Forest Cooperative Staff × Strengths: Stress Tolerance

For Those with High Stress Tolerance

This collection features jobs that may suit those who are relatively comfortable responding calmly in pressured situations.

Ways of coping with stress vary from person to person. Some channel pressure into heightened focus, while others calmly analyze situations and respond. Also, having high stress tolerance does not mean it's okay to push yourself too hard. Having stress management methods that work for you and taking rest when needed are also important skills.

The jobs introduced here tend to involve more pressured situations or require responsive capabilities. Find a place where you can utilize your composure and responsiveness.

7 jobs found.

Raft Operator (Forestry: Log Transport)

Raft operators assemble felled timber into rafts and transport them to delivery points using rivers or waterways; they are forestry workers.

Rail Logging Transport Worker

A forestry worker who transports felled timber using trolleys or freight cars on tracks laid within the forest.

Forestry Worker (Silviculture)

A profession that manages forest silviculture, promotes forest growth through planting, thinning, weeding, etc., and is responsible for securing sustainable forest resources.

Resin Collector

A forestry specialist who collects natural resin from pine trees etc. in forests and performs quality control and initial processing.

Forest Worker (Logging, Timber Processing, and Skidding)

A profession that involves felling trees in forests, shaping them into usable timber, and skidding (transporting) them out.

Charcoal Wood Feller

Forestry worker who fells and bucks timber (charcoal wood) for charcoal burning in mountain forests and prepares for extraction.

Logging, Timber Processing, and Log Collection Workers

A profession responsible for felling trees in forests, processing them into logs or chips (timber processing), collecting, and transporting them.