LDL. Hope for Cleighton: Transferred to Shepherd Center as His Recovery Journey Continues 🙏
It will be six weeks ago tomorrow.
Six weeks since one moment changed everything for Cleighton Strickland, a 19-year-old from Alabama whose future had only just begun to open up. Six weeks since a car accident in Auburn, Alabama left him with a traumatic brain injury—and left the people who love him living in a new reality measured not in days, but in small signs, careful updates, and the stubborn hope that refuses to let go.
Cleighton is described by those who know him as a bright presence—handsome, full of life, the kind of young man who made people feel comfortable just by being around. He is a 2025 Daphne High School graduate, a milestone that should have been the start of a wide, exciting road ahead. Instead, his journey has turned into something far different: a fight for healing and a slow climb back from a semi-conscious state.
Since the accident, Cleighton has remained semi-conscious, and for his family, that status is both a heartbreak and a lifeline. Heartbreak, because it means he isn’t yet able to fully return to himself in the way everyone longs for. A lifeline, because it means he is still here—still fighting, still holding on, still giving those around him a reason to believe that tomorrow could look different from today.
And now, in the middle of this long, emotional stretch, there is a piece of news that feels like a genuine step forward.
Cleighton’s mom, Amy, shared that he was transferred to the Shepherd Center in Atlanta last night.
For families walking through brain injury recovery, the name “Shepherd Center” carries real weight. It’s widely known as one of the premier rehabilitation facilities—especially for traumatic brain injuries and other complex neurological conditions. It’s a place built for the kind of work that requires not only advanced clinical knowledge, but also patience, structure, and an entire team committed to helping a person regain what an injury tried to steal.
That’s why people who have followed Cleighton’s story are calling this move a “game changer.”
Not because it guarantees an immediate breakthrough. Not because rehab is some magic door you walk through and suddenly everything becomes easy. But because the transfer signals something important: Cleighton is entering the phase where recovery is actively pursued, day after day, with specialized support designed for the long haul.
It’s also why the emotions around this moment are so complicated.
When a loved one is moved to a world-class rehab facility, people feel hope—deep hope—because it represents possibility. But at the same time, the reality is still heavy. This isn’t the end of the story. It’s not even the end of the beginning. It’s the start of a new chapter, and it comes with its own fear: What if progress is slow? What if signs come and go? What if the days feel like climbing a mountain in the dark?
That’s where Cleighton’s family is right now—standing at the edge of “new hope” and “ongoing heartbreak” at the same time.
Amy has shared that Cleighton has moved his eyes a bit, a detail that may sound small to someone who hasn’t lived through this kind of situation—but to families walking through traumatic brain injury recovery, small signs can mean everything. Eye movement can be a sign of awareness. It can be a sign of tracking. It can be a flicker of connection.
But the truth she has also shared is equally important: Cleighton is still showing very little movement, even about a month after the accident. That reality doesn’t erase hope—it simply tells everyone what kind of journey this is.
Brain injury recovery is often measured in inches, not miles.
It is not always a straight line. Progress can show up and then disappear. Some days can feel quietly encouraging; other days can feel like being pulled backward by grief. The body heals in layers. The brain rewires in its own time. And families learn to live in a strange new rhythm where “good news” might be “he opened his eyes for a little longer,” or “his breathing looked calmer,” or “he seemed to respond to a voice.”
In the middle of all of this is the human side of the story—what’s happening around Cleighton.
His family is not just dealing with medical updates. They are dealing with the emotional and practical weight of moving a loved one to a different city. They are navigating travel, lodging, schedules, and the constant balancing act of being strong while feeling broken. And with them is Cleighton’s girlfriend, Mary Claire, who has been living in the same painful in-between: loving someone deeply while watching them fight from a place she can’t fully reach.
When tragedy hits young, it hits differently. People aren’t just grieving what happened—they’re grieving what was supposed to happen. Plans, routines, dreams, and simple moments that used to feel guaranteed suddenly become sacred, because you realize how fragile “normal” really is.
Still, this is the reason people are rallying right now: because the Shepherd Center transfer is a step that points toward a future that could include more recovery, more awareness, more ability, more connection.
And whether you’re family, friend, classmate, or a stranger who simply believes in the power of community—this is the moment where support matters.
It’s easy for attention to spike when something first happens and then fade as time goes on. But families like Cleighton’s know the hardest stretch often begins after the initial shock settles—when the days turn into weeks, and the fight becomes routine.
Six weeks is a long time to carry fear.
Six weeks is a long time to wake up each morning hoping for change.
And that’s why this update deserves to be shared—not just because it’s hopeful, but because it reminds everyone that Cleighton is still in this fight, and his loved ones are still carrying the weight.
So today, the ask is simple:
Let’s send our best to Cleighton and his family. Let’s flood them with encouragement. Let’s keep them wrapped in prayer as they get settled in Atlanta. And let’s hold onto hope—not the loud, unrealistic kind, but the steady kind that says: keep going, one day at a time.
May our prayers help Cleighton climb back.
And may they bring comfort to his family and Mary Claire as they step into this next chapter at the Shepherd Center.
Thanks to Amy Strickland for the pictures. 🙏🙏🙏