh, uh, they needed a backup crew

37:07
for 17. Uh, and uh, I said, "John, why

37:11
don't we do backup crew?" He says, "Oh,

37:13
it's a dead-end job. I don't want to do

37:15
that." I said, "John, they might break

37:17
their leg and we get to go again." He

37:20
said, "Yeah, that's a good idea." So,

37:22
uh, we volunteered because of the

37:24
opportunity on the outside chance that

37:27
if something happened, we get to go

37:28
again. So, that was our motivation.

Rapidfire Questions Begin

37:31
Wow.

37:31
Yeah.

37:32
Well, Charlie, I want to finish with 10

37:35
rapidfire questions where I'm just going

37:37
to ask you something and you say the

37:39
first thing that comes to your mind.

First Thought on Leadership

37:41
Okay.

37:42
Who's the first person you think of when

37:44
I say servant leadership?

37:47
Jesus.

Describing Charlie Duke

37:49
All right. Five words that most describe

37:51
you.

37:55
Uh focused, loving, uh dedicated.

38:00
Oh gosh. Uh kind and generous.

Favorite Book and Author

38:04
All right. Favorite book or author?

38:07
Bible

38:09
is my favorite book. Now I don't I don't

38:12
read other many books. I I uh I used to

38:15
read Tom Clansancy when he was fa a

38:17
favorite. He was a good favorite of

38:19
mine.

Favorite Food

38:20
Yeah. Favorite food?

38:24
Uh, fried chicken.

Astronaut Food Experience

38:26
I have to pause the questions and ask

38:28
here. What was it like eating astronaut

38:30
food on the moon and and like you see

38:33
all the videos of it. Was that just a

38:35
crazy experience for you?

Challenges of Space Food

38:37
Uh, yeah. Well, it wasn't very good. I

38:40
mean, it was mostly dehydrated. you had

38:42
to add water to it and uh uh and uh it

38:46
was uh nutrition, but it wasn't very

38:51
tasty. And uh

38:53
on the moon it was even worse because we

38:55
had no hot water. So everything we we

38:59
reconstituted all this food with cold

39:01
water and uh and it so we didn't eat

39:04
very much on the moon. The thing that

39:07
kept us going, I think we had a a high

39:10
energy candy bar uh velcro to the inside

39:13
of our space suit and it came up inside

39:16
your helmet right in this area and you

39:18
could reach over and bite a bite a hook

39:21
out of it. And we ate all that on the

39:24
moon and we had a bag of water uh Velcro

39:28
to our suit and inside our suit and that

39:31
straw came up on the inside over here

39:33
and so you could drink water. And so we

39:36
all uh that kept us really going. Uh it

39:40
was the candy bar was really delicious,

39:45
especially after you've been eating

39:46
dehydrated food for the last few years.

Favorite Free Time Activity

39:48
Yeah, exactly. Right. Yeah.

39:50
All right. Favorite thing to do in your

39:51
free time?

39:53
Uh be with family. We have a farm. uh uh

39:58
hunting and fishing and um uh I like to

40:02
play golf, but uh just lately I haven't

40:05
had a chance to play golf much.

Surprising Fact About Charlie

40:08
What's a surprising fact about you?

40:11
I don't I don't That's hardly qu That's

40:13
a hard question. What What surprises

40:16
everybody?

40:17
Uh

Youngest Moonwalker

40:20
you know, I'd probably ask

40:21
maybe that you're the youngest person to

40:23
ever be on the moon.

40:25
Uh that's uh that's probably good. Yeah,

40:29
I'll take that. Okay.

Favorite Travel Destinations

40:31
All right. Where's your favorite place

40:32
you've been

40:35
for culture? Uh uh the capitals of

40:38
Europe like Vienna and every places like

40:41
that

40:42
for uh excitement uh from uh was at last

40:47
year we went to Antarctica.

40:49
Uh it was it was the last of the seven

40:52
continents for me to visit. So it was a

40:54
big uh uh uh you might fill that square

40:59
and uh we spent a a week in Antarctica.

41:02
Well, on a boat, but we would go we

41:04
would go ashore and uh so that was

41:08
probably one of the nic nicest trips

41:12
that we've ever had.

Moon as a Favorite Place

41:14
Wow. You're you're the only person I've

41:16
ever had on the podcast who could also

41:17
say the moon as their answer for their

41:19
favorite place. So,

41:20
oh, well, I mean, not down here. You're

41:23
right. Now, you know, uh the moon was

41:27
probably my favorite favorite place, but

41:29
uh uh it's you you ask it in the tone of

41:33
Earth. Uh and uh so I got to say uh

41:37
probably the the thrill of Antarctica

41:40
was the the place here.

Future Travel Aspirations

41:43
After checking Antarctica off the list,

41:45
is there anywhere else that you want to

41:47
go or wanted to go that you haven't

41:48
been?

41:50
Not really. Uh we've we've been just

41:53
about every well every continent and uh

41:55
we spent time in Australia, South

41:58
America, you know, uh Alaska, all over.

42:02
Wow.

42:02
Uh maybe the we we were going to go to

42:06
the North Pole, but we didn't quite make

42:08
it because of the ice. Uh maybe uh going

42:11
to the off North Pole would be

42:16
a a thrilling adventure. Okay. Uh, what

Best Advice Received

42:19
is the best advice you've ever received?

42:22
Keep your antennas up. Listen to every

42:24
thought that you have and and uh and and

42:29
respond and respond

42:32
as once I became a Christian, I just you

42:36
just know you know you know that God

42:37
wants you to do this. And so I've never

42:40
heard the voice of God audibly, but I

42:42
have an impression inside uh that spirit

42:46
to spirit and this is the way I should

42:48
go.

Importance of Servant Leadership

42:49
Wow. All right. And finally, obviously

42:51
on a podcast about servant leadership,

42:54
why do you think it's important for

42:55
people to become better servant leaders?

42:59
Well, I mean your example that you uh

43:02
that you as a servant leader, you give a

43:05
great example for those that uh you're

43:07
leading and uh you can uh uh change a

43:12
lot of lives and be in a and you could

43:15
uh have a lot of influence on people's

43:18
lives as as you put them first and

43:22
leadership and and and and I think my

43:25
example is Jesus. Jesus was a servant

43:28
leader. Uh, you know, he says, "Follow

43:31
me." But he was leading them with love

43:34
and direction and purpose and, uh, so

43:38
that's what I try to do.

Closing Remarks

43:40
Wow. Well, Charlie, thank you for giving

43:43
us your time and sharing your story with

43:45
our audience. I'm excited for everyone

43:46
to watch this. Is there any parting

43:48
words that you want to leave people

43:50
with?

43:51
I guess stay focused. uh uh listen to

43:55
the quiet uh spirit of God that uh as he

43:58
uh leads you and try to be obedient to

44:02
uh what God wants you to do.

44:05
Wow. Well, thank you, Charlie. It's an

44:07
honor to have you on and I'm excited for

44:08
people to hear your story.

44:10
Thank you, Chris. I appreciate the

44:12
opportunity. It's been a great

44:13
interview. So, God bless you and uh you

44:16
have a great 2026. Okay.

Podcast Outro

44:18
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44:21
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44:23
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44:25
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44:27
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