
When Alexis was a young child, a traumatic brain injury changed the course of her life. The damage disrupted the signals between her brain and muscles, impacting her development in profound ways. Tasks that come naturally to most children—walking, sitting up, moving independently—became long-term challenges she will navigate for the rest of her life.
Alexis has spent thousands of hours in intensive therapies. She regained her eyesight, though her eyes still shift constantly because of neurological damage. She can walk only with significant support and uses a power wheelchair for most mobility. She will always need help with daily activities, from getting out of bed to transferring into a chair.
Her medical journey has been relentless. She has undergone more than a dozen major surgeries. Her scoliosis progressed so severely that she required a full spinal fusion. Her hip surgery was so complex that fewer than five surgeons in the United States were qualified to perform it. Each of these challenges stems from the early brain injury she endured before she ever had a chance to grow into herself.
But what stands out most about Alexis is not the difficulty of her path—it is the extraordinary light she brings into the world.
Alexis has found joy, purpose, and connection in ways that defy the expectations that once surrounded her. She frequently travels with her father from city to city, becoming a cherished presence in every ballpark they visit. The players adore her. The staff adore her. And everyone who meets her remembers her.
As Kevin Czerwinski wrote, she brings a spark with her wherever she goes.
“She is amazing,” her mother Tiffany Verzal said. “People gravitate toward her. With the energy she has, people just want to be around her. She is just a great human being. She has made a lot of people better and not just us. You can interview her teachers, the kids she has grown up with, she changes lives. She still has weekly phone calls with her elementary school principal if that tells you anything.”
Alexis’s life is full of challenges, but it is also full of impact. She changes the spaces she enters. She builds friendships that last across years and miles. She continues to grow, adapt, and show others what resilience looks like—not through grand gestures, but through the way she connects.
Her story is a reminder that brain injury reshapes a life, but it does not erase the ability to give joy, create community, or inspire hope. What you don’t see is how deeply someone like Alexis can influence the world around them.
💙 Read more stories from our What You Don’t See campaign and support our work at: biane.org/appeal
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