LOL! Thanks for the word of caution about the chicks. I've been married once. Worst experience of my life. The girl was psycho!!! I was engaged too. I have no regrets with that one. Things just didn't work out. Anyways, i'm enjoying the single life right now, and I'm not sure if I ever want to change it. No social interaction is actually a plus in my pro's vs. con's column as long as I can figure out how to make a TV work in the truck and have internet connectivity.
Should I become a trucker?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Wade73, Jun 11, 2014.
Page 4 of 8
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
I admire those in good marriages, but how often do you see a truly good marriage these days?
The choice to stay single is finally becoming an acceptable choice (not that I care what society thinks) -
best of luck to ya
-
[QUOTE="semi" retired;4067907]Hi Wade, while to an outsider, trucking may seem like a glamorous, high action life,(depicted by movies) truth be known, there's like 5% of the time it is action packed, while 95% of the time, nothing happens. Only you can make that decision, but with new regulations and the way the public looks on truckers (with recent events) it may not be the best decision. Also, being the "new guy", and not knowing what's good or bad, companies will take advantage of that, and give you the crxp no one else wants. It is a driver's market out there, it just may take you several jobs to land a good one, Best of luck to you.[/QUOTE]
Thanks for the feedback! I'm trying to read the messageboards here as much a possible so that I go into this with my eyes wide open. I definitely realize there is no glamour for sure. Working for a company that treats its drivers like crap is one of my biggest worries. Sounds like a crap shoot!"semi" retired, 70s_driver and bergy Thank this. -
No spouse is definitely a good thing from multiple perspectives. I wouldn't be even considering this if I had a wife and especially kids. But I don't, so I keep asking myself what do I have to lose? not coming up with many answers other than money.
bergy Thanks this. -
70s_driver Thanks this.
-
Lots of places won't even talk to you once they find out you were a trucker.....they've seen too many drivers say they want to be "off the road".....only to find out that they really didn't....
70s_driver Thanks this. -
Funny thing is that it wasn't long ago that I was living in a house that I used cardboard to repair broken windows because I didn't have money to buy new ones. I as happy then as I am now!
70s_driver and bergy Thank this. -
I'd like to jump now, but in all likely hood it could be 2-5 years due to business interests etc. For me it is an early retirement plan. Knowing myself, it would be a mistake to outright retire. Driving for me is going to be a way to slow life down and get some much needed solitude. When I make the jump, I'm going total nomad style. I'll sell the house and vehicles and bring a small motorcycle with me. My plan also includes taking the worst couple months off, so I can count waves on a beach somewhere. Some here may not consider me a real trucker, but I'll drive my 10 each day and try and enjoy life.
We're in our forties and I don't know about you, but I've been realizing just how short life really is. Best of luck with whatever you chose.70s_driver Thanks this. -
bergy Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 4 of 8