Just call him the kid with a heart.
Ayden Skillman of Greybull has lived a lot of his life without a complete heart because of a rare congenital heart defect. But thanks to a recent heart transplant, Ayden is now on a journey that his family and friends hope will change hislife.
âHe did his first walk on the unit today,â his mom Deanna Skillman told Cowboy State Daily on Tuesday. âHeâs on three different immune suppressant medications to suppress his immune system so it doesnât attack the heart, and then weâre just slowly moving around.â
Ayden has had a tough yellow brick road to follow from the first day of his life, but the 18-year-old never seems to let anything get him down. Thatâs one of the things people love about Ayden and his story.
âHe had one of the rare forms of CHDs, congenital heart defects,â Deanna said. âThey donât know what causes it, but itâs like the leading cause of death in children across the world, and it just keeps increasing every year.â
At first, Aydenâs parents didnât notice anything unusual with their newborn son. By the second day home, though, it was clear something was drastically wrong.
âWe couldnât figure out why we couldnât warm him up,â Deanna said. âWhen I would go to nurse him, he would just fall asleep within seconds because he was getting too worn out.â
Deanna layered baby pajamas on her son, trying to help warm him up.
âMy sister-in-law took his temperature, and he was 88 degrees,â Deanna said. âWeâre like, âThatâs not normal,â so we called the pediatrician, and she had us go back to the hospital.â
A diagnosis wasnât long in coming.
Ayden had a condition called hypoplastic left heart syndrome, one of the rarest of congenital heart defects in children affecting two to three of every 10,000 live births worldwide.
With this condition, the left side of a babyâs heart fails to develop properly during pregnancy. That results in a chamber thatâs too small to pump much blood to the body. Thatâs why her son had been unable to nurse and seemed so cold all the time.
Not many babies survive this condition. Those who do need surgery to survive. Lots of it.
Lifeâs About What You Can Do, Not What You Canât
Today, Ayden is barely 18 years old, but heâs already become well-known in Greybull, where he works at Bobâs Diner & Bakery.
Ayden does have some developmental disabilities, caused by surgeries at such a young age when technology wasnât as advanced as it is today.
âHe doesnât read or write really well, but he understands the tickets when they come in,â Deanna said. âAnd heâs very sociable, too, and so his overall personality, people just love him. Heâs a very sweet-natured young man, and if you just talk to him, on average you wouldnât know thereâs anything wrong.â
Opening a diner was one of the things the family decided to do because Ayden loved to cook.
âIt was already a dream of ours so we thought, âIf we do this it gives him a skill for the rest of his life that he can do,ââ Deanna said.
Friends and family describe Ayden as a laugh-with-you kind of guy, someone who makes people around him feel good. Like the time just last week when he spontaneously gave a woman a hug at the restaurant just because.
âIt made her cry, and sheâs like, âOh, everybody needs to have a hug by him,ââ Deanna said. âSo, itâs just things like that, and his smile. Everyone always compliments his smile, thatâs what people really love about him.â
Aydenâs parents have always encouraged him to focus on what he can do rather than what he canât. Thatâs let his creativity shine through in areas besides food.
âHe and his brothers are doing a Dungeons and Dragons campaign,â Deanna said. âItâs a Western campaign, and they have got quite the story going right now. His older brother helped him write it down, but a lot of the ideas were Aydenâs.â
Ayden then used Legos to build structures for the storyline, as well as little miniature characters to populate the fantasy world.
âMy character is a rhinoceros-humanoid type thing,â Deanna said. âAnd in the first campaign, we were all suspicious to the sheriff, so we got sent to the jailhouse. It was kind of like a âSilveradoâ movie campaign, where the bad sheriff doesnât like you because youâre a good person.â
A Turn For The Worse
Things had begun to take a turn for the worse for Ayden not long ago.
A circulation issue caused a life-threatening infection in his leg, and it soon became clear that there werenât any more tweaks left to keep his heart functioning.
Thatâs when his caregivers decided they should push to get him on the pediatric heart transplant waiting list, ahead of his 18th birthday, so heâd have a better chance of getting a heart.
âIf you get on the adult list, itâs a very long wait list,â Deanna said. âFor Aydenâs age, size and weight, those donors come in quite frequently on the pediatric list. The adult list, they just make it so hard to get the heart.â
Donate Life America estimates that 5,600 people die in the U.S. each year while on a transplant waiting list. Thatâs 16 people every day.
Thatâs not because there arenât hearts out there. But many people are unaware of organ donation options.
