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I'm not sure how to start....
I am very tempted to try to get off the road. It has been on my mind for
several weeks. I am torn between a need to do other things in my life and
this crazy thing called trucking. I am at a total loss.
I can make arguments for and against both sides. There is something to be
lost no matter which way I go. What do you do when you don't know what to
do?
The reasons for getting away from being over the road are many and are
likely all of those that you would expect plus a few. It isn't as simple
as that I'm sick of the crap. I've been sick of the crap for a long, long
time and though it may be impossible to get used to, I've gotten as close
as a person can. No, it isn't just that.
Way back when, I didn't quite understand it when drivers would complain
about their jobs and say that they were "stuck". What they meant is
becoming clear to me now. I fear that I will wake up one day and find
myself stuck in the truck for life. Any other job skills I might have had
will be so long lost as to be non existent. I'm thirty one years young,
have been driving nearly a decade and I'm still not sure what I want to be
when I grow up.
Just for fun the other day I
filled out an online application to do typing and clerical stuff for a
"work at home" deal. I can type very fast and the web site work has kept
my computer skills up to date. Besides, it was only typing and basic
letter writing stuff they were looking for. I was shocked when they turned
me down! My most recent experience in that line of work is a decade old.
Too old. I don't want to return to that line of work, but the knowledge
that I couldn't even if I did want to is sobering.
I want to enjoy watching my son
grow up before he is. I want to enjoy the house that I just bought and be
there to protect it. (Oh what a rite of passage to buy your first home...)
I want to take classes. I want to kiss my pets every day. (Cat, two
rabbits and a bird. I will not kiss the bird as he is a mean little sucker
and he'd peck my lip off given half the chance.) I want to be "normal".
(Ok, ok, in reality this might be a stretch.)
I look down in your cars as you
drive down the interstate and I envy your little family scenes. (Don't
misunderstand me, please. I am no voyeur... I am simply bored to death.)
Kids in the back. Dad driving. Mom conked out, head on a pillow in the
passenger seat. Sometimes the kids do the cute little arm thing so that I
will honk the air horn and I do. (Snoozin' Mom is none too appreciative,
but the kids like it.) I look at you for a moment and then you're gone, on
down the highway, destination unknown. I plod along my own path, not sure
exactly where I will end up, knowing only the pitstops along the way. I
wonder where you are going, if you have any idea that the truck driver
that you just passed is wishing, at least for a moment, that she could be
you. I would especially like to be the one sleeping in the passenger seat.
At the end of the day I crave running water down the hall and a recliner
and a remote. Heck, I just crave knowing when the end of the day is. 15+
hour workdays have aged me past my years. No offense to my chiropractor,
he really is a great guy, but I don't want to see him ten times a month
anymore. I want to eat homemade food. (Do frozen dinners count as
"homemade"?) I want to spend holidays with people that I care about. I
want to be able to make plans weeks ahead of time without worrying that I
won't be home. I want something that more closely resembles a life.
My buddy Bob; that is, Bob Seger, says it best:
"On a long lonesome highway east of Omaha... you can listen to the engine
moanin' out as one lone song..."
"...but your thoughts will soon be wanderin' the way they always do, when
you're ridin' 16 hours and there's nothin' much to do... and you don't
feel much like ridin', you just wish the trip was through..."
"...say here I am, on the road
again, there I am, up on a stage... here I go, playin' star again, there I
go, turn the page..."
Although Bob sings about a career on the road as a musician, this song's
lines so closely parallel what I feel... the engine song on long, lonesome
stretches east of Omaha, my thoughts wandering aimlessly around my brain
and looking so forward to the end of the run. Bob's stage is a real stage,
but I often feel as though I am on my own sort of "stage". Women have been
driving trucks for a good long time, but that doesn't mean that the masses
have gotten used to it. I am an utterly boring individual, but people
stare at me constantly and I feel as though I might as well be on a stage.
I realize this is actually a compliment and that people are very curious
as to how this young little thing drives that big ole truck. (Makes me
think of the song "Big Ole Truck" by Toby Keith about a woman in a big 4 X
4.) Even though I know it is actually complimentary, it is a human desire,
as well as my own, to just "fit in".
