The Confessions of a Professional Seat Cover
Suzanne Marsh
October 17, 1995
Here I am in Utica a guest of my cousin Helen, while Earl goes to truck driving school. Dad
did not exactly think this was the smartest thing we could do but there are perks, like traveling
all over the United States. Two nights ago Earl came home from a truck driving school and asked
me where the toilet plunger was. I asked what he needed the toilet plunger for. As a dutiful
wife, I went and found the plunger. Earl had changed into his Zumba sweats, as I stood there
plunger in hand Earl had me sit on the bed. I have found myself in some crazy situations
but this one deserved a prize Earl informed me that his instructor told him to practice
“shifting” Now I understood why he wanted the plunger, it was an imaginary shifter, or thought I
did until he sat down on the bed and began to shift the toilet plunger, when the feet became
involved I lost it, I laughed so hard my eyes were watering!
October 29th, 1995
Earl graduated second in his class, now he has to go out four weeks with a trainer and
another two weeks solo before I can go. We drove to J.B. Hunt’s terminal in Syracuse,
New York. We walked into the break room where David entered our lives. David
was Earl’s trainer. He made a mistake when he asked if I would like to see where Earl
would spend his time for the next four weeks. Earl grabbed his duffle bag and
shaving kit and we proceeded to David’s truck. There it stood the monster from hell. I
watched Earl enter the cab. David asked then if I would like to see the truck's interior. I am afraid of heights and I get sick look out a second-story window, the damn truck
is thirteen feet six inches. This did not bode well, I climbed up and looked in, it was
spartan it had one big bed, nothing else. Once I saw the interior I should have climbed right
down but I clung to the bars on the side of the truck on the first step, like a monkey with suction
cups. I was not coming down. This presented a problem to David and Earl since they had to
leave to deliver a load in Tennessee. David attempted to explain that if I just put
my foot down on the next step, everything would be fine. I was not about to budge, and then they
hit on a solution. David took my foot and placed it on the bottom step, I was still clinging to the
handles on the side of the truck. Earl grabbed my waist and lifted me down. They pulled
out of the terminal and I went home with Nick our German Shepherd. Thus began the longest
six weeks of my life.
December 26th, 1995
Kissed Dad goodbye, and loaded the car with two weeks of clean laundry, we are off on my first
adventure. Earl had a load to deliver at Proctor and Gamble in Lima, Ohio. The snow is falling
at an incredible rate, it is cold and we are going slowly. We are going to stop at the Applewood
Restaurant for the night. Ii had my first lesson on the Qualcomm I do not like the keyboard.
I had to send a message to dispatch letting them know we stopped for the night and the
road conditions were bad. The problem is that the keyboard was designed for hunt and
peck, not a data entry specialist who doesn’t look to see what she keyed. I received a reply:
“HUH?” Earl called dispatch; I guess they had a good laugh after dispatch received the correct
message.
The quarters in this truck could not have been designed by a sane person. There are no closets
all clothes have to be rolled and placed around the edge of the bed. Earlier today I
was not a happy camper. I discovered what the doghouse is, and I climbed on it enough times.
That is what covers the engine in these cabover trucks. I still have no clue as to how to
change clothes or anything else inside this behemoth. I had to lay on my back and pull my jeans on then sit up and on my shirt.
December 30th, 1995
We arrived in Bentonville, Arkansas but not before I found myself on a mountain with the
innocuous name Boston Mountain. Going up was bad enough, but when we got to the top
it was dark, an orange flashing sign got my attention: “Eight people have died going down
this mountain do you want to be number nine?” That did it for me, I looked at Earl and told
him I was walking down the mountain to which he replied: “No you are not, it was dark
out.” I think my fingernails are still embedded in the armrest of that truck. We got to
the bottom there was one helpful soul that said: “Awe come on JB this ain’t too bad is it?”
I made a grab for the CB but Earl got it first. We delivered to Walmart then went to the terminal
the truck needed a PM service, and we got a free night in a motel, maybe there were a few perks to
this trucking thing.
January 15th, 1996
Happy New Year to me. I have been on the truck now for a few months. I have been on bumpy roads but I 20 in Louisiana in a cab over I need my head examined. I had, had is the operative
word in the sentence, a carton of chocolate milk. I bounced out of the seat hit my head and on
the way down wore the chocolate milk. Do not get me wrong, Louisiana is a beautiful and
graceful state but their roads are horrible. There is no other way to describe them, they have\
huge potholes like nothing I had ever seen.
January 30th, 1996
Headed home for a few days, can’t wait to see my dad and tell him about my adventures.
October 22, 2024
Earl and I are now retired truck drivers, he drove for twenty-nine years and I was a professional
seat cover for twenty-two years. Do I miss it? Sometimes. I don’t miss being gone for months
at a time. I don’t miss cars cutting us off or sitting in rush hour traffic and moving two inches
at a time. I do miss the freedom of trucking, I miss the beauty that I saw out the window. I have s
seen pronghorn antelope, bald eagles, and golden eagles. I have seen moose running through the
middle of a small Vermont town. Would I do it again, since confession is good for the soul:
yes, I would.
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