Site Supervisor × 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.

240 jobs found.

Stone Cutting Stone Mason

A craftsman who cuts raw stone at a quarry to produce stone blocks for construction or sculpture. Uses machinery and hand tools to perform precise cutting work.

Petroleum Extraction Machine Operator

Specialized profession that operates drilling equipment and pumps at oilfield extraction facilities to extract crude oil and maintain equipment.

Limestone Rough Cutter (Quarrying Industry)

A job that involves splitting large blocks of limestone into appropriate sizes using hand tools or machinery at a quarry site and preparing them for easy transport.

Caisson (kan) Worker

Specialized civil engineering professional who enters caissons in caisson construction projects, etc., and performs structure installation, concrete pouring, and other tasks under pressurized and decompressed management.

Dry Dock Wire Handler

Specialist who uses wire ropes and winches inside dry docks to moor, lift, and adjust the position of ships.

Wire Rod Rolling Worker

Manufacturing technician who heats steel slabs or billets and operates rolling mills to produce wire rods (wire materials).

Diving Operator

Specialized worker who performs surveys, inspections, repairs, welding, demolition, etc., of structures in underwater environments such as the sea, rivers, and ports.

Line Worker (Submarine Communication Cable Laying Ship)

Worker on specialized ships that lay and maintain submarine communication cables. Responsible for a wide range of onboard tasks, from cable payout and laying to seabed topography surveys, maintenance, and repairs.

Lumber Processor

Workers who cut felled timber in forests to appropriate lengths, perform processing such as limbing, and shape and sort it for transportation and sawmilling.

Land Development Worker

A worker who performs land leveling, fill work, drainage treatment, etc., at land development construction sites to prepare the foundation for buildings and infrastructure.