For my first few years of
driving I avoided eating in a truckstop restaurant anywhere near supper
time because when I walked in and everyone stared, I was very
uncomfortable. Somewhere along the way I decided to hell with it, I'm
hungry!!! To this day, though, it still happens. Drivers look at me as
though I've made a mistake by sitting in the driver's section. Since I've
perfected "the stare", though, they soon forget I'm even there. (I take
pride in never losing a staredown.) Again, Bob means
something a bit different, but it clicks...
"...well you walk into a restaurant, strung out from the road and you feel
the eyes upon you as you're shakin' off the cold... you pretend it doesn't
bother you, but you just want to explode... most times you can't hear 'em
talk, other times you can, all the same old clichés, is that a woman or a
man... and you always seem outnumbered, you don't dare make a stand..."
I don't think people mistake me for a man, but in my flannel shirts, etc,
some look at me as though they're wondering if I'm suffering an identity
crisis. Though I have my share of problems, an identity problem is not one
of them. I don't particularly like flannel, but I do have an entire
wardrobe of every flannel color combination ever imagined. In fact, a
boyfriend once bailed out of a relationship and the only reason he could
give at the time was, "Man, you wear a lot of flannel..." I guess he
thought that I would wear my "nice" clothes on the road in the winter.
Okay, Mike.
All of these things and I haven't even mentioned the unfair treatment that
drivers suffer through as even one of my reasons for wanting to get away
from OTR. I am not going to, for that matter. This journal has already
been through all of those things. The only thing that I will say to this
subject is that I do not believe there is any relief in sight. This does
not mean, however, that if I quit driving OTR that I would stop doing the
things I do regarding web sites, research, writing, etc. Oh no. I wouldn't
dream of letting the industry off so easy. I am a very small thorn in it's
side and I can only work, try and hope to become a much larger thorn.
I don't know what I am going to do but no matter what, I don't want to
quit driving completely. I am a driver down deep and as much as I want
some things and am tired of others, I would miss driving too much to leave
it entirely.
Wouldn't you know it, but Bob captures that beautifully as well:
"Leavin' my home, leavin' my friends, runnin' when things get too
crazy..."
(I once thought trucking would be a great way to escape problems... until
I figured out that if you go truckin' to escape problems, they come with
you and you lock yourself up with them. Once you figure out that you can't
run, can't hide, you can do some incredible soul searching and this is
only and always good.)
"Out to the road, out underneath the stars, feelin' the breeze, passin'
the cars.."
(Where a driver's soul really is..)
And finally, the most beautiful song lyric I've ever heard:
"Sometimes at night I see their faces, I feel the traces they've left on
my soul... those are the memories that make me a wealthy soul... I tell ya,
those are the memories that make me a wealthy soul..."
I've met thousands of people on
the road: white people, brown people, black, yellow, whatever. Nice
people, jerks, drifters, white collar, blue collar, no collar... Some of
those people have made impressions on me that have shaped me, changed me,
strengthened me, grown me up. I have no way to thank those who helped me
in times of trouble, no way to let them know that I am grateful for them,
for their actions or words... but I can, and forever will, be able to see
their faces and know that I am a better person for having known them, if
only for a short time.
I have learned a great deal about my fellow
human being. I was born and raised in a mostly white city in a
mostly white state. Cultural diversity to me was picking up a
National Geographic. When I started driving I was fascinated by what
I hadn't known was out there. I was automatically a minority as a
female in the profession, but at times I became a double minority.
(Female and white in mostly male and black warehouses, truckstops, etc. or
the same thing among Spanish/Mexican populations and so on.) I went
to the East Coast and for the very first time, I understood what was meant
by America being a "melting pot." I heard many languages spoken and
not everyone looked like me. This "culture shock" was sometimes
intimidating but overall, I saw it as a learning experience. People
fascinate me. There was a big world outside of my home back in the
sticks of Iowa and there was a lot to be learned from all of these
incredibly different people. I believe prejudice is simply a lack of
exposure. How can you hate a person simply because they don't look
like you????
I would be remiss if I did not include some
of the other benefits that I have realized by taking this career path.
It has not, contrary to what my journal may sometimes imply, always been
bad. It has almost always been a challenge, though. This has
often made it all feel like an uphill battle, but in the long run, has
served to make me a stronger, more confident and more capable human being.
