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Droopy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:03 PM
Original message
Seeking inspirational stories
This coming week I may be presented with the biggest opportunity in my life to this point. I applied at a car hauling trucking company recently and yesterday they called to get some more information from me and to inform me that they are performing a background check. I was up front in my application about all aspects of my life that they wanted to know about both positive and negative. They aren't going to find any surprises. I meet or exceed all of their minimum qualifications. If they are interested in me now I think I've got a pretty good chance. The only thing that might put me on the back burner is a more qualified driver applicant. The job pays 50%-80% more than I make right now depending on how hard I work.

It's a no-brainer, right?

The problem is that I'm scared to death. Even more scared than the first time I hopped behind the wheel of a truck. I've been with the same company for 6 years now and I intended on retiring from that company when I signed on with them.

What if I screw up during training and they decide I'm not car hauler material? My current company would hire me back, but I'd lose all the perks that come with working for them for 6 years. I'd have to take a significant pay cut as well to come back.

Give me your inspirational stories from when you took a chance in life and it payed off. I need some courage.
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MiniMandaRuth Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:11 PM
Response to Original message
1. Okay... from a friend...
His parents are very right-wing... In fact, the nickname 'round the lunch-table for his dad is 'Bible Thumping Bob'

He has two older sisters, two older brothers, and one younger sister. He's the second youngest.

His oldest sister is 22, going to college, and has good grades. His mom says that if she doesn't marry by 25, she's an outcast from the family.

The other older sister is a nitwit, prissy, stupid girl who can't even tie her own shoes. She wears tight-fitting pants with 'bitch' written across the back when her dad isn't looking.

His oldest brother is in Iraq.

So, typical right-wing nut-job family, right?

Well, my friend is gay. He recently came out of the closet to me, practically crying on my shoulder when he did.... But he's not afraid. He's not afraid to be who he is, even if his parents hate what he is (They don't know yet).

But his older brother lives in Canada, and is one of the most die-hard liberals I know.

He's awesome.

Just goes to show you that even in the bleakest of situations, there can be light.
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Droopy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:22 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. Thanks MiniManda
I wish your friend all the best. He is lucky to have you as a friend.
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Nevernose Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:30 PM
Response to Original message
3. SImilar thing happened to me & worked out HORRIBLY, TERRIBLY
I was in my early twenties, a new father, and got a job delivering pizza for a small local chain. Worked my way up by working hard and long hours, getting in good w/ the boss, all of that. I was in charge of drivers and making, on average, about $13 an hour. Not bad for a guy with no experience in any kind of real profession and no skills to speak of except phenomenal map-reading and an intimate knowledge of the city streets.

After three years, bored beyond belief and looking for something better, I applied for a courier job.

Got it, too. $16 an hour (32k a year, unskilled!), health vision and dental, two weeks off paid vacation.

I quit the pizza job after everything was finalized, giving two weeks notice, and knowing that the boss was such an incredible asshole that I would never get my old job back.

I worked the first two weeks at the new job (a full month after I'd left the last one), driving my ass off and showing up people who'd worked there for years. Management loved me. Then corporate came in and said "We noticed that you got a speeding ticket four years ago. That affects our insurance rates. Sorry, you'll have to go." I cried.

It was the BEST thing to ever happen to me. We got evicted, I lost my girlfriend, couldn't find a decent job for the longest time. Many other misadventures ensued. Went back to college (which took a while, as in "decade") and got a job teaching school. Happiest I've ever been, now, and almost unimaginably so. Ecstatic.

If you have just a little bit of brains and are willing to work hard, this is still the land of opportunity. One door closes, another opens. I didn't post this miserable little story to scare you, only to let you know that, at least in my experience, if you work hard enough you'll get ahead. Think of this as an adventure; and without a little adventure, what's the point in life? For God's sake, go for it!

What's the worst that could happen? Go back to where you where six years ago? Was that really so long that you don't have enough time to catch up? (if you're a senior citizen, I apologize)

(FYI: I've got a friend who tells me that half the drivers on his rodeo circuit, at least during summer, are teachers on vacation. It's something like two days on and five days off, hotels paid. I'm thinking about qualifying for my CDL just so I can get a paid tour of national parks.)
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Droopy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:37 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Thanks Nevernose (I think)
There is nothing that would disqualify me from the job in question. Like I said, no surprises on my end. The only thing that could hurt me if I get the job is if I make a serious mistake. Something like putting a big old scratch on a $40,000 car while training. Since I have no experience in car hauling that's probably a better than average possibility.

But you are right in saying that life is an adventure. That's the attitude I took when I first struck out on the blessed hellride that is trucking. I need to get that attitude back I guess or I'll never get anywhere.
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Dangerously Amused Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 11:17 AM
Response to Reply #4
13. Knowledge is power.



Don't be afraid, just gain as much knowledge on the job as quickly as you can. Talk to other car haulers. Just be humble and honest, and tell them, "This is my first time hauling cars and I love it so far, but I'm afraid I'll do something stupid, like scratch a car or (whatever/fill in blank). Can you give any advice to a rookie? Much appreciated." Most old timers are flattered when you seek them out for advice, and are more than happy to help out the new guy.

Re: Putting scratches in the new cars; that is probably the most common worry in such a business. I imagine they have devised any number of gadgets/procedures to help you out. You just don't know about them yet, which is why you are worried. So ask!


:)



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RoyGBiv Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 10:54 PM
Response to Original message
5. Okay, somewhat similar story ...
This actually has two parts, but I'll rush through the first one (it's convoluted, depressing, and basically irrelevant at this point) because it's really all one, long thing. These are the highlights.

One month and 24 days from now will be the 6 year anniversary of the day I planned to kill myself, but a couple months before that, something else got in the way. I just made a decision to try something else, since The Plan hadn't worked out. I was out of college but hadn't managed to scramble the finances or juggle my personal life to allow me to go to graduate school, and my degree is all but worthless without grad school. I had no job, having left the one I had had for the past 8 years because I woke up one afternoon from a drunken haze and decided I didn't want to do it anymore. The gas had been turned off in February, and I'd spent the last part of the winter freezing. I hadn't seen my daughter in months. My house was falling apart, and the city was threatening to condemn it unless I fixed it up, which I couldn't afford to do. On the day the electric company came and cut off the power, I made a decision and took the money I had left, didn't pay the electric bill, put gasoline in my car, packed it with what I thought I needed, and drove to see my mother.

I only went back once to close on the sale of the house.

I got a job I didn't want but that would get me started. It was hard, demeaning work, but it paid the bills. I got an apartment, got a good, used truck. Bought a couch, a television, and a computer. I reestablished my relationship with my daughter, eventually to the point we saw each other most weekends, talked on the phone regularly, and e-mailed even more often after I built her a computer. I was promoted to assistant manager. At the end of three years, I was about to be promoted to manager and given my own store. The salary would be somewhere in the 45 - 60 thousand/year range, which is good money for Oklahoma. I tested for the job, passed with flying colors, then went on vacation. When I came back from vacation, I quit. Why? As mentioned, I didn't want the job originally. I had only stayed with it because it paid the bills. It would *really* pay the bills if I stayed with it, but I feared losing my mind and health. This was a 10 hour/day job, often rotating shifts, standing the entire time, no breaks or lunches. Managers are paid salary and expected to make up any shifts hourly employees don't show up for. I hated upper management and with the promotion would be reporting directly to them rather than just having to tolerate their presence. Most of all, the job was incredibly boring to my mind.

I spent the next few months looking for work and not finding anything. Someone offered me a minimum wage job as a "lawn maintenance engineer," after I had applied at the company for an office position managing their computers. (I'm completely self-taught in computers and networking and have a better understanding of this type of thing that some professionals with gobs of certificates and classroom hours under their belts, but it's hard to sell that in a resume'.) I had about decided I had made a terrible mistake. The savings was gone. I had about $300 to my name, and rent was due in three weeks. I was making plans to move out of the state and live with a friend while I looked for work elsewhere, and I didn't want to do that.

Finally, I got a call from a company with which I had applied a couple months before. They wanted to interview me for a position that would utilize my technical skills as well as draw on my vast experience in retail operations and customer service. With benefits it paid just slightly less than what I had been making at the job I left. The only problem was that I was competing with about 20 other candidates, information I learned after asking since even trying to get this job would force me to hang on to a rope and swing if I didn't get it, rather than use the last of my money to make the move I had been planning. I decided to go for it. I wanted to work for this company; it had been first on my list. It would all turn on the interview, and I was late for that because the main office had suddenly moved between the time I applied and when I got the call, and no one told me that. I thought I had totally screwed it up, and to make matters worse I hadn't gotten a wink of sleep the night before due to nervousness. I left the interview with an oddly good feeling but still certain I was doomed.

To make a long story a bit shorter, I got the job, got my first check in time to make the rent payment without it being so late the landlord was angry. (Helped that I'd always made timely payments before.) I was worried, as are you, that I'd screw it up, that all my self-taught technical skills would turn out to be nothing but an illusion in my own mind, and that was really what made me stand out. I was the only applicant with both technical skills and retail/customer service experience at the same time. Last year my salary was 50% higher than my last year at the previous company. I get a chair and a lunch hour, and I don't stink or have to soak my back and tend to my sore knees when I get home. I get real vacations, which I've used to take my daughter and mother all over the country, this past summer to see Spamalot in New York, something I never could have managed at the old place. My last evaluation put me in the top ten percent of all people in my department, allowing me to choose my schedule and to move into a leadership role. My salary just increased, and now I'm getting substantial commissions as well.

The thoughts of suicide now seem incredibly childish.
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Droopy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 11:05 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Thanks RoyGBiv
Edited on Thu Apr-20-06 11:06 PM by Droopy
That is inspirational. You all are making feel better already. The butterflies in my stomach have settled down. I can do this.

I'm happy for you in your new life.
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CaliforniaPeggy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-20-06 11:53 PM
Response to Original message
7. My dear Droopy......
I have no inspirational stories here for you....

But you do! Reach down inside, and find them yourself!

Go for it! You have the courage, my dear.....

You just need permission to get it out and put it to good use.....

OK?

You'll be fine!

:loveya: :hug:
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merh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 12:02 AM
Response to Original message
8. Just stopped in to wish you luck and to remind you that
you have nothing to fear but fear itself.

You can do it, trust yourself, have faith in yourself and know that you deserve all the good things in life, take that step. :thumbsup:

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SeattleGirl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 12:10 AM
Response to Original message
9. Here's a story of mine for you.
In 1990, I was working at an alcohol/drug treatment center. The Director of the place where I worked was crazy, I swear. She was overbearing, overpowering, domineering, bossy, and a pain in the ass. I got to the point where I just could not stand it anymore, and I quit (7 of us quit in a two-week period of time, so I was definitely NOT alone!).

Well, here I was, living by myself in Seattle, and when I quit I had NO job to go to. I signed up at a temp agency, but it wasn't until the very end of the week that I got a call from them. I ended up first doing dispatch for a bank to send out repair people to fix machines in banks in 6 states, and then I ended up doing basic maintenance on ATMs at various of our branches in the greater Seattle area.

After 6 months of this, I saw a 2-line ad in the paper for a vocational rehab counselor job. I applied, got it, it's 17 years later, and I'm still working in that same field. Which, ironically, was my ORIGINAL major in college until I switched to psych!

You will be fine, Droopy. Take inspiration from these stories, but most of all, trust in yourself!
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Shine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 12:18 AM
Response to Original message
10. Whenever I have pushed through my fears and taken a chance
I gain something postive from it. I have had many, many experiences in my life of pushing through fear. Feeling it, acknowledging it, but not being limited by it, not allowing it to stop me.

One time, when I was 9 mos. pregnant with my first kid, I participated in a workshop that had, as its final culmination, a firewalk. The firewalk consisted of walking about 50 yds on burning hot coals with only our bare feet. They were using the experience of doing a firewalk as a metaphor for going beyond what we each thought we were capable of doing.

I went with the intention of being open to the possibility, but not necessarily committed to doing it, since I was soooo big and preggers. I didn't want to get hurt, injure myself or the baby. In the end, however, I did indeed do it, in my full and pregnant glory and it was truly a transformative experience I will never, ever forget. I took a chance, pushed through my fears, and briefly experienced myself as an unlimited being, filled with Power, Courage and Grace. It was a great gift to myself and a memory I call upon sometimes when I'm feeling down or forget what I am capable of.

Never underestimate the power of your mind and your ability to transform your fears into empowerment.

Best to you, Droopy. :hug:
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Shine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 10:40 AM
Response to Original message
11. kick.
:kick:

let's hear some more inspirational stories!
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skygazer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 10:56 AM
Response to Original message
12. You've probably heard this one before
I've told it here often but it bears repeating.

In December of 1998, I was living in Vermont working construction. I was depressed - all three of my kids had moved out the previous summer, I was lonely, I'd had to move and was renting a room at a co-worker's house, I had no real space to call my own. A week before Christmas I got laid off with no hope of finding work at that time of year and very little banked for unemployment.

I drove in to get my last paycheck - $300, all I had to my name - and on the way home, I thought to myself, "this blows. I'm going to California." I had an email friend who I'd been corresponding with for about 18 months - he knew I worked construction, he was building a house on 28 acres on top of a mountain in the bay area and kept telling me that if I wanted to try it out there, I could stay at his place and help with his project.

I drove home, loaded my clothes, my two dogs, my saddle and some books in my '85 VW Golf that had over 100,000 miles on it and was held together mainly by rust -



left a note for my roommate - "gone to California" and was driving by that afternoon.

I put the last ten dollars I had in my gas tank at the top of Donner Pass, coasted down the other side and got to my friend's place on fumes. I'd called him from about Nebraska and after his initial shock wore off, he was wonderful. He welcomed me to his home, gave me a credit card to use until I found a job, which I did within weeks, and I've been here ever since.

I'm at the same job, which I enjoy, I found a nice guy who I've been living with for 5 years now, I have some wonderful friends including the guy who I stayed with for the first 2 years and I'm happier than I've ever been.

It was a chance, a crazy chance and it could have turned out badly. But it didn't and I'll always be grateful that I took it.

Good luck, Droopy. You're gonna be fine. :hi:
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trof Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-21-06 11:37 AM
Response to Original message
14. Two tries to get hired at TWA.
Briefly:
1st interview/testing, 1966, "No. Don't come back."
2nd interview/testing, 1968, "When can you start?"
I had added about 800 hours flying time and gotten my instructor's ticket in the meantime.
That probably helped.

Go for it.
Depending on your age, you'll probably change jobs/professions 2 or 3 more times.
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