F**K IT
#11
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Sulphur Springs, TX
Posts: 528
T*Storm, weren't you raving about Swift not long ago? What the h3ll? Didn't you research just a little bit before hopping aboard? Seems you were so gung-ho about the whole thing, now you're ready to leave after a couple of weeks! I know I was ready to leave the first night of training, but I gritted my teeth, bit the bullet, and toughed it out. Spent a couple years doing local and am now back to OTR. And I'm no military veteran either. For God's sake, if I can do it, anyone can! You chose this life. Just do it.
And how exactly is getting stuck in some sand a preventable accident? I still haven't figured that one out. If you were flatbedding (or rock hauling, or bed bugging, or LTL, or even driving straight trucks) you'd be getting into tight situations all the time. How is getting stuck in some sand an accident?
#12
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Auburn, CA
Posts: 763
Originally Posted by nrvsreck
T*Storm, weren't you raving about Swift not long ago? What the h3ll? Didn't you research just a little bit before hopping aboard? Seems you were so gung-ho about the whole thing, now you're ready to leave after a couple of weeks!
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#14
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 12,859
man-I've been stuck in Sand-Snow-Spinning my drives on Ice and going nowhere. Haul logs out of the woods in the Spring you need a Dozer hooked up to you to drag you out of the Woods. If nobody hasn't gotten stuck they will be in the Future :P
Like most everybody else on here has said-Stick with it or you're REALLY gonna regret it.
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#15
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 177
just like swift or any company you are new and you are going to need trained. Anywhere you go you are going to have to do a training program. And in 2 weeks you definitely didn't do everything you wanted to do. He!! I have been out here for awhile now and I still need to learn on some stuff. Any better quality company will probably not even look at you jumping ship from swift so soon. For not really a good reason. You said you had a good trainer but he had some health problems. That is not swifts fault. Alot of people go ill out here. I hate when people job hop so quick. That is why half these company's don't pay well to many people jumping from job to job out here. I can see if you are having some real problems with a company. But to just quit because the trainer got ill again is just stupid. And to drive down a dead end street, that happens no matter what condition you are in. Some of these D/Cs and things are not in the streets and trips or atlas and sometimes the shippers/cosignees give really bad directions. Just my outlook on it. Bol
#18
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Auburn, CA
Posts: 763
#20
Senior Board Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Stillwater, OK
Posts: 577
What does having a life have to do with being rude and disrespectful to other human beings? There are quite a few truckers who do not fit in the stereotype you're giving them, including the wonderful man I'm married to. If you're willing to base your opinion of a whole industry on a small group that might represent 1% of all "truckers", and one bad experience with a company very few recommend, then the rest of your life or career choices are likely to follow in the same path, as our attitude and perspective on life makes the most difference.
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