Tough question.....In my younger years, working at Ryder Truck Rental while I was working out of Rocky Mount, NC. I worked just doing PM's on tractor trailers. I didn't have to do any of the follow ups I found, I left it for the line mechanics. So all the follow ups and repairs I used to hate doing, I didn't have to do. The guy that worked "the pit" with me, we did 2-3 times the work of the other two crews put together. WE rocked! The shop foreman left us alone to our own world. I set him straight one Friday night. We'd turned like 8 trucks before 8 pm, cleaned up and were more or less chillin'. He said we needed to do at least 6-8 more....I told him we'd done all we're doing, have at it. The he threatened to write us up and send us home. I told him if he did we'd just the required number recommended by RTR and not one more. Then he'd have to explain to the service manager why he was getting his but chewed out for being behind on the PM's. He walked off then came back with a different attitude. he explained the shop mechanics were starting to slack off because they saw us taking it easy. I told him "no problem, why didn't you say that to start with? Come on Terry, let's go to MBM and check PM's" The foreman said he thought we'd already been over there and there weren't any due. I told him, that's right,but the guys in the shop don't know that. If you want us we'll be at the convenient mart right as you turn to go to MBM. If you need us, call there, we'll be back in time to get off on time. And we left. We never butted heads after that. But on Monday the service manager did ask me if I actually threatened his Shop foreman. I told him no, but did make him a promise. He laughed about it and said his foreman really didn't know what to say or do.
Later on doing road work on Power Generation for Cummins Atlantic Inc., then Automated Power Services. I learned a lot, made a lot of friends, made some good $$$.
I got laid off about 10 years ago and more or less have been bumming around here and there. I got into "chasin' hurricanes" hooking up generators to cell towers as soon as the wind dies down enough not to blow the truck off the road. There's nothing quite like racing to beat a hurricane to where it's going and waiting for it to hit, sitting in a truck as its rocking, then going out and cutting/dragging things out of your way to get to a cell tower that you hope is still there. "Ike" was my first in Texas, "Sandy" was the most memorable one so far on the east coast. We had Prime rib and snow crab legs the night before Ike and Prime rib and lobster the night before Sandy, I go for the good food first, then the $$$.
Now I take a job for the fun and challenge of it. I just got a call from a guy that's probably getting me hooked up for a job about 15 minutes from the house/shop, I may be learning to run a steam plant and steam turbine generator soon. They're building the place now. I guess in another 10-20 years I'll grow up and settle down.....I'll be 65-75 then....