Boy, I was so excited when that search box appeared with the words "If you had a chance to experience another lifestyle…"<p>With no hesitation at all, I typed TRUCK DRIVER, and hit "search." All my life, I've said at one time or another, "if I could just take a couple years off and learn to drive a big rig, I'd love to see what life would be like." I've gone so far as to inquire with various trucking schools, but never more than that. It's just too different, too wildly far away from who I am and what I do now. How would anyone understand that I left a high-paying tech career with "no heavy lifting," as they say, to become an over the road driver? Would I be happy? I wish I could know.<p>So of course I typed TRUCK DRIVER and hit search. And in a split second, anticipation turned into unsurprised disappointment. Of course it said "Whoops. Looks like we couldn't find any mentors matching your search."<p>Dead end. Sure, there's a place to enter a suggestion, which naturally just results in an empty-sounding "you're awesome" and a vague promise to "try and get someone," but no CTA beyond that, or opportunity for further engagement.<p>Digging around a bit more, there's a sidebar that can be expanded to show some locations. Clicking on various cities like San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, etc., the minuscule number of mentors that do exist on the site are web designers, UX specialists, and the like. I'd wager that most of the people looking at the site already do things like that. Not much lifetramping to be had there.<p>A concept like this could be amazing, if it had a wide network of mentors in all walks of life. The ones that are there now, though, seem to be variants of "hip tech worker" or "hip artisanal ex-tech worker." I hope the creators can get a lot more variety, and most importantly, a lot of mentors.<p>I'll be watching with my fingers crossed. Still wish I could ride along with a truck driver for a week.