This article appears in the April edition of USA Lacrosse Magazine.
SHAWN MALONEY WAS FACE DOWN IN THE SAND along the remote bluffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Northern California. He couldn’t move.
“It wasn’t the best decision I ever made,” Maloney said of his impulse to go hiking by moonlight with two other friends in April 2015. “It’s usually pretty safe — unless you decide to go out and do it at midnight. We were knuckleheads.”
Maloney, 29 at the time, had just fallen more than 20 feet, and all he could feel as he lay motionless was pain. Excruciating pain.
“I don’t remember the fall, but I remember being on the ground,” he said. “I was conscious, and I knew immediately that something was wrong. I found out later that I had broken two vertebrae in my back and had crushed my spinal cord.”
Once help arrived, a medevac helicopter transported Maloney to Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital, and within hours, he was in surgery.
“My friends had to call my girlfriend, Mary, who is now my wife, at 3 a.m. and tell her what had happened,” Maloney said. “She didn’t know what she was walking into.”
After the surgery, Maloney couldn’t feel or move anything from his waist down. The doctors told him he had incurred a T10-level spinal cord injury, and permanent paralysis was a very real possibility.
“They usually under-promise,” Maloney said. “They tell you, pretty bluntly, that the chances of you walking again are slim. You’ve got to learn how to live life in a wheelchair. It’s overwhelming news and your emotions are all over the place.”