I have learned to rely upon myself, for the most part, and when I could
not accomplish something on my own, I have learned how to humble myself to
reach for help and to acknowledge when I am in over my head. I've
pushed myself to my mental and physical limits and have been amazed at
just how far a person can actually push themselves.
Of course, there is the money, too. I
did not go to college (big mistake) and there are few other jobs that
would pay me what trucking does. The job security that a clean CDL
gives me is assuring. In these days of massive layoffs, I have more
job security than the bigwig corporate types. How often do you hear
about truck drivers being laid off?
I have been forced to learn patience.
I cannot say that this is a lesson that has been learned, as in past
tense, because it is ongoing. Dealing with the job, the traffic,
etc, etc, will force you to become more patient or you will get out.
This is significant for me because I used to have about as much patience
as a kid.
I don't like all of my fellow drivers, but
what would you expect; there are more than 3 million drivers in the USA.
Most drivers, though, are down to earth, good, hard working people.
(Um, never mind the serial killer truck driver from the Northwest.)
These are a group of people who have had much time to think their lives
through from that air ride seat. Too many people seem to go through
life never giving their mistakes the necessary thought. How can
anyone work things through and become wiser if stuck in avoidance?
Drivers also tend to be pretty blunt individuals, a trait which I like.
I don't like to be forced to "read between the lines" as to someone's
meaning -- just say it, already.
I know this isn't the "style" of writing you are used to from this
journal. It is really beyond my control; I pick up a pen or start pounding
a keyboard and I never know what will result.
My last trucking week went well enough. I took a preloaded trailer out of
Council Bluffs, IA and delivered in
Ephrata, PA at 1:00 PM on a Monday afternoon.
The day's schedule was like this:
Monday
8:00 AM Up and off towards
Ephrata, PA.
10:00 AM Arrived at receiver.
12:50 PM Unloaded and running empty to
Carlisle, PA to load for Seymour, IN.
2:50 PM Arrived at receiver. I was 50 minutes
late for my loading appointment, but it couldn't be helped. I admit one
short stop between my delivery and here for a cheeseburger, but even
without the stop I would've been late. I also had to get money from an ATM
so that I could get off the toll road. Considering the shipper was much
behind and had many trucks ahead of me, they couldn't have dreamt of
getting me in on time, anyway. I learned long ago that if you skip food
and showers, you will soon either starve and/or stink. I try my best to be
where I am supposed to be, when I am supposed to be there, but not at the
ultimate expense of my personal needs. (Notice I did not say "wants" --
but needs.)
When I pulled into the shipper's driveway, there was a sign that
instructed drivers to call for the shipping department on CB channel 3. I
called to them several times, but they did not answer. That's fairly
typical -- they monitor the CB at their convenience only. I walked into
the office and got checked in. There were a lot of trucks ahead of me. As
I waited for them to call me, several trucks came in and checked in over
the CB radio. Shipping responded to them quickly.
When they called me hours
later, they said to put my trailer in dock door 11. I thanked them and
went to find door 11. I quickly found that there were actually two doors
that were 11 - one in each of two different buildings. I called to them to
ask which building they meant. They wouldn't answer. I took a guess and
put it in one of the two dock doors. A driver called to them and received
an immediate answer so as soon as they were done, I tried to reach
shipping again. They would not answer me. Within a few minutes I felt them
banging around back in the trailer and decided I must have chosen the
correct dock. I continued to hear drivers call to the shipping department
on the CB radio and shipping responded to them each and every time. The
other drivers said my radio was working just fine. It would seem that they
would only respond to male drivers on the CB radio. What other conclusion
can I come to after all of my failed attempts to reach them and all of the
successful attempts of the men? I've never had a shipper treat me so
differently than everyone else. Even my fellow drivers were joking about
it on the radio, saying things like, "I guess they don't like the sound of
your voice." I had to agree.
After a couple of hours I got sleepy. I turned the CB radio volume up and
laid down. I fell asleep and when I woke, it was a couple of hours later
and it was dark outside. I called to shipping on the CB, but as before,
there was no answer. I went into the office to ask if I'd missed them
calling me to say I was done. The office was empty. There was a buzzer
beside the check-in counter and a sign above it that read, "Ring buzzer if
there is no one in attendance." I buzzed. I waited. 10 minutes, 15
minutes. I was about ready to go get my cell phone and call them when a
driver came in.
He said, "He's out there (referring to the loader) better than half done
with my trailer, so he'll be in in a minute. He didn't want to quit just
to give you your paperwork."
My eyebrows raised... I mean, it takes only minutes to hand over paperwork
and this driver's trailer was practically right beside the office, not
across the warehouse. I asked the driver if they'd heard me ring the
buzzer.
He said, "Yeah, we heard it..."
and his voice trailed off so I finished the sentence for him.
"...but you guys just ignored it."
He smiled and said, "Well, yeah."
I found no humor in this.
About fifteen minutes later the lazy warehouseman returned to the office.
He saw me standing there.
He said, "I tried to call you on the CB when your load was done, but you
didn't answer."
I said, "Yeah, I fell asleep."
He said, "Well, it ain't my job to come wake you up."
I said, "I realize falling asleep after waiting for hours is an
unforgivable sin. Tell me though, what is it with this buzzer? Why bother
to put it there if you are just going to ignore it?"
He shrugged his shoulders, smirked and said nothing.
This is the first time I've been so blatantly discriminated against.
Usually they are a lot more subtle.
8:00 PM Finally loaded and rolling towards Seymour, IN.
1:00 AM I call the day officially over and go to sleep.
Day Started At:
8:00 AM
Day Ended At:
1:00 AM
The schedule above is pretty typical. The days are long, but are
interspersed with waiting periods when you can catch your breath. On the
other hand, when you are rarin' to go, the waiting periods can really wear
you down. This is the issue that the big boys in charge refuse to
understand and refuse to deal with fairly. You have to learn early on to
pace yourself, as well as slow yourself down to best use the downtime to
rest, relax, take care of paperwork, trip plan, etc. Learning to "sleep on
demand" was very difficult for me, as I had been the worst kind of
insomniac before I started driving. (Driving has since cured this
problem.) More and more shippers and receivers are insisting that drivers
remain awake while waiting, babysitting a CB radio. You can wait hours for
them to call you to tell you it is your turn to load/unload. I think this
is a poor way to do business.
You can probably see why carriers are so strongly opposed to paying
drivers hourly. Besides being incredibly complicated in regard to
bookkeeping, it could get very, very expensive. Many of the advocacy
groups would like to see hourly pay, but it really isn't practical. Don't
get me wrong -- I'm no fan of per mile pay -- but hourly pay is just not
the way to do it. There's too much opportunity for lying. We do not have
the technology in place to keep this method honest. Salaried pay is the
way to go. I've been on this type of pay for nearly two years and I feel
I'm in a place to say that it is just about the most effective deterrent
to logbook cheating that exists. It also provides strong motivation for
carriers to "get it together" and get drivers driving -- not wasting away
on docks. It puts the responsibility and burden back on the carrier to
move the driver. I have my beefs with my carrier at times, but I strongly
commend them for this program. I know of just a few over the road
companies that have opportunities like this.
Tuesday
9:00 AM or so ? Up and off towards
Seymour, IN.
4:40 PM Arrived at receiver in
Seymour, IN. My appointment isn't until 6:00 PM and they won't
allow you to come in any more than one hour early. They tell me to go away
for awhile so I go up the street to the truckstop for supper.
8:45 PM Arrived at receiver for the second time. I'm
assigned a dock door to drop the trailer in. This receiver makes the
driver unhook the tractor and trailer and park the bobtail in a "holding
area". Although it is sort of a pain, I understand that they mean it to be
a safety precaution.
9:45 PM Finally unloaded. My reload will be a drop and
hook out of Granite City, IL. It will deliver
in Lincoln, NE at 4:00 AM on Thursday.
Wednesday
9:00 AM Up and off.... Only drove about an hour and
stopped for a shower. A couple of hours down the road I made a pitstop at
a rest area. Another driver was walking in at the same time and our paths
crossed. We both walked out of the building at the same time, too.
He said, "Didn't I see you yesterday in Seymour, IN?"
I said, "Yeah, I was unloading there yesterday."
He asked how long I'd been there and said he'd been held up 8 hours. We
went on to chit chat about this, that and the other thing. Before long the
conversation strayed to other topics.
He said, "You know, after 18 years I'm just tired of it, tired of
everything. I just gotta get off the road..."
He went on to list the things that were driving him away. They were the
standard complaints of drivers nationwide. What was strange about it is
that he was parroting all of the things that I had been thinking about so
hard in the past several weeks.
I said, "I know how you feel because that's absolutely exactly how I feel,
too."
For some reason I think that is just what he wanted, or needed, to hear.
Every human has a need to be heard. No human, no matter how solitary,
wants to feel totally alone. He then did something that many drivers do
when in search of answers as to how their industry has changed... he
blamed new drivers. Naturally I had to interrupt and say my piece at this
point.
"Wait a minute, though," I interrupted, "you can't blame the new drivers
for the whole mess. There are schools out there convincing these people
that they can learn to be a good driver in two weeks. Then, of course, the
carriers hire them. The carrier puts a lot on the shoulders of the
trainer, who gets a lot more than he bargained for. How can you blame the
new driver when the schools mislead them and the carriers accept them? All
they're really guilty of is trying to start a new career but all of these
drivers blame them because they don't know what else to blame."
He looked a bit surprised and then said, "Well, yeah... they do get a bad
rap but it is usually the drivers with under five years of experience that
blame the new drivers."
I thought his contradiction interesting but let it go. In truth, I've
found that it's almost always the 15-20 year veteran driver who is so
quick to blame the new driver. These old pros hold nearly all schools in
deep disdain. Very few of these drivers learned from a school. More often
than not, they learned from Dad or an uncle, brother, etc. Teaching
methods were a whole lot different. Grind the gear? Get ready for a hard
slap on the back of your hand. Many times they learned in Dad's truck and
beating up the transmission could cost Dad some bucks, so you'd better
learn to do it and do it right.
I think I understand him at least a little bit, though. Things have
changed a lot. The changes reflect not only a change in drivers, but of
society in general. People don't trust other people like they used to. Our
society has become more wary. It used to be that you could trust the
trucker driving alongside you with your life. Quite literally, at times,
that is exactly what you were doing. When two trucks, side by side, are
going down a slick hill, or down a hill, around curves, etc, one wrong
move by either one could be the end of both. Both drivers instinctively
knew that and trust was inherent. Not so anymore. These days the other
drivers are almost as bad as the four wheelers. While I would probably
still prefer to have a truck beside me rather than a car, I am very much
aware that many drivers these days do not drive well. They allow their
trailers to drift into my lane. They cut in front of me too soon and force
me to kill the cruise. If you did one of these things just ten years ago,
the driver you did it to would likely tell you, in no uncertain terms,
what he thought of your driving on the CB radio. It was disgraceful if you
could not keep control of that truck. Your driving ability defined your
worth as a truck driver. Period.
I remember when I was just starting out that I would concentrate extremely
hard on doing everything exactly right so that another driver wouldn't
holler at me. I thought getting hollered at was just about the worst thing
there was.
If a driver did do something stupid, he/she would usually pick up the CB
and apologize. This would almost always immediately quell the anger of the
"wronged" driver. Nowadays if you say something to the driver who let his
trailer swing 3 feet into your lane, he's likely to cuss you out. Because
he/she isn't in control.
The standards are no longer what they once were and many drivers are
frustrated and angered by this. They often blame the new driver because, I
guess, they believe that poor training spawns drivers who can't control
their trucks. Good ole Dad's hand slapping method might have been nasty,
but it was usually quite effective! Schools have to provide a different
motivation to make a student want to learn the right way, but all too
often, they don't.
2:00 PM Arrived at shipper. This was a drop & hook so I was
hooked up and gone in no more than 30 minutes. Drove straight thru to
receiver (462 miles).
11:30 PM Arrived at receiver in
Lincoln, NE and went to sleep on their lot.
Thursday
3:30 AM Bang! Bang! Bang! The receiving guy is
knocking on doors, waking all drivers. I have a 4:00 AM appointment, so I
am assigned a door right away. I put it in the dock, checked in,
negotiated with the lumper and went back to sleep.
12:30 PM Finally done unloading.... I headed back to
Council Bluffs, IA and jumped in my car to go
home.
A fairly easy week, all told. I am also happy to say that all the money
I've been paying to the chiropractor (Or as I lovingly refer to him, the
"Bone Cruncher") seems to be starting to pay off. Many weeks end
with me ready to bawl and scream because my back and neck hurt so much.
This week wasn't as bad... maybe there's a light at the end of the
tunnel (or should I say road) after all.... :)
'Til next time... |