The 23-year-old me felt insignificant enough as it was without the whole universe chiming in. I didn't bother watching beyond those first two instalments.
So the night sky filled with stars became a bit of a stranger to me - a passive aggressive bully, if you will.
I tried to ignore it.
Then I became a dad, my own dad passed away, I had my own medical drama three years ago and then mum died last February.
I started looking at the night sky again - going outside when the International Space Station was due to silently streak high over New Zealand.
Admiring just how bright and red Mars is as it rises in the eastern sky.
I even started taking my daughter out each night to "wish upon a star" (she usually chooses what is actually the planet Venus, but whatever).
And maybe I was even thinking, hoping, a couple of those twinkles in the night sky might just be my parents looking down on us.
And so it was I found myself staring skyward twice on Sunday, May 5.
It started with a cold, dark, 5am start and me standing out in my back yard catching a dozen glimpses of "shooting stars" – as the annual Eta-Aquarids Meteor Shower was at its most visible in the eastern sky.
We spent our daylight hours out and about around Hawke's Bay going to Anderson Park playground and Ahuriri beach in Napier, and Keirunga Park Railway in Havelock North under stunningly clear blue, autumnal Hawke's Bay skies.
As we drove back to Napier from Havelock North along Marine Parade there was a clear view north and east across Hawke Bay towards Wairoa and Mahia and we remembered there was to be a Rocket Lab launch that evening.
Sure enough, as 6pm rolled around we watched the live-stream of the launch countdown and lift-off on YouTube, then headed outside to where I had seen the meteor shower 13 hours before and with the benefit of a darkened evening sky we, along with hundreds, maybe even thousands of people around Hawke's Bay saw a very bright red-yellow light slowly rising in the eastern sky – Hawke's Bay reaching for the stars.
As little as 10 years ago I couldn't have imagined that I would be standing in my back yard watching rockets being launched from a Hawke's Bay site, but here we were.
This was very cool and I must admit to even shedding a proud tear or two, because this has long been the sort of thing I have written about, expected and hoped for from my Hawke's Bay home.
For my 5-year-old daughter this is hopefully her new, very spectacular, normal.
It may not have been the first Rocket Lab launch, but it was certainly the most visible and symbolic for our region.
Just as The Spirit of Napier reaches for the rising morning sun on Marine Parade, here was Hawke's Bay launching satellites into space.
In 2014 National government finance minister Bill English had the audacity to say, while on a visit to Napier, that "Hawke's Bay's seasonal low-wage economy isn't going to change in a hurry, so let's get good at it".
How wrong he was.
While New Zealand's Auckland-centric commercial media networks still obsess over surreal estate prices, traffic issues and radio announcer reckons, Hawke's Bay has been quietly thriving, growing and reaching for the stars.
No longer the butt of that snide slight "A visitor from Hawke's Bay" at Metro Magazine-covered parties - With tech hubs, call centres, as well as a rocket launch facility, "A Visitor TO Hawke's Bay" is becoming something people aspire to as our region becomes an even more attractive place to live, raise a family or open a high-tech, or web-based business.
I'm looking forward to watching more Rocket Lab launches on clear winter evenings and New Zealand being reminded of just how astronomical Hawke's Bay's future will be!