A 53-year-old woman with hypertension and diabetes mellitus type-II presented with a 1-week history of generalized weakness, gait instability, slurred speech, and tingling in the lower extremities that gradually ascended to the upper extremities and face. Physical examination demonstrated no focal weakness, hypoesthesia, or other neurological deficits. Cranial nerve examination was unremarkable. Brain MRI demonstrated a large acute infarct in the right pons and tiny chronic infarcts in the left supratentorial white matter. Bickerstaff and CLIPPERS were considered on the differential but ruled out considering lack of contrast enhancement on gadolinium-enhanced imaging. Despite the size and location of the infarct, the patient did not exhibit any residual neurologic symptoms. Her blood pressure control was optimized prior to her discharge home.