PO1 Ryan Sykes

Grass Valley, CA

Mission Accomplished on January 15, 2022

 
Ryan Sykes joined the military at 18, wanting to give back to his country and explore the world. He spent more than half of his military service on either training missions within the U.S. or deployments overseas.

On March 3, 2008, Navy Petty Officer First Class Ryan Sykes was on his fifth deployment to Afghanistan, serving as a special warfare analyst, when he sustained a traumatic brain injury (TBI) and other life-threatening injuries in Eastern Afghanistan. Lying unconscious in the darkness for more than five hours, a local security guard found him and alerted American troops. In addition to the traumatic brain injury, he also sustained a collapsed lung, facial fractures, soft tissue damage on his bicep, and pneumonia. Petty Officer Sykes was saved from further brain injury due to the freezing temperatures that limited the swelling of his brain.

Now medically retired, Ryan maintains an active lifestyle, and makes working out at the gym a priority despite his injuries, which include partial-paralysis on the left side of his body. He likes being outdoors, usually accompanied by his service dog Docker, and enjoys camping, biking, kayaking and swimming. Ryan now rides an upright trike and has placed first for the past several years in the USA Cycling Para-Cycling National Championships.

Though Ryan leads a busy lifestyle, he could not do as much as he would have liked because his previous home was not wheelchair accessible. His living situation made it difficult to perform daily routine tasks. With a specially adapted home from Homes For Our Troops, he is able to easily prepare meals in a kitchen with roll-under countertops and pull-down shelves. Additionally, he is able to shower safely in an accessible bathroom. He is relieved to have accessible appliances, a functional kitchen, and complete wheelchair mobility, all of which he says enable him to put his full strength and energy into trying to walk again, and further advance his cycling training for the US Paralympics.

With his newfound financial freedom of living mortgage-free, Ryan is able to give back to his community through his Rotary Club, and provide a better quality of life for his son.

Ryan would like to thank those who supported the building of his Homes For Our Troops home. “Thank you for this chance to start a new chapter in my life. This is an opportunity that I never dreamed of and one I shall never take for granted,” he says.


related articles:

  • My 97.1, Jan. 19, 2022 A Navy Veteran who was wounded in Afghanistan receives a new, custom-built, specially adapted home. Read more.
  • KTXL, Jan. 16, 2022 A local veteran, who nearly lost his life serving his country, gets a life-changing gift thanks to a nonprofit. Read more. 
  • KESQ, Jan. 16, 2022 A Grass Valley Navy Veteran wounded in Afghanistan received a custom-built home Saturday, thanks to a Veteran’s charity called Homes For Our Troops. Read more.
  • 101 Magic Iheart, Jan. 18, 2022 A Navy Veteran who was wounded in Afghanistan receives a new, custom-built, specially adapted home. Read more.
  • The Union, Jan. 19, 2022 Welcoming home Ryan: Navy Petty Officer Ryan Sykes receives his Homes For Our Troops residence. Read more
  • The Union, Nov. 22, 2021 Nearly 100 volunteers descended upon the home of retired Navy Petty Officer First Class Ryan Sykes’ for a work day helping to lay down 11,000 square feet of sod. Read more.
  • YubaNet, Nov. 17, 2021 On Saturday, Nov. 20, 2021, the national nonprofit organization Homes For Our Troops (HFOT) invites the community to a Volunteer Day event to help landscape a future specially adapted custom home. Read more. 
  • CBS Sacramento, April 29, 2021 Lumber, nails and plenty of hard work are going into a new build in Grass Valley, but it’s not any ordinary home. It’s a home for a U.S Navy veteran and Grass Valley local Ryan Sykes. Read more.
  • The Union, April 23, 2021 A virtual community kickoff event will be streamed at 10 a.m. today for the building of a Grass Valley home for Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Ryan Sykes. Read more.