A routine chat on a busy Gold Coast construction site took a heartbreaking turn when a truck driver quietly revealed the tragedy he’d been carrying on his own.
Scaffolder Hohepa Wanihi was exchanging the usual worksite small talk when the conversation suddenly shifted from light-hearted banter, to something more personal.
‘We were installing an office, and I got talking to the truck driver who delivered it. Just the usual banter at first – where you heading next mate, that sort of thing,’ he said.
When the truckie mentioned that his company had been ‘mucking him around’, Mr Wanihi suggested he consider working for his own employer, which offered a simple seven-days-on, seven-days-off FIFO roster.
The truck driver then shared a deeply personal truth.
‘He said his mental space wasn’t all there. I asked what was going on, just trying to be supportive while we’re getting the crane rigged up, load in the air,’ Mr Wanihi said.
‘As I’m walking away to sort the rigging, he just says it plain: “Me son just died.” My heart absolutely sank.’
Mr Wanihi said the exchange hit him hard, but the realities of the job meant he had to keep working while the grieving driver quietly got back in his truck and left.
Hohepa Wanihi (pictured) said the conversation with a truck driver who had just lost his son was a reminder that you never know what someone is going through
‘I had to go do my job, rig this load, but all I wanted to do was yarn and talk to this bloke properly. Five minutes later he was in his truck and gone,’ he said.
‘I can only imagine what he’s going through – still turning up to work, still doing the job, carrying that weight.
‘Just a reminder that you never really know what the person next to you is dealing with. The truckie dropping off your delivery, the operator in the next truck, the sparkie you’re working with – everyone’s fighting battles we know nothing about.’
Mr Wanihi later shared the encounter on social media to encourage others to check in on the people around them.
‘If someone opens up, even for a second, listen,’ he wrote.
His post has since resonated widely, with thousands urging Aussies to check in with their mates.
‘You’ve really made me think deeply,’ one person commented.
A truck driver unexpectedly revealed the devastating truth about his personal life prompting a fellow tradie to share how deeply the conversation impacted him
‘It’s not only the others on your crew. It’s your mates that don’t work in the industry. It might even be your next-door neighbour who seems very quiet, never says much, if anything at all.
‘I really feel for that man. I can’t even imagine what it’s like when he’s all alone in his truck hundreds of kilometres from anywhere with nothing to do except think about what has suddenly just happened.’
‘That is one of the most human things I’ve heard,’ said another.
‘A five-minute conversation can save someone’s life. We never know what the person next to us is going through. You cared… well done mate.’
Another added: ‘This hit hard. Most men keep going long after their mind has broken in places nobody can see. We turn up, we get the job done, we carry the weight in silence and hope it doesn’t spill over.
‘The smallest conversation can be the only break in some one’s entire week. You did more for that bloke than you probably realise -sometimes just being human is the only lifeline someone gets in a day.’
