Norris, the youngest of three, grew up in the mountains of Johnson City, Tennessee. "My parents hadn't raised a boy before," he wrote in the Players' Tribune. "So when I was about two years old, they were like, I guess we'll put him in … sports?"
He excelled at football and basketball in high school, but baseball — particularly pitching — suited his personality most. As he told ESPN, "It can get quiet and lonely out there when you're pitching, which drives some people crazy. But that's my favorite part."
Norris, right, as a sophomore in high school.
Source: ESPN
Much of Norris' lifestyle was influenced by his father (pictured), who owned a local bike shop in Johnson City and raised his kids to embrace the outdoors and live simply. "We would always go mountain biking or on family bike rides," Norris wrote in the Tribune. "We were always outside. So my love for the outdoors comes from how and where I was raised."
In June 2011, Norris signed his first pro baseball contract with the Toronto Blue Jays. It came with a $2 million signing bonus, plus a deal with Nike. He was 18 at the time, straight out of high school, and did what most people would do with a fat check: He bought his dream ride ...
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad... a 1978 Volkswagen camper. "I knew after I signed [with the Blue Jays] that I was going to get a Volkswagen van," Norris told GrindTV. "It was my dream car."
What's more, he turned his $10,000 mustard-yellow van — nicknamed 'Shaggy' — into a tiny house on wheels, which he lives and travels in during the offseason.
One of the reasons he hits the road in the off season is to keep himself busy once baseball is over for the year. "If there's no baseball, I need to keep myself occupied or I'll go crazy," he wrote in the Tribune. "It keeps me grounded and allows me to recharge." He also enjoys the simplicity of the van lifestyle: "Living with less, even if it's only for a few months on the road, helps me keep things in perspective."
Norris is the first to admit that he's "more comfortable being kind of poor." In fact, he only spends about $800 a month and directs the rest of his money into conservative investments. "Just because money is there doesn't mean you have to have nicer things than you used to have," he told ESPN.
Come baseball season, which kicks off with spring training in Florida, Norris road-trips south from his home in Tennessee, stopping to hike, camp, and explore the back-roads along the way. While most players live in hotels or apartments during spring training, Norris can often be found in the Walmart parking lot, sleeping and cooking meals in Shaggy.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAs for whether or not the van life takes away from focusing on baseball, Norris doesn't think so. As he wrote in the Tribune, "It might be a little unconventional, but that's the only way I'm going to come back to spring training and have a great season. I need to start out happy and balanced. With things in perspective."
He's a self-taught surfer, inspired by his favorite musician, Jack Johnson. "It's so exhilarating, but mellow at the same time," he wrote of surfing. "It's this happy medium between being super intense, but completely relaxed. It's a lot like pitching."
He also has a knack for photography ... and for finding and connecting with interesting people on the road. While traveling, Norris takes portraits of folks he meets, uploads them to his Instagram account, and shares a sliver of their lives in his captions. Pictured is a mechanic he met in Denver, Colorado.
But his true passion is baseball. "Above all my other hobbies and interests, I'm a baseball player first," he wrote in the Tribune. "Even when I'm out on the road, I never miss a workout. I'm working out twice a day, every day, whether I'm back home in Tennessee, out on the Oregon coast (another one of my favorite spots) or down in Nicaragua."
It was a frustrating start to the 2016 season for Norris, who has been recovering from injuries and a battle with thyroid cancer. After being diagnosed in the spring of 2015, he made a full recovery in October. However, after a long hiatus, Norris is back: He was called up from the minor leagues to start for the Detroit Tigers in late June 2016.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNo matter what his future holds, baseball will always be on his mind. "It doesn't matter what I'm doing. Whether I'm in the Pacific Ocean in Nicaragua waiting for the next good wave, or pledging devotion to my faith, I'm always thinking about baseball," he wrote in the Tribune. "I just can't escape it. Probably because I really don't want to."