It started like it did for many of us—a routine Covid vaccination, a hopeful step back to normal life. Then the ground shifted. Across the U.S. and U.K., a handful of early recipients say they developed transverse myelitis, a rare spinal inflammation that can steal feeling, balance, even independence. Their stories aren’t loud. But they are deeply human.
Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Joel Wallskog took one Moderna dose in December 2020. Days later, his legs tingled and buckled. “I was in deep trouble,” he admits. Steroids and IVIg helped, but he’s now partially paralyzed and unable to operate. Business owner Rebecca Thommen says she was diagnosed with TM 18 days after a Pfizer shot. She learned to walk again, but still struggles with numbness and bowel issues. In Oxford, author Sally Bayley embraced the AstraZeneca rollout with pride—then faced dizziness, pain, and a “body that wouldn’t obey.”

Health systems logged reports—VAERS in the U.S. and Yellow Card in the U.K.—while stressing that reports alone don’t prove causation. Regulators paused a major trial early on, then resumed it. Companies note serious adverse events are very rare, and patient safety monitoring remains ongoing.
Still, the quiet grief is real. Families rearranged work. Marriages absorbed strain. People who once ran, swam, and healed others learned to measure days by energy and pain. These are not debates. They are lives—asking to be seen with compassion.

In the end, the message is simple: believe patients, investigate carefully, and care well. Science seeks answers. People need help—now.