One of the easiest is the box on driverâs licenses people can checkmark that signs them up for organ donation in the event they are in a fatal accident. One person can save up to eight lives, restore sight for two people and heal up to 75 people with various tissue and bone donations. People can also sign up to be an organ donor online at donors1.org.
Raising awareness of these issues is one of the reasons Deanna wants to tell Aydenâs story.
âOur biggest thing is just letting people know about CHDs and that they do exist out there,â Deanna said. âItâs really hard for Wyoming families, too, because Wyoming has never had a pediatric cardiologist.â
That has meant all of Aydenâs care has generally had to happen out of Denver, something theyâve been doing now for 18 years.
âDenver has cardiologists that will fly out to Casper or Sheridan, if that works for your schedule,â Deanna said. âBut weather can kind of mess around with those appointments if you really need to have them on a routine basis.â
The only other option is a drive to Billings, Montana, to see the pediatric cardiologists there â but those professionals also come from Denver Childrenâs Hospital.
âSo, itâs life-changing, because we donât have the medical health care in the state to take care of these kids,â Deanna said. âAnd itâs not just us. Itâs other families, too. You just never know how long your stay is going to be. Itâs just depending on what your childâs condition is.â
Just In Time
Ayden had several factors working in his favor for a heart transplant. He is type A, the most common blood type. He also didnât show any antibodies that would suggest an allergic reaction to a donor heart.
âAnd then just his size, age, height and weight were all like a perfect combination,â Deanna said. âHe was listed in March of this year.â
âHis heart health started (further) declining a few weeks ago, so Denver Childrenâs decided they wanted to admit him and put him on a medication called milrinone, which helps patients with failing hearts,â she added. âItâs kind of like an end-of-the-road medication when youâre on the transplant list.â
Deanna knew the medication was a signal that Ayden needed a heart, and needed it soon.
She was praying for a miracle and, just as the hospital was about to send Ayden to the Ronald McDonald house for outpatient care, a heart that matched him about as perfectly as possible came in. Theyâd only been in the hospital for four days.
Now itâs a wait-and-see game of another kind whether his body will accept its new heart, but Aydenâs prognosis is looking good so far.
âTheyâre going to start measuring his bloodwork on Thursday for rejection,â Deanna said.

Crazy Time For The Diner
Aydenâs heart showed up just in time from a health standpoint, but itâs a difficult timeframe for the familyâs Greybull Diner & Bakery, which is a key part of their sonâs future as well.
The shop received a $10,000 Backing Small Business Grant from American Express in partnership with Main Street America to do some renovations, including new tile for the kitchen, a new bar counter and a dish room with dishwasher.
That work was to begin July 28, the same window as Aydenâs heart surgery. To juggle this, the family pushed the renovation work out one week and created a plan to keep the restaurant going in shifts. Their plan is to remain open Wednesdays through Sundays.
Theyâre also scheduled for a visit from Americaâs Best Restaurants in August. Americaâs Best Restaurants is a road trip across America to highlight the best locally owned independent restaurants.
Keeping their restaurant going amid high inflation has been a challenge all on its own, and it has meant the family cannot afford to just close the business while Aydenâs transplant happens.
They have to find a way to keep the restaurant going at the same time.
âTransplants cannot happen without some form of insurance, or the ability to pay out of pocket,â Deanna said. âIn 2020, the average cost of heart transplant in the United States before insurance was $1,664,800.â
The cost breakdown is:
⢠$49,800 for 30 days pre-transplant medical care
⢠$131,500 for organ procurement
⢠$111,100 for physician costs
⢠$270,300 for 180 days of post-transplant medical care
⢠$39,500 for immunosuppressants and other medications
⢠$1.063 million for hospital admission
Because of these expenses, friends of the family have set up a GoFundMe campaign for Ayden to help with expenses that insurance doesnât cover.
Getting Ayden to this point in his life has been a long, expensive journey for the family, and the fight to save his life isnât over just yet.
Like any journey of 10,000 steps, itâs happening one step, one day at a time. The family is thankful itâs a journey that theyâre not taking alone.
An entire community has been following along, inspired by the heart they see in this family, as well as the heart Ayden himself has always had.
âIâll get back on Facebook an hour or so after making a post and there will be like 500 likes on it,â Deanna said. âIâm like, âGeez, people are emotionally invested over this at home.â And on his first day of surgery, there were people who literally stayed up until they knew he was out of surgery. So, this has affected a lot of people in the community, too.â
RenĂŠe Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.