NASA astronauts’ return is near. Their long, unlikely trip puts focus on resilience.

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In a YouTube video posted by NASA, kids sit cross-legged in neat rows in a gymnasium at Sunita L. Williams Elementary School in Needham, Massachusetts. You can see them wave their little hands at the camera, which beams the image roughly 250 miles above Earth to the International Space Station.

They were talking in December with none other than Sunita Williams, the school’s namesake and an astronaut living on the space station.

She should have been home already. A series of technical failures extended an eight-day mission to nine months, leading some news organizations and politicians to play up tension and place blame.

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A narrative grew that two astronauts were “stranded” in space. But their training and character may tell a story of adaptability and strength.

But Ms. Williams’ livestream with those young students gave a glimpse into another side of the saga.

Suspended in microgravity, Ms. Williams bats around a stuffed wildcat, the school’s mascot. She is asked how astronauts celebrate their birthdays on the space station.

“Of course, we have to still sometimes work, but the crew on board tries to make it pretty special, and we’ve become pretty good at making cakes up here,” she says. They use pudding for the frosting and cinnamon buns for the cake.

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