📅 April 28, 2026
Learning the Trade the Right Way
I’ve been thinking a lot about what it actually means to become a good electrician.
Not just getting the 8,000 hours in, not just finishing school, but actually understanding the work—especially when it comes to the National Electrical Code (NEC) and electrical theory.
I’m a 23-year-old apprentice electrician in Massachusetts, currently in my second year of trade school, working through the journeyman modules. On paper, that sounds like progress. But most of the real learning hasn’t come from just moving forward—it’s come from going back.
Re-reading code sections.
Reworking the same concepts.
Trying to understand why something is done, not just how.
Some things stick right away. A lot don’t.
Grounding and bonding made sense at first on a basic level, but the deeper I go, the more I realize how much detail is actually behind it. Same with voltage, current, and load calculations—simple on the surface, but easy to misunderstand if you rush it.
That’s been the biggest lesson so far: slowing down.
I’ve been studying the NEC and electrical theory on my own for the past few years, and it’s changed how I look at the trade. It’s not just installation—it’s decision-making. Every connection, every splice, every run has a reason behind it.
The goal is still the same: finish school, get the required hours, and earn my journeyman electrician license. But I don’t just want to qualify—I want to be confident in what I’m doing when I get there.
Right now, I’m preparing to enter the field in 2026 and looking for the right opportunity to keep learning under someone experienced—someone who actually cares about doing things right.
Until then, I’m staying consistent—studying, practicing, and documenting the process.
Because that’s really what this is.
Not a finished electrician.
Just someone learning the trade, one step at a time.
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