Two months in at my new job at TrueNorth

I worked for a FedEx opco for 15 and a half years, 2 months ago yesterday I took a leap of faith and started my first day at TrueNorth, a company that is trying to bring semi-truck (I’m still trying to get “tractor” to stick in my head) drivers into the 21st century by offering various services that make the life of a trucker so much easier by moving things from a world of faxing paperwork to just using an app to confirm deliveries and get money into the hands of the drivers quicker.



You know, the idea was enough to get my interest and I wrote a blog post that I would later learn in the company Slack that put me on the radar of several people in the company that assumed I was an interested owner-operator. I didn’t think I’d quit my job to go work there, I was just writing about another Y Combinator company that caught my interest. I’ve found Y Combinator to be fascinating for many years now, it made the meteoric rise of a friend possible, I visited the San Francisco offices several years ago when I was in town visiting that friend, I did some consultation in an advisory capacity for YC Research (now OpenResearch), and I check the YC forum, Hacker News, most mornings before I even check Reddit.

I had such a good breakfast that morning just before I popped over to the Y Combinator offices in San Francisco. Oh man. So good.

My friend introduced me to co-founder Jin Stedge about a week before the Series B was public and I just assumed nothing would come of it but as with every introduction he has made I went with it and we exchanged several emails. Little did I know a few months later I would be accepting an offer to go to work for TrueNorth and quitting my decade and a half job at a global giant to go to work for a barely 2-year-old startup.

I had no clue what to expect. Here I had been working at a draconian corporate behemoth of yesteryear, piloted by men in their 60s, 70s, and even 80s, that seemed completely allergic to any sort of technological advancement, I mean when I started at my previous employer in 2006 I still had to access my email in a terminal shell…

I’ve been working, legally, since I was 12 years old. I started by delivering papers for 3 cents per with my childhood friend Dani. We both got routes and we’d walk them together, each taking a side of the street. I’ve dug graves, I’ve tossed trucks, I’ve been a government contractor, I cleared international freight through Customs for a decade and a half. I brought home money and was able to pay my bills but never once in those 25 years of work, did I ever look forward to going to work - even when we transitioned to work from home the last 2 years at my previous employer. Work was just some necessary evil, I had to wake up and grind out my day of work so I could get paid

Work was just a necessary evil. Something I had to spend as many as 70 hours a week the past year and change doing. Something I did not look forward to, something I did not like, something I would just try to get through so I could enjoy a little free time doing literally anything else.

TrueNorth is different. I wake up and genuinely look forward to working. I wonder what improvements I’ll make to the product that day, or how I might be able to help a coworker, I wonder what laughs will be had in my meetings for the day.

In the past week alone I’ve had 7 people thank me for work I’ve done, that never happened once at my last employer. In the past week, I’ve been publicly thanked once in our all-hands meeting, and another time in a most-hands meeting. I’m given a lot of autonomy to get my work done, I feel confident doing something without having to tiptoe around asking for permission, and I’m treated like an actual adult capable of rational and independent thought. I’m sure this is largely just the startup world.

I hate when people make some post “ermagerd, I lurv my job, come work here, we r family, omgomgomg much great!” as they are usually saccharinely-sweet, butt-kissing, bull hockey that is little more than self-serving “look at me, promote me, I’m guzzling the koolaid for you!” and that’s 100% not what that is. If TrueNorth told me they didn’t need me anymore I’d be bummed but I’d harbor no ill-will, I’d still be championing the company because I think what they are doing is neat, and clearly, people a lot smarter than me do too based on the aforementioned Series B round. TN is a good company with a great plan.

I enjoy the work, I enjoy the level of trust I am given, I absolutely love the people I work with, and uncharacteristically find myself smiling all the time in Zoom meetings. For that matter I’ll just randomly find myself smiling while working and it’s because for the first time in my life I am truly happy about my job and my career opportunities. I can 100% see myself giving TN 10, 20, 30 years if things stay even 60% the way they are now.

We get a lot of work done, but we also have fun. Several weeks ago in a little ‘fun’ meeting we made a Disney character battle bracket where Mulan of all characters emerged champion supreme. That was the goofiest 20~ minutes I have ever experienced at a job but at the same time it provided us all a quick mental break from our work and let us learn a little more about each other. A dozen times more effective, in my eyes anyway, as a team-building experience than any nonsensical roleplaying tomfoolery I experienced at any previous job.

From the top-down, it’s a great company. Jin can be extremely serious but at the same time exudes this almost motherly, or even grandmotherly, vibe that stays positive. From my limited interaction with Sanjaya, he’s jovial, he’s caring, but at the same time, you see in just a few minutes of a meeting that he’s incredibly sharp and churning away at work, at every level below them we have absolutely wonderful people that give it their all. We have people from all kinds of backgrounds coming together to build this patchwork of expertise. We have a painter, someone that worked on JWST, former truckers and industry experts, quirky lawyers, woodworkers, at least two AFOLs (I must resist the urge to fall back down my Lego addiction), just so many diverse people. Even some of our drivers, which are starting to be featured on the Let It Ride with TrueNorth podcast, are wonderfully delightful characters that I could listen to for hundreds of hours.

