|
Good CDL Job Offer, But Bad Job Duty!!
Question:
OK, I got my first job/training offer for Truck Driving. I have to explain in a little more detail though. OK, I was all worried about credit a few weeks ago but, now I got over that hurtle. I got a local company to give me the training for free to get my Class A BUT, theres a catch to it and its not time for employment like many of you think. I don't have to stay with them for a year or even 6 months but, have to stay with them for 3 months to get of my probationary period with the company so, they can start training me. Now, the job is for a CDL job with a National Environmental and Polution company Called "GapVax". Pay is $19.50 an hour which is good with raises every year full benefits and alot of overtime, but, Now, for the hang up. The job involves more than just driving. I would be handleing hazmat spills, cleaning out strip mines and equipment, cleaning ash out from power plants and steel mills. But, that isn't what worries my azz right now. Inorder to do the job you MUST beable to handle heights of 40 to 50 feet on a extension ladder and on roofs with an industrial power washer or vaccum and theres my problem. I am definitly affraid of Heights . They have their own safety department to make sure the ladders are safe so, I could try to get over it and just go up the damn ladder and pray that I don't panic 40 feet up. I am thinking of everyway to get the fear of heights out of my head but, nothing seems to work. 20 feet up I freeze and I can't do anything about it like an idiot . They even want to start training me in 2 weeks. Anyone got any Ideas To Get Over This Stupid phobia?????? Any Advice Will Be Consider Hey, if life throws you a curve ball, try and take a swing at it. Who knows what might happen Answer: The fix is to join the Navy and climb ships masts a couple hundred feet up! LOL Now really, check with your state "one-stop" office for a WIA training grant. Oh, don't go flatbed, you have to climb. BOL Answer: A good pay check will help with any problem.202 N Main Street Summerfield Il 62289 TRUCK PARKING AVAILABLE! Answer: What a counselor will tell you is to approach your fear slowly. Start off a foot off the ground and get comfortable there and the 2 feet and so forth and work your way up. This is about the only real way to get over it, if at all possible. Some phobias though are so deeply ingrained that no matter how much effort, desire, counseling a person goes through they can not conquer it. Whatever you do do not take this job or any other job unless, until you are 250% certain you have mastered your fear. If you have not mastered it then you could do more than just freeze. You could scare yourself into an accident. I will always be a mutter trucker at heart. Answer: Being afraid of heights is a serious problem. I agree with what Uturn said. You're going to need to get comfortable with it. I used to work on Grain Handling Systems. Both commercial and on the farm. I've changed bearings on the top of a 120' grain leg in Feb. when it was -30 degrees! As long as you have the proper safety equipment (and use it properly), you should have no problems. Your employer is REQUIRED to supply you with all the safety equipment you need to do the job. Another thing to remember is...... Keep a 3 point contact at all times! You have 2 feet and 2 hands, make sure you have at least 3 of them in solid contact on whatever you're climbing. BTW, swinging from your safety harness like a pinata isn't all that bad, but it may take a couple weeks before co-workers quit giving you sh*t about it. ******************************* "Got the bird dog on... Dodgin' the scales... 80 miles an hour and a step outta jail..." From "Rollin' Home, Pirates of the Mississippi) ******************************* "I've always been different with one foot over the line. Winding up somewhere, one step ahead or behind. It ain't been so easy, but I guess I shouldn't complain. I've always been crazy, but it's kept me from going insane." (from Waylon Jennings) Answer: What Hoss said, about safety harness, etc. Also, I am in chemical plants everyday and nearly all of the ladders 40-50 feet high have a cage around them. Most people feel that climbing inside the cage FEELS very different from climbing on an exposed ladder. And, if you are running a vacum truck I can tell you that running a hose up and down a 50 foot height will be a very rare situation. Most tanks have outlets at the bottom for cleaning purposes and an enormus amount of negative pressure has to be generated to lift a liquid 50' in a 2" hose. Sounds like a good job if you can work this out. Good luck! Rhymer Answer: This thread has been copied to the Medical forum. Be sure to check there also for any additional replies. We've all got phobias to varying degrees. I climb on the roof each year to clean the chimney out. I'm fine once I'm up there, it's getting up there I have a problem with. I do believe a snail would beat me to the top of the ladder (this is a two story house). On the other hand, I have no problem crawling under the house in the crawlspace, the rest of the family would go under there kicking and screaming. Part of your training will be using those ladders and learning all the safety training required, by law and company policy, in order to do the job. For Owner Operator Jobs Click here ****************************** TruckNets Truckingjobs .com Click here Answer: Originally posted by Retread: On the other hand, I have no problem crawling under the house in the crawlspace, the rest of the family would go under there kicking and screaming. That's only because they were trying to escape from doing their assigned chores. Chasing them with a cast iron frying pan or "Board Fairy Wand" doesn't help ya know. ******************************* "Got the bird dog on... Dodgin' the scales... 80 miles an hour and a step outta jail..." From "Rollin' Home, Pirates of the Mississippi) ******************************* "I've always been different with one foot over the line. Winding up somewhere, one step ahead or behind. It ain't been so easy, but I guess I shouldn't complain. I've always been crazy, but it's kept me from going insane." (from Waylon Jennings) Answer: I too once had acrophobia. I was unemployed and hungry so I took a job with a roofing company. Climbed the ladder to the roof the first day, scared poopless, got on the roof and couldn`t get off a lunch to eat. Spent lunch on the roof. At the end of the day, I finnaly got the ba!!s to climb down. The moral of this story is that if ya want or need something bad enough, you1ll make it happen. BTW, this was the beginning of 27 years as a roofer and roofing contractor. Just confront your fears and they will be overcome.. My 2cents worth. fishman Answer: messages are done with... I have a 6" titanium plate, 14 screws, and two feet of wire in my left knee because I fell off a roof. Me personally I won't climb a ladder any higher than 25'. I just quit a job that was a lot of work, and a little driving. If driving is what you want, go do it. Answer: I am not going to take the job based on the heights phobia problem. I am not ready to get over my phobia by taking on a job that I am not confortable with and that the phobia could get me fired for. I also really don't want to just drive truck for 3 hours a day then the other 10 climbing a ladder. I want to drive truck and if need be unload but, not having to do things that im not confortable with. I will wait how ever long it takes to get my credit up to go to school or go to a companies school and go with them for a year or 2. Either way its worth it. I want to be a driver not a labor. Money dones't really matter if your happy doing what you want to or have you heart set on. Thanks Guys for the help Hey, if life throws you a curve ball, try and take a swing at it. Who knows what might happen Copyright ? 2006 - 2007 www.thankhealth.com Privacy Policy
|
All Dialogue
|