High safety awareness × 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.
126 jobs found.
Town Scaffolder
A specialist occupation that assembles/dismantles scaffolding and constructs temporary structures at construction sites. Involves extensive high-altitude work, requiring safety management and work efficiency.
Melting Purification Worker (Non-ferrous Metal Smelting)
A technical job responsible for the melting and purification processes of non-ferrous metals, dissolving and refining raw metals in the pre-stage of electrolytic refining.
Melting Worker (Non-Ferrous Metal Smelting)
A manufacturing job that melts and refines non-ferrous metals, achieving the specified metal composition through temperature control and impurity removal.
Land cargo handling and transportation workers
A job that uses forklifts, cranes, carts, etc., at warehouses and logistics bases to handle, transport, stack, and load/unload cargo.
Ropