How Taj rebuilt his life one goal at a time
Recording an interview with Taj Mailata for The Limb Shift last weekend was an incredibly powerful experience. Taj is someone who refuses to let circumstances dictate his life, even when faced with the dual weight of family grief and a sudden, life-altering workplace accident in 2018. For Taj, navigating the aftermath of his amputation required a deliberate shift in focus from broad, overwhelming realities to small, actionable goals. Here’s part of his story which will feature in the podcast when it launches later this year, in October, during Amputee Awareness Week.
For Taj Mailata, navigating the aftermath of life-altering accident required a shift in focus from broad, overwhelming realities to small, actionable goals. Following a workplace accident in 2018 and the devastating loss of his brother a year prior, Taj found a unique tool to process his recovery. He downloaded a simple shopping list app on his mobile phone. However, instead of managing groceries, he used it to manage his existence.
“Every time I go through and I tick it off, it’s almost like a sense of accomplishment that I’ve achieved what I wanted to achieve the next day,” Taj notes. “And that kind of got me through on the day-to-day things. It could be any simple thing like fold washing, whatever it is. Every time I ticked it off, the list got smaller and smaller.”
This structured discipline helped ground him as his physical reality fundamentally changed.
Before the accident, Taj’s professional world was defined by high pressure and rigid, time-sensitive quotas. Working for a supplier that provided glass bottles to a major brewery, the operational margins were incredibly tight.
“You’re really time-sensitive with getting deliveries over to the brewery,” Taj explains. “There’s just a lot of costs or fines that come back to the company if you don’t fulfill the quota of how many glass bottles you need to get over there.”
On September 18, 2018, Taj was navigating a standard “split”—switching production from one type of beer bottle to another—when he drove a forklift toward the office. As he swerved around a corner to avoid a safety barrier, his foot swung out. It was caught between the forklift and the barrier, cleanly shearing off the front part of his heavy, metal-sheathed safety boot.
Initially, the sheer shock masked the true extent of the trauma.
“It’s kind of weird because it felt like I actually injured my knee or sprained something right at the start,” Taj recalls. “But then when I looked down, I realized that my foot was pretty much nearly decapitated—the front half was kind of just hanging by a thread.”
After Taj independently moved himself onto an ambulance stretcher, he faced a rapidly escalating medical reality at the hospital. Surgeons initially removed the irreparably damaged front section of his foot. Only a day later, medical staff approached him with a sobering recommendation to consider a below-knee amputation to secure long-term mobility.
With no prior knowledge of amputee care, Taj’s decision-making process was instantaneous, anchored entirely by his role as a father.
“I had three young daughters to look after for the rest of my life. If that was an opportunity to get a better quality of life, then it was kind of a no-brainer to make that decision.”
Driven by an intense desire to escape the clinical confines of the hospital, Taj pushed through the immediate recovery with remarkable speed. He was discharged and back home by the weekend, less than five days after the initial trauma occurred.
Taj’s resilience during his amputation recovery was deeply intertwined with an existing emotional scar. In 2017, his brother tragically passed away, plunging Taj and his parents into the absolute lowest point of their lives. When the workplace accident occurred just a year later, Taj viewed his physical loss through the lens of that profound family grief.
“The death of my brother actually hit me the worst,” Taj admits. “When I lost my leg, believe it or not, it didn’t really affect me as much because I think I already went through all the pain. I kind of just looked at it as, well, as long as I can walk after this and go back to work, then I’m good.”
Determined to prevent his family from sliding further into despair, Taj consciously chose a pathway of positivity.
“I kind of had to do it—I had to be positive because everything was so negative around that period of time,” Taj reflects. “We didn’t really have too much to celebrate, and I needed to be positive or else we would have just gone down another rabbit hole.”
Taj refused to allow his physical impairment to alter his life or standard of work. Despite his entitlements for time off work, he grew restless at home. Within a month, he purchased a gym set for his garage, and began lifting heavy weights. By the six-week mark, he contacted his manager and returned to work, initially handling essential administrative duties and supply chain scheduling.
He was fitted with his first prosthetic limb by late November 2018 and was signed off on full-time hours by early 2019. His fast rehabilitation even earned him a formal corporate award for return to work. To this day, his mindset remains completely unchanged by his prosthesis.
“I took it upon myself to let the family know that I’m good, that nothing’s going to change,” Taj explains. “Like, I just mowed the lawns today, and I live on an acre block with a push mower. Nothing’s ever going to stop me from doing what I wanted to do.”
Through systematic goal-setting—from purchasing an acreage property between Brisbane and Toowoomba to marrying his wife in late 2025—Taj continues to structure his life around building long-term security and stability for his loved ones.