What They Don't Show You Most people's mental image of a truck driver comes from a dashcam video gone viral — a close call, a jackknife, a moment where everything went wrong. Or maybe it's the evening news, a pile-up on the interstate, the kind of footage that travels fast because fear
faith, gratitude, presence, God's creation, sunset, truck yard, OTR life, one safe mile, Honey, women who truck, finding peace on the road, Christian, slow down, truck driver faith He's Got This God was giving me a gift. All it took was pulling back a curtain.
faith, prayer, slow days, contentment, truck driver faith, OTR life, Christian, one safe mile, stillness, women who truck, life on the road The Slow Days Lord, thank You for this day. For the stillness. The rest. The room to breathe.
trucking, road safety, mental health, OTR, truck driver, distracted driving, four wheelers, driving safety, one safe mile Your Mind Is Miles Ahead There's a kind of tired that sleep doesn't fix. You know the one. You wake up in the bunk, boots haven't hit the step yet, and your brain is already at the shipper. Already doing math on hours and weather and whether that appointment
ai The Thinking Space Between Sleep and the Road The people who get the most out of it treat it like a conversation. Not a search. Not a command prompt. A conversation with a thinking partner who responds to context, follows a thread, and builds on what came before.
ai The Thinking Space Between Sleep and the Road Conversations with Claude Renae | One Safe Mile April 25, 2026 | Scared and Capable 44 years old. Standing at the bottom of those steps looking up at a truck that seems impossibly big. Everything about it is loud and diesel-smelling and foreign. The seat is too far from everything and too
conversations with claude Conversations with Claude No scripts. No polish. Just the actual conversations — the ones that went somewhere unexpected, that surprised me, that left me sitting with something I hadn't considered before.
faith, trucking life, road reflections, women in trucking, personal essay Faith That Got Road-Tested Some things I thought I believed turned out to be habits more than convictions. I had to let those go. What was left — what didn’t shake loose no matter how hard the road got — that became the real thing.
Why I Drive — The Real Answer Suggested tags: women in trucking, CDL story, trucking origin, one safe mile, why I drive ——— People ask me why I drive truck. I have a short answer I give most of the time. It’s honest as far as it goes. I talk about the independence, the variety, the way
What the Miles Do to You (If You Let Them) Suggested tags: trucking life, long-haul driving, driver mindset, mental health, road wisdom ——— There’s something that happens to long-haul drivers that doesn’t happen to most people. We spend an extraordinary amount of time alone with our thoughts. Not a quiet morning before the family wakes up. Not a commute.
I Came to This Truck Broken Suggested tags: trucking life, women in trucking, personal essay, one safe mile ——— I’m going to tell you something I don’t say out loud very often. When I started driving truck, I was not okay. I wasn’t chasing adventure. I wasn’t following a dream. I wasn’t
What the Road Built The night I sat in my truck cab crying, I genuinely believed I had made the worst decision of my life. I want you to hold that image for a second — because what happened after that is exactly why I'm writing this today. When I first started driving,
The Quiet Gets Loud The Quiet Gets Loud BR The Quiet Gets Loud0:00/191.5783131× There's something nobody really warns you about when you take this job. It gets quiet out here. Really quiet. Just you, the road, the hum of the engine — maybe some music drifting in the background. And
The Only Thing Left I was 44 years old, sitting in a house full of final notices, and I had run out of options. Not the kind of "out of options" people say when they're frustrated. The real kind. The kind where you've made every call, tried every
Planning Beats Pushing Miles — A Calm Approach to Trucking There's a mindset that sneaks into trucking that causes more problems than almost anything else on the road — the idea that more miles always means better. Push harder, drive longer, squeeze out one more run. I've seen it burn drivers out and put trucks in ditches.