Nasa Astronaut Sunita Williams may have placed a brave face while he is stuck in space, but her family has revealed how she secretly hurt.
Williams' mother, Bonnie Pandya, said that her daughter retired for weeks before she was deployed on the mission meant to take only 10 days.
During her nine uncertain months stranded at the international space station, Williams complained about missing her family and the warmth of their touch.
In an interview with Local News Station WCNC, the sister Dina Annad van Williams shared the context of a private -mail between her and her brother or sister.
Williams wrote in it: “You forget that you don't hold hand in space, you don't hug you.”
Bonnie Pandya also shared a heart -warming message on the return of her daughter and said that her family and friends 'wait and wait'.
“We missed you a lot, but that you have contact with everyone and all of us, the family, we didn't miss much, but just enough,” said Pandya.
Williams and her crew member Butch Wilmore spent a total of 286 days to the ISS, which is the second to Frank Rubio who was 371 consecutive days at the ISS,
The pair eventually returned to the earth on Tuesday, at 5:57 pm and the coast of Florida and reunification with family hours afterwards.

Dina Annad, the sister of Sunita Williams, has shared the psychological trauma that the astronaut has endured while he is detained in space for 286 days.

Sunita Williams returned to the earth on Tuesday, splashed off the coast of Florida before 5:57 PM and reunification with family
During William's stay, the public and medical experts gave their concern about her health because she looked it out of her on photos of her on the ISS.
Dr. Gupta told DailyMail.com: 'What you see in that photo there is someone I think it experiences the natural stress of life at a very high height, even in a predicted hut, for longer periods.
“Her cheeks seem a bit sunk – and usually it happens when you have had a kind of total body weight loss,” Dr. Gupta.
But because of all this, Williams held a stony face and even laughed at her long -term stay during press conferences.
During a press conference on March 4, Williams actually said that she would miss in space.
But behind the scenes a different story happened.
Annad told WCNC that Williams' missed her friends and family just as much, so much they sent Funny stories and jokes for the ISS.
The cousin of Williams, Falguni Pandya, was also 'Constant Contact' with her.

Annad (left) shared an unprecedented admission of the astronaut and unveiled a person who missed her family and the warmth of their touch. Williams' mother (right) also said she waited for her daughter's return
'We constantly meet each other on Microsoft Software, celebrate holidays together and we have sent her gifts, cards and photos. We have constant contact, “Falguni said two days before the return mission. “She talks to her mother every day.”
The cousin painted Williams as a 'very joyful person' and stumbled about how close she is to all children in the family, which suggests that the astronaut certainly missed them in space.
“People have seen her speeches give her talking about intense topics and science and that, but she really laughs, she finds joy in the smallest things to the point where you know it is very contagious,” Falguni added.
Falguni told Republic World, an Indian newsstation, she looked forward to seeing her two dogs with pets again.
Williams and Wilmore shot away on June 5 and marked the ISS a day later.
While they could return home on 13 June, a scourge of technical problems with their spacecraft, Boeing's Starliner.
The problems eventually drove NASA to postpone their return until they could lift a lift home on a safer ship.
Williams came out of the SpaceX capsule smiling and waved out on Tuesday while she was lifted on a stretcher and taken for medical evaluations.

Williams and her crew member Butch Wilmore (right) spent a total of 286 days at the International Space Station (ISS) when their mission was set for just eight days
Steve Stich, manager at NASA's Commercial Crew program, said at a press conference that evening that Williams and Wilmore 'great'.
While experts believed that Williams would not run alone for at least a few days, she was seen on two feet in photos released by NASA around 2 o'clock and Wednesday.
She looked noticeably weak with 'visibly thin' wrists, of which doctors told that Dailymail.com could be a sign of rapid weight loss, muscle waste in her arms and loss of bone density.
The experts also noted that the IV sticks from the wrist of Williams 'most likely' to restore hydration and electrolytes, because micro -gravity for eliminating the required liquids for eliminating, causing dehydration.
Striking before and after photos of Williams showed her with noticeably grayer hair, deeper wrinkles and a more lean face.
Dr. John Jaquish, a biomedical engineer at Jaquish Biomedical, told DailyMail.com: “That time in space is crushing.”
Former astronauts have discovered that it can take up to 1.5 times the length of the mission to recover.
That means that Williams and Wilmore may need more than a year before they feel completely themselves again.