I’M A TRUCK DRIVER—BUT MY FAMILY THINKS IT’S A JOKE

I’ve been driving trucks for eight years now. Long hauls, short runs, through rain, snow, and highways that never seem to end. I love it—the freedom, the solitude, the feeling of controlling something so massive and powerful. It’s not just a job. It’s my job.

But my family? They don’t see it that way.

“Still doing that truck thing?” my mom asks every time I visit, like it’s a phase I’ll grow out of.

My sister loves to tell me I should “do something more feminine,” like working in an office or—God forbid—becoming a teacher, like she did. “You don’t want to be that woman at family gatherings, right?” she says with a smirk.

And my dad? He just shakes his head. “Not exactly lady-like, is it?”

It’s exhausting. I make good money. I pay my bills. I’m damn good at what I do. But to them, it’s like I’m playing pretend in a man’s world, waiting to come to my senses.

Last Thanksgiving, my uncle tried to be funny. “You sure you don’t want a husband to drive you around instead?” Everyone laughed. I didn’t.

What they don’t get is that this job is me. The early morning starts, the late-night drives with nothing but the hum of the engine and the radio keeping me company—it’s what I love.

I don’t need their approval. But I’d be lying if I said it doesn’t sting.

After that Thanksgiving dinner, I drove back to my rig parked on the street—yes, I brought it home because I had a run scheduled first thing the next morning. I climbed up into the cab, slammed the door shut, and just sat there in the quiet, gripping the steering wheel. My second home. My sanctuary. My proof that I didn’t need anyone to validate my choices.

That night, I slept in the sleeper berth. Not because I had to, but because I wanted to. I curled up in my bunk, wrapped in a blanket I bought in Utah, and stared at the string of photos I’d pinned up: shots from truck stops, roadside diners, weird roadside attractions, and the smiling faces of friends I’d made on the road. None of them cared about nail polish or high heels or what society thinks a woman should do. They just cared that I could back into a loading dock in one try and wasn’t afraid to lend a hand.

The next morning, I was up before sunrise. Frost coated the windows, and my breath fogged in the cold. I fired up the engine, the roar of it settling something deep in me. I rolled out onto the road before anyone else in my family even had their coffee brewing.

A week later, I delivered a load down in Arizona. Hot sun, wide skies, and a diner with biscuits that melted in your mouth. While I was refueling, I saw a little girl watching me from the passenger seat of her dad’s pickup. Her eyes were wide as she stared at the truck, then up at me. I gave her a nod and a wink.

She grinned, like she’d just seen a superhero.

That moment? It stayed with me. Because maybe one day, that girl will remember the woman behind the wheel of a big rig. Maybe she’ll ignore the people who tell her what she should be, and go after what makes her feel free.

I still go to family gatherings. I still get the same comments, the same looks. But now, I let them roll off. I tell stories from the road, real stories—like the time I helped a stranded driver in the middle of Wyoming, or when I outran a dust storm in Texas, or when I sat with another trucker who’d lost his wife, just to keep him company through the night.

And you know what? Sometimes, they actually listen.

They may never fully understand why I chose this life. And that’s okay. They don’t have to. Because every time I climb back into my truck and hit the highway, I remember who I am.

I’m not just a woman behind the wheel.

I’m a truck driver.

And I’m damn proud of it.

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