Found paralysed in the streets of Aberdeen, the circumstances surrounding Jon Davie's injuries remain a mystery.

A well-known face on the Aberdeen music scene, Jon played guitar and sang vocals for rock band Guttergodz.

But after a night out in the city, the 28-year-old was discovered with life changing injuries.

It is still not known how he came to be paralysed to this day.

In the early hours of September 29, Jon was found unconscious in the streets of Aberdeen.

He had been spotted on CCTV on Harriet Street but beyond that point, his movements had not been captured any further.

A good samaritan found him on Charlotte Street some 300m away from his last known sighting and called the emergency services.

The circumstances in which Jon had found himself in have been a mystery ever since, having been found with his neck broken in three places, a broken back and a damaged spinal cord.

"We don't know if its been a fall, a collision with a vehicle or an assault, because there were no outer damage to the body, it was only the inner breaks, which seems even more strange," Jon explains.

"To break the pelvis which I believe is one of the strongest bones in the body, to do that much damage and have no outer visible damage, it's really strange.

"I've no idea what the accident actually was or the incident whatever you would call it. I've no idea how it happened."

Jon's first memory after being found in Aberdeen was waking up in hospital in Glasgow, having been transferred for specialist treatment.

He says it was then he first realised he "was totally paralysed from the neck down".

While Jon was concerned about his injuries, he was convinced everything would be fine.

It wasn't until doctors told him of the lasting damage his injuries had caused in December that he realised the life-changing impact the mysterious incident would have on him.

"My consultant in Glasgow had told me he thought it was unlikely I would have functional movement in my back and legs and arms and that's when the whole game changed," he says.

"My whole demeanour changed, my whole mindset changed entirely about the future.

"Up until that point I thought I could put in all the work and I would be guaranteed to walk again, play the guitar again but I was then told that wouldn't be the case.

Jon's biggest torment was knowing he may never play the guitar again, a hobby he calls his "one true love".

"To go from centre stage to rehab centre is massive," he says.

"Obviously it's a massive ordeal anyway but it's taken my one true love away from me.

"As much as the physical body aspects of things is obviously a huge deal, but playing guitar was my life.

"To not be able to do that is a killer."

Back in Aberdeen, the music community which Jon was such a beloved member of were rallying to support him.

They held a three-day music festival in his honour at Cafe Drummonds in October and raised thousands of pounds to support the family who were travelling to Glasgow as much as they could afford.

The festival showed Jon's parents Lynne and Eddie just how loved Jon was in the local music scene.

"My family when they were at the gigs last year, they didn't realise how many people I really knew and people's lives I'd affected through music," he explains.

"Everyone one of them said that if it had been someone else who had been affected, I would have been the first person to play these gigs because I would have been."

Since October, Jon has been working with doctors at Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital to begin the gruelling process of physiotherapy to help improve his condition.

"In the beginning, any movement was just the elation we felt," Jon's mother Lynne explains.

"We kinda knocked ourselves so far down that everything that happened, a move of a finger, the move of a toe and that was how it basically started, and now that he can lift his legs, he can lift his arms.

"It's not a huge amount for Jon but for us it's a huge amount because we saw him at his total worst."

Recently Jon has been transferred back to his hometown of Aberdeen and currently resides at the city's Woodend Hospital where he continues to get treatment.

He is delighted to be nearer his family and his mother visits him at least once a day.

Since beginning treatment, Jon's condition has improved and while his hands and arms don't work properly, he is able to move them and control his wheelchair which he uses to get about.

Jon remains positive about his future and hopes his condition will improve as he continues to work hard on his rehabilitation.

"Because my injuries are classed as incomplete, the sky's the limit so to speak," he says.

"It's basically trying to build more muscle and stretch off all the muscles to hopefully gain more movement, gain more function in the fingers.

"The legs, building up more muscles on the standing frame I'm using so hopefully that can be used to transfer me from my chair to my bed other than full body hoists or anything like that.

"Basically to build up the muscle and hopefully gain more function and movement in the future."