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Traveling with Grandma Joy has shown grandson the beauty in ordinary moments

After a bout with depression, a man rediscovered simple joys on a long roadtrip with his grandmother.

Joy Ryan, 89, and her grandson Brad Ryan, 38, tour Wrigley Field Wednesday Sept. 25, 2019 in Chicago. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune/TNS)
Joy Ryan, 89, and her grandson Brad Ryan, 38, tour Wrigley Field Wednesday Sept. 25, 2019 in Chicago. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune/TNS)Read moreArmando L. Sanchez / MCT

If you don’t like the view, change your lens.

That’s what Brad Ryan did after he finished years of higher education only to find out that becoming a veterinarian wasn’t the “end all, be all” he thought it would be.

“I was going through my worst depression in life and I had been honest about the fact that I definitely had suicidal thoughts during vet school,” said the 38-year-old Ohio man. “When a second-year student committed suicide, I thought I needed to get out. And for me, Mother Nature was always my greatest healer.”

He drove to the Great Smoky Mountains for a reset with his octogenarian grandmother, Joy Ryan, known as Grandma Joy, riding shotgun. That was four years ago. What started out as a single road trip turned into six, with a goal of visiting all 61 U.S. national parks.

Brad has been chronicling their adventures on social media, and the duo have become internet sensations with almost 30,000 followers on Instagram and several national news spots under their belts. Per Brad, Grandma Joy can’t go to the grocery store in their hometown of Duncan Falls, Ohio, without having people ask for a photo.

“We have been charged by moose, and Grandma has unfortunately run across a skinny-dipper on the side of a lake in Yellowstone National Park,” Brad said recently, when he and Grandma Joy dropped by Chicago in between park visits. “We’ve had beautiful, epic moments like being trapped in a bison herd for four hours at Yellowstone, walking through the redwood trees, watching the sun rise over the Grand Canyon. We could go on and on.”

The Ryans finished seeing their 31st park when they visited the country’s newest: Indiana Dunes National Park, on the southern shore of Lake Michigan.

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“We had a nice ranger who was very giving and patient with me, trying to plow through all that sand,” Grandma Joy said. “Oh my word! That was a tad of a struggle, but we made it. She showed us all the different flowers. I have sassafras in my backyard, but I didn’t find out until yesterday that a sassafras tree has three kinds of leaves.”

Amid their adventures, the Ryans have strengthened familial bonds. For years, Brad thought by achieving his career goals, he would find validation and fulfillment, and his life would then take shape. He did all of that and still found he was not the person he wanted to be.

“It was sort of the Dorothy Gale [Wizard of Oz] analogy, right?” Brad said. “Everything that I ever needed was right there at home the whole time, and I had lost sight of that.

“When you’re on the open road, it forces conversations to emerge that might have otherwise gone unspoken,” he added. “We had a whole family legacy that I didn’t know about, and she would have taken to her grave. I think we just take that for granted as we push forward in life to pursue our careers. I definitely had.”

This was Grandma Joy’s first visit to Chicago. She was in awe of the city lights.

“I couldn’t believe all these people live in these great big buildings — millions of them,” she said. “It looked like Christmastime.”

Before the Ryans left for Isle Royale National Park in Michigan, Brad and Grandma Joy offered some life lessons. The interview has been condensed and edited.

GRANDMA JOY

On getting tired hiking through parks:

“Sure, I get tired sometimes, but what’s the alternative? Stay home? I don’t think so.”

On her view on life:

“I look forward to life. I lost my boys and husband, but you just take it one day at a time and you look around and see other people in a lot worse shape than you. So every morning I wake up and thank God for giving me another day and trudge forward.”

On getting caught in the middle of a bison herd:

“It was fun to just sit there and watch — there were little ones, big ones, middle-sized ones. It’s amazing to see all these things that you see on the Travel Channel and then you see them in person. You can’t believe the difference when you see something in person. In every park, so beautiful, it was just amazing.”

On her lessons to Brad:

“You just have to be positive. The glass is half full, not half empty. Stop and smell the roses.”

BRAD RYAN

On Grandma’s lessons:

“She loves animals like I do; that’s one of the things that we connect on. She was the grandma who was adventurous enough to take her shoes off and get in the stream with me to lift up rocks to find little critters. That planted the seed and my love of nature and wildlife. When she told me in her 80s that she had never seen mountains or the great, charismatic wildlife of the United States, that’s what broke my heart because I knew that if she had the financial means and the ability to go and see these things, she would have really soaked it all up. It just kind of haunted me. She makes the most of her life and she’s always looking at life through a very grateful lens. I just felt what a missed opportunity if I couldn’t somehow show her the world.”

On completing their road tripping, as last month they visited their 49th out of 61 national parks:

“That’s every national park in the lower continental United States. At that point, it’s Hawaii, Alaska, and two in the Caribbean. The old Brad was completely disappointed if I didn’t complete 10 items on a to-do list when I visited a place. Now I’m not so distracted by the end goal — that’s a lesson I got from her.

“When I had to slow down to her pace when we were visiting the parks, she would point out the designs on caterpillars, say: ‘Look at the roots on this tree. Doesn’t that look like a sculpture?’ I’ve learned to live more presently because of her.”