That is great.
I have never really had much success yrying to sleep on the train and I worked them for almost 9 years. We had plenty of early morning empty stock services where, as a guard, I had time spare for a snooze (Driver had to stay awake!), but try as I did I was never able to sleep.... BUT I do admit that later on on one early shift sitting in the back cab on the drivers seat (Second mans seats were often in a bad state of repair) where I had a lengthy stretch between stations and had no new passengers so I could relax, and I found myself waking up to hear the continual sound of the horn of the train (Was a class 153).
Puzzled, My initial thoughts were "Why is the driver doing that with just the one tone?"
I realized that it was me! I had fallen forward in my snooze onto the horn! (The driver puzzled why for the last mile or two I was sounding the horn! Haha). Must have woke most of the nearby residents up with the few houses that were near the line! Was the only time I really found myself really asleep.
Had a few drivers fall asleep and the train would do a stop when the "Dead mans brake" came in and stopped the train.
Arriva back them had altered the shifts when they took over the franchise to get the most from the staff, and it really showed as they eliminated the shorter "Recovery" shifts that the previous company had in place to avoid such occurances as we would often go straight from a week of lates into a week of earlies every other week, and these recovery 5 to 7 hour shifts added here and there to the rostering link really did make a difference. Arriva lengthened the other shifts to the max and eliminated the recovery shifts which gave us more rest days in theory, but in practice, when one reached those rest days, the company would pester staff several times a day to work them until staff like me gave in and worked them, which eventually played its toll.
I handed in my notice after mental pressures caused initially through lack of sleep along with other pressures started taking effect (Though did not know it was mental at the time. Just knew I had to quit as had suicidal thoughts as a "Way out" of the situation and caught myself about to jump off a train, where fortunately a passenger unknowingly brought me back to my senses by hammering on the cab door. Also had my mind "Bouncing" between long and short term memory, so I knew my only way out of the situation was to quit.
But yes. Sleep... Found I could not really sleep on a train. You must be one of the lucky ones who can!
