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

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 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 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 someone 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 stars for company—that’s where I feel like myself. I’ve watched the sunrise from the Rockies, seen lightning dance over open fields in Kansas, and driven through cities most people only know from maps. I’ve hauled everything from refrigerated goods to emergency supplies, and I’ve never once missed a delivery deadline.

They don’t know what it’s like to command 80,000 pounds of steel through a mountain pass in winter. Or how satisfying it is to back a rig into a tight dock on the first try while a row of guys watches, expecting me to mess up—only to see their jaws drop when I nail it.

But to my family, it’s all invisible.

So this past Christmas, I decided I was done trying to justify it.

Dinner was at my sister’s house. Everyone was already there, sipping wine and passing judgment like side dishes. I pulled up in my truck. Not the pickup they all hoped I’d “settle down” with—my rig, chrome clean and cab spotless.

I parked it right outside the house.

And when my uncle made another tired joke—“Hope you didn’t block the whole street with that thing”—I smiled.

“I brought dessert,” I said, and handed my niece a box I’d picked up from a bakery in New Orleans on my last run.

Later that night, I pulled out a photo album I’d started keeping. Not of family birthdays or beach vacations—but snapshots from the road: sunsets in Arizona, rest stop sunsets, diner signs glowing at 3 a.m., my truck framed against landscapes so beautiful they look fake.

I passed it around the table.

Quiet settled in.

No one laughed. No one smirked.

My dad was the last to look through it. He stopped on a photo of me in front of the rig, hands on my hips, grinning ear to ear, a dust trail behind me and the horizon wide open.

“Didn’t realize you go this far,” he said softly.

I just nodded.

“Guess it’s not just a job, huh?”

“No, Dad,” I said. “It’s a life.”

And for the first time in years, they didn’t have anything to say.

But I could tell.

They finally saw me.

Not the daughter, the sister, the woman who should’ve “done something more feminine.”

Just me.

A trucker.

A damn good one.

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