Forced onto third shift...

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by TugHillRider, Jun 22, 2020.

  1. buddyd157

    buddyd157 Road Train Member

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    they may have needed someone they could depend on, and keep an ""eye" on things"

    maybe they got a bunch of slackers over there..???

    they have money invested in that take over.

    no, you will not be a company snitch, but rather maybe an example for the rest to follow what the company expects of them.

    take this slide over as a possible compliment more than an insult.

    leaving now may be like cutting off your nose, to spite your face.
     
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  2. D.Tibbitt

    D.Tibbitt Road Train Member

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    Midnight to 9am shift. That is awesome
     
  3. homeskillet

    homeskillet Road Train Member

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    I worked nights in various non-trucking jobs for about 15 years.

    Keep your room dark.

    Run a cheap box fan to generate "white noise" while you sleep.

    It was easier for me to keep my same sleep/wake cycle on my days off, but I realize it's not possible for some people to do that.

    I'm back driving again, and while I enjoy being in daylight, I find myself gravitating to a night schedule if the load permits.

    Good luck.
     
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  4. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

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    "Barry White, a spokesman at California's Employment Development Department, which administers unemployment benefits for workers in the state, explained it this way: Good cause exists when a "substantial motivating factor" causing a quit was "real, substantial, and compelling and would cause a reasonable person who genuinely wants to stay employed to quit under the same circumstances."

    Let's say a worker has typical daytime hours, perhaps from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and has family care responsibilities in the evenings. The employer demands a shift change to night hours, from 4 p.m. to midnight.

    This worker could likely quit and collect unemployment, Woodbury said."
     
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  5. farmerjohn64

    farmerjohn64 Road Train Member

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    I find there’s a lot less people around to pay for any of my mistakes, kinda makes me feel lonely though, let me clip your bumper in a right hand turn
     
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  6. Traveling

    Traveling Light Load Member

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    Look at it from the bright side, at least it is the same period of day/night so you can get used to it. It is especially difficult to adjust to ever-changing shift times, one day a driver gets 10 hour break for sleep at night, next day in the afternoon, the day after in the morning.
     
  7. G13Tomcat

    G13Tomcat Road Train Member

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    You're new; give it time, grasshopper . . . ~! ;)

    j/k... WISH YOU WELL~~! :)
     
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  8. G13Tomcat

    G13Tomcat Road Train Member

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    Don't see you around these parts much anymore. . . I was up in 'your' neck of the woods last night; Vandalia.

    Who 'are' you driving for, nowadays?!?
     
  9. TugHillRider

    TugHillRider Light Load Member

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    True. I don’t know if I could deal with that. I know a lot of OTR guys do that. That has to be very difficult
     
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  10. Traveling

    Traveling Light Load Member

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    Yeah, beyond difficult, during the Orientation with one of the mega companies, doctor said the average lifespan of a truck driver is 10 year shorter than of the average person in the U.S., I Googled it now and it says 17 years shorter. It probably has to do a lot with sleep deprivation.

    Inconsistency of sleep wears body out, difficult to get consistent sleep when pick up/delivery appointments are at all times days/nights, especially for OTR drivers who work long hours for weeks with no days off, I did that for a little bit, my stomach didn't function well, body started to shut down, I wasn't able to continue, the extra few hundreds $ a month weren't worth it, I went for a more steady schedule.

    Working a steady night shift at least offers consistency.
     
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