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2023-09-26 Β |Β β±οΈ 18:57 Β |Β ποΈ 52.3K views Β |Β π 5.8K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.2K comments
As part of her U.S. tour, Pea tries to interview truckers at a truck stop and gets completely shut down β no one will talk to her. She eventually calls Chris from the YouTube channel Expat Theory, a patron of hers who's been a trucker for 3.5 years and is driving toward early retirement in Asia. The interview covers life inside a big rig, the economics of trucking, the isolation of the job, and Chris's plan to leave America behind.
Pea spent an entire day at truck stops and couldn't get a single interview β
- Drivers waved her off before she even got close to their trucks
- Chris explains why: a woman with recording equipment approaching truckers is "a recipe for disaster" β drivers are terrified of saying something that gets taken out of context in today's climate
- Chris only agreed because they've known each other a long time through her channel
Chris's background and why he's trucking β
- Works for a mid-sized company with about 500 trucks; doesn't own his truck
- Former military law enforcement officer in the Air Force, stationed at Clark Air Base in the Philippines for 3 years
- Self-described "lone wolf" who basically lives in his truck
- Got into trucking specifically to afford retiring overseas β it's a means to an end
- Target retirement: 2030, when he turns 62
- Runs the YouTube channel "Expat Theory" documenting his journey from his old life through trucking to eventual overseas retirement
The appeal and reality of trucking β
- Likes seeing the country β "I can wake up one day on the eastern side of the country and two days later be on the western side"
- Pay is good when the wheels are turning
- When broken down, drivers get roughly one-third of normal pay β the per-mile rate is contracted with the customer, so breakdown pay comes out of the company's pocket
- Limited by law to 70 hours of driving per week; Chris typically runs 65-68
- Stays awake by thinking about his future retirement plans β where he'll go, what he'll do
Tour of the truck cab β
- Trucks cost roughly $250,000 for the model his company buys
- The cockpit is fully digital β all flat screens, no analog gauges
- Living space in back includes: a lower bunk for sleeping, an upper bunk (used for storage when solo, sleeping when team-driving), cabinets for clothes, a microwave, a mini fridge with freezer section, and a Keurig coffee maker
- Chris cooks his own meals and shops at grocery stores/Walmart to save money vs. expensive truck stop food
Things Pea learns about trucking β
- Drivers often don't know exactly what's in their trailers β they get a bill with product numbers and weight; Chris once asked and found out he was hauling Halloween costumes and wigs
- Hazardous materials require a special license endorsement and are marked on the bills
- Weigh stations ensure trucks comply with weight limits per axle section β drivers can move the rear wheel assembly to redistribute weight
- Pea assumed weigh stations were to catch drivers selling cargo before delivery (because "in the Philippines there are some shady things happening β they're even selling the fuel")
- Tire blowouts happen because of high mileage and heavy weight β Pea describes being next to a truck when a tire exploded and being terrified
- Worst driving times: morning rush hour (6-8 AM) and evening (3-6 PM) β navigating a 70-foot truck through city rush hour traffic is miserable
He's not worried about autonomous trucks β
- Believes driverless vehicles won't succeed because of the error potential
- Professional drivers go through extensive training and use physical ability to avoid accidents that autonomous vehicles couldn't handle
Lot lizards and human trafficking β
- "Lot lizards" (sex workers who approach truckers at stops) used to be much more prevalent
- There's been a huge crackdown from both law enforcement and the trucking industry
- The industry has connected it to human trafficking β many of these people are being forced into it
- Any driver caught engaging with them faces immediate termination
The isolation and mental health toll β
- The biggest misconception: people don't understand how difficult and isolating the job is
- Trucking separates you from family and loved ones
- Many truckers deal with depression from the isolation β "almost like a cutoff of all sensory because you're by yourself all the time"
Why Chris wants to retire in Asia specifically β
- His time at Clark Air Base gave him a taste of Filipino culture and Asian cultures generally
- Considering: Cebu City/Mactan, Dumaguete, or the Visayas area in the Philippines; also Phnom Penh, Cambodia
- Acknowledges other retirement options exist (South America, Portugal, Spain) but says "my personal flavor and taste are definitely Asian"
- His entire trucking career is structured around this goal β he got rid of everything, started over, and is using trucking income to fund overseas retirement
The flashing trucker legend is real β
- Pea asks about women pulling up alongside trucks and flashing them
- Chris confirms it happened to him once β "and it wasn't just for a few seconds, this was a prolonged thing"
- He says it definitely made his day
- Pea asks if it matters if the woman is pretty; Chris diplomatically says "for most of us guys, probably not" β seeing that from any woman is going to put a smile on a trucker's face
- Kids doing the "honk honk" arm pump is a beloved tradition β Chris always honks for kids because "they get such a kick out of it"
Hitchhikers are rare now β
- Used to be more common; people are scared today and don't trust strangers
- Chris jokes that he'd pick up Pea as a hitchhiker β followed by a dark joke about "a little stop deep in the woods"