This has already waxed far longer than I intended, but I get like that when it comes to things I am genuinely interested in

Thank you S. for making the introduction, thank you Jinn and Alex for being interested in what I might bring to the table. Thank you, Arturo, Austin, Oleg, and Sayeed for interviewing me and deciding you thought I was worth working with. And thank you again Arturo for all those daily meetings at first when you got me up to speed with all of our data, for the patience and effective teaching to get me to the point where I felt component enough to get work done without constantly asking questions and getting me through that full-blown imposter syndrome that had me terrified the first few weeks.

Well, it’s 7:06 AM as I bring this to a close, I suppose I should get downstairs and get on my BikeErg to get my morning started so I can start getting some actual work done.

Solution to Python 3.10 "command not found: py" and "command not found: python"

Today I started learning Python, when trying to run a simple helloworld.py on my MacBook Air I ran into an issue. When attempting “python helloworld.py” in the terminal I got the following:

zsh: command not found python

When trying “py helloworld.py” in the terminal I similarly got the following:


zsh: command not found py

I solved this by simply doing “python3 helloworld.py”, this successfully ran my hello world.

I’m definitely not the first person to have this issue as someone in my class was having the same issue and I found this Stack Overflow answers as well https://stackoverflow.com/a/57074406/18431135

Do I love my Litheli Cordless Chainsaw?

I recently purchased a Lietheli Cordless Chainsaw. Do I love it or hate it? I bought it for $158.40 during an Easter sale. One thing to keep in mind, it came with no bar and chain oil.


24AD (After Dad), letter to my father 2021

Hey dad.


We are now past 2 years of the global COVID pandemic spreading through the world. Worldwide over 445 million cases have been confirmed with over 6 million lives lost to it. I have now been working from home for 2 years later this month.

While on the subject of working from home, I recently quit my job of nearly 16 years. People were quitting left and right as the pandemic has made it an employee’s market so I decided to jump ship too. I had not had a cost of living increase in 14 years so it was time to move on, I have started at a trucking startup that actually cares about its employees and I just finished my second week there. I really like it, the people are all super nice and supportive of each other. It has been a major culture shock going to TrueNorth from FedEx.

The morel clone I made last year, you know the clone of the one you gave your father as a joke, is doing well outside under a tree. I stand in the kitchen and look out at it, it does make me miss you and grandpa Jack but I do not regret putting it in the yard. I have now been in my house for about 16 months now and it’s going pretty great. We had the basement flood last year when we got somewhere between 8 and 12 inches of rain in just a couple of hours but we only lost a single particleboard shelf and people from church rushed to help us get the water out and clean up. My wife and I were running buckets up and down the stairs for at least a half-hour but the water was still rising, finally, we managed to get a call out for help and within an hour I think we had 8 people here helping us about the time the sump pump finally started to catch up. Just having help show up made the clean-up go much quicker and raised our spirits considerably.

Mom’s health isn’t the greatest but she seems pretty happy and stays pretty active. Her roommate and her don’t seem to get along very well but she’s on a waiting list to get into a retirement community the Quakers operate in downtown Plainfield.

As the latest wave of the pandemic started to die down, things looked great. Then on February 24th Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. The world quickly responded with sanctions and as of today, over 1.5 million people have fled Ukraine. Many are staying to fight though, despite facing superior forces. Men and women, young and old, are taking up any arms they can get their hands on and fighting in the streets while a Russian military column stretching over 40 miles moves deeper and deeper into their country. People are dying in the streets, in their homes, in their apartments, as superior Russian forces launch mortars and missiles into the cities. It is surreal. Around the time COVID started, there were massive worldwide wildfires, then we dealt with COVID and domestic civil unrest, we moved into a more virulent strain of COVID and now find ourselves at the doorstep of nuclear war. Russia has explicitly threatened to use their nuclear weapons if anyone tries to mess with them taking Ukraine.

One begins to wonder if I’ll be around next year to write this letter, or if I’ll stand on the other side of the veil and get to tell you what happened to between this letter and the next in person. On that subject, proxy baptism was performed for your mother last year. I haven’t gotten around to yours, or grandpa Jack’s, but things are weird in the world.

I heard your voice last year for the first time in a very long time, an answering machine recording. You sounded decidedly more country than I remember. Funny how we forget things with time.

Hopefully I am still around to write one of these next year, if not I guess I will be catching you up in person!

Do not stand at my grave and weep,
I am not there, I do not sleep.
I am in a thousand winds that blow,
I am the softly falling snow.
I am the gentle showers of rain,
I am the fields of ripening grain.
I am in the morning hush,
I am in the graceful rush
Of beautiful birds in circling flight,
I am the starshine of the night.
I am in the flowers that bloom,
I am in a quiet room.
I am in the birds that sing,
I am in each lovely thing.
Do not stand at my grave bereft
I am not there. I have not left.

Past letters.

I took the Google Data Analytics Professional certificate course

I decided to take the Google Data Analytics Professional certificate course on Coursera recently and just finished it. Definitely, an interesting field and I’d say this course just barely scratched the surface. If I want to make real use out of the skills I was introduced to I’m definitely going to have to start working on some projects in my free time to hone the umpteen various skill sets needed to be decent at data analysis but, hey, that could be fun!

Look at my pretty credential: