
Logistics at a Crossroads
Where freight meets real life.
Hosted by Gia â logistics veteran, cancer survivor, and truth-teller â âLogistics at a Crossroadsâ explores the industry, identity, and the grit it takes to keep showing up. Freight. Feelings. No filter.
Logistics at a Crossroads
đď¸ Episode 33: Back to School, But Whoâs Helping?
Going back to college as a working adult isnât just about hitting the booksâitâs about navigating broken systems, managing 70-hour workweeks, and finding the time to study after everyone elseâs needs have been met.
In this episode, Gia gets real about what it means to return to school while working full-time in logistics, caring for family, and still pushing toward something greater. From formatting papers in APA while coordinating freight, to the mental weight of financial aid mix-upsâthis episode speaks to every adult whoâs gone back to school for a reason bigger than themselves.
After completing her AAS in Supply Chain Management, Gia thought she was done. But now sheâs backâpursuing a Bachelorâs in Project Management with a minor in HRâbecause when you know thereâs more in you, you go for it.
In this episode:
- Why finishing matters more than a title
- What no one tells you about adult learning and financial aid
- How real-world logistics doesnât match outdated academic expectations
- The toll of juggling work, school, caregiving, and exhaustion
- Why SMART goals and self-made systems are survival tools
- Encouragement for rewriting your story, one deadline at a time
âWe carve out the timeâafter work, after dinner, after bedtime. We show up for everyone else, then sit down and meet our deadlines. Why? Because we want better. For them. And for us.â
âPeople say, âYou brought this on yourself.â Maybe we did. But we did it to build wealth and knowledge. Because itâs never too late to finish what you started.â
đŹ Like what you hear?
Rate â, review đ, and share this episode with someone who's carrying it allâand still showing up.
đ§ Subscribe to Logistics at a Crossroads wherever you get your podcasts.
đŹ Like what you hear?
Rate â, review đ, and share this episode with someone whoâs doing the hard thing anyway.
â
đ§ Subscribe to Logistics at a Crossroads wherever you get your podcasts.
Letâs keep navigating the chaos, together.
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đŹ Want to connect?
Find me on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/reginahunter
Visit the blog: giakat.blogspot.com
HOST (Gia):
"What does it really cost to chase a dreamâwhen life wonât slow down for you to catch it?"
Welcome to Logistics at a Crossroads â the podcast where real stories meet real careers. Itâs me, your girl Gia, and today? Weâre pulling back the curtain on what it really takes to go back to school as working adults.
Itâs not just a time commitment, itâs a test of endurance, identity, and whether the systems built to support us are even showing up.
âI didnât go back to school because I had to. I went back because I deserved to finish what I started.â
SEGMENT 1: Why I Went Back
After 25+ years in logistics, I didnât need a degree to survive. But I wanted one to grow. I wanted to finish what I started in 1994ânot for a title, not for a raise, but for me. For my peace.
I finished my Associate of Applied Science in Supply Chain Management in August of 2024 and I thought, âThatâs it. Iâve done it. Iâm good.â
And now? Iâm tackling my bachelorâs in project management with a minor in Human Resources. Because when you know there's more in you, you go for it. Fully stepping back into the classroom. Even if itâs virtual, let me tell youâitâs still just as real. Discussions, papers, tests, deadlines⌠all stacked on top of a 50-to-70-hour workweek.
âSometimes the best legacy isnât what you giveâitâs what you finish.â
SEGMENT 2: The Unexpected Challenge
I knew school would stretch me. APA formatting, citation juggling, online platformsâI expected that.
But nobody tells you the real roadblock is administration.
Emails that go unanswered. Refunds delayed by weeks. A team of five managing the financial futures of thousands.
We say weâre building pathways for adult learnersâbut right now, weâre patching potholes with duct tape and prayers.
âEmails go unanswered. Refunds are delayed. And somehow weâre still expected to push through.â
And you know what else makes it harder?
Trying to relearn how to write academic papers in APA, MLA, or even Chicago styleâwhen none of that applies to the real world I work in.
In logistics, I donât format reports to a citation standard. I build them to solve a problem.
Payroll systems donât come with test questions.
And accounting? It's not boxed into perfect scenariosâitâs flexible, creative, and built to fit the chaos we face every day.
The real world has missed deadlines, ports shut down, tariff strikes, rerouted vessels, labor shortages, and freight delays caused by literal pirates.
And yet⌠Iâm expected to pretend formatting a paper just right is the ultimate skill.
âWe say we want real-world readinessâbut weâre still testing people like itâs 1996.â
Thereâs a mismatch hereâand adult learners feel it more than anyone.
SEGMENT 3: Real Struggles, Real Stats
Let me give it to you straight: I work anywhere from 50 to 70 hours a week.
Logistics doesnât care if I have a paper due. Freight doesnât stop moving just because Iâm mentally exhausted.
And yetâI show up.
Not because itâs easy, but because itâs worth it.
Hereâs the truth: most adult learners donât fail outâthey get squeezed out.
By red tape.
By poor systems.
By burnout no one talks about.
âMost adult learners donât drop outâthey get squeezed out by broken systems.â
Sheldon and Yuâs 2021 study backs this up. When adult students have structure, they thrive.
We donât lack driveâwe lack infrastructure.
And weâre not just juggling work and class. Most adults going back to school are also caregivers. Getting the kids off to school and practice. Helping with homework. Or spending their only day off making sure their aging parents are okay.
So, when do we study? After everyone else is fed, settled, and asleep. Then we show up to our desk and get to work.
âWe carve out the timeâafter work, after dinner, after bedtime. We show up for everyone else, then sit down and meet our deadlines. Why? Because we want better. For them. And for us.â
People say, "You brought this on yourself." Maybe we did.
But we did it to build wealth and knowledge. Because no matter where the road takes usâit's never too late to finish what you start.
SEGMENT 4: Finding the Fix
My nieces and nephews reminded me of the version of myself I left behind. And I realized: I couldnât preach ambition and perseverance without showing them what it looked like.
đ¤ âSometimes the best legacy isnât what you giveâitâs what you finish.â
So, since so many of us adults heading back into the classroom lacked a true infrastructure. We must build our own. I went back to what logistics has given, and taught me... I went back to what logistics taught me:
Plan the work. Work the plan.
Instead of âtry harder,â I say:
- Finish this paper by Thursday.
- Study two hours tonight.
- Email Financial Aid by 10 a.m.
Itâs not glamorous. Itâs not easy. But it works.
And itâs mine.
âSMART goals saved my academic life. âDo betterâ became: finish by Thursday, study tonight, send the email by 10.â
âIf the system wonât build a path for me, Iâll build my own.â
We may not be able to overhaul everythingâbut we can reclaim our process.
SEGMENT 5: The Takeaway
If youâre an adult learner, this journey is bigger than a syllabus.
You are not just earning creditsâyouâre reclaiming your confidence.
âGoing back to school isnât just about getting a degree. Itâs about rewriting your story.â
Youâre not behind.
Youâre not too late.
Youâre not alone.
âYouâre walking a path that wasnât built for youâand still making progress.â
That? Thatâs power.
âIf I can juggle logistics, deadlines, and APA formattingâso can you.â
Thanks for being here with me on Logistics at a Crossroads.
If this episode hit home, share it. Rate it. Or send it to the person who thinks they canât start over.
Because if I can keep goingâso can they.
Until next timeâstay strong, stay steady, and keep holding the line.
And know Iâll be right here⌠navigating the crossroads with you.