When Noland Arbaugh woke up after surgery and moved a cursor just by thinking about his hand, it wasn’t a tech demo; it was a piece of his stolen life returning. A diving accident had left him quadriplegic, convinced he’d never again play games, move freely online, or beat friends at the chessboard he once loved. Neuralink’s chip changed that, turning stray wishes into digital action and giving him back something simple yet profound: agency.
Then the connection failed. Overnight, the newfound freedom vanished, replaced by a cold fear that the miracle was over. His panic was raw: what if this second chance had been an illusion? Engineers restored and improved the link, but the scare revealed the stakes. For Noland, this isn’t about futuristic hype. It’s about whether technology can keep its promise to the people who have risked everything to believe in it.