Most people never say thank you so it's nice when someone does. It means a lot. Many or most people in trucking will help you, but you'll need to not be shy about asking for help. I know it felt like having a different guardian angel every time someone helped me. Back when I started 1990s, and especially when my dad started, helping other drivers was normal and expected. With the language barrier , almost no CB radios and the smartphones it's not as common as it was once. Being a woman, you will probably get help more than you need or want, and not always because the helper wants a "temporary adult experience". Most men are/were raised to offer help to women. Some women interpret offers of help as accusations they can't do things on their own. Some men are dangerous, but that is rare. Most men are more like eager puppies, clumsy, harmless, trying to figure out how be helpful. Mostly everyone is just in a hurry and 200% focused on their job. The best way to say thank you, it's never wrong to say it, is you help the next driver when you see someone wanting or needing help. It is no fun having a problem, not knowing what to do, but it feels like winning the lottery when someone knows what and how and helps. An offer to buy someone coffee inside the truck stop is standard etiquette. Those are mostly refused by the helper, but good either way. You aren't usually expected to hang around after buying the coffee. You're in a hurry, too.
Not a question but a thank you
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by UnderdogVigilante, Mar 8, 2025.
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A lot of people get asked the same questions day to day…
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Reading all your questions, replies & posts..... I have the feeling you are going to just fine after you find your footing out here.
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I left trucking after 1 year when there were no cellphones, only payphones, no satellite radio, no podcasts, and no GPS because me, Mr. Introvert, was so crushingly isolated. I came back into trucking with my pet dog after a year and it it was fantastic. Then cellphones and satellite radios and podcast became common. Make friends with your company trainer and other new and veteran drivers and talk by phone and whatever other people you meet along the way. Women, in general are more social and have a higher need for social contact than men, in general. Trucking is about 90% male so many drivers avoid social contact out of habit and no strong desire to change that. Trucking is like the olympics of being alone. You will need to make social contact happen, otherwise it won't just happen in trucking. If you can't be happy having only short conversations with clerks at customers and cashiers at truck stops as you do business this industry isn't well suited for you.Last edited: Mar 10, 2025
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Definitively lots of good info in the forums! I haven't been super social yet because its a bit intimidating but enjoy reading through all the information.
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