When Justin and Rachel Yerbury met as teenagers, they had no idea that he would become a world-leading scientist – studying a disease that would cause his own tragic decline
Get our weekend culture and lifestyle email
Few people who make vows to stay together in sickness and in health give the words a second thought.
For Rachel Yerbury, the promise she exchanged with her husband, Justin, back in 1995 has tested her in ways most couples cannot imagine. Shortly after they married, motor neurone disease started cutting a swathe through his family. His uncle. Cousin. His grandmother, mother and sister. Justin was determined to research the disease, and set about becoming a leading molecular biologist. His work brought him to New York in 2016, a lecture hall filled with the top minds in MND research. As he stood at the lectern to give a speech on his work, his thumb stopped working. The realisation that this was the first sign of MND in his own body hit him like a punch in the face. He thought immediately, “Fuck. How will I tell Rachel?” And then, he continued his speech.
Sign up for our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning
More Stories
Esports are booming in Africa – but can its infrastructure keep pace?
AI learns to distinguish between aromas of US and Scottish whiskies
How 2024 made Elon Musk the world’s most powerful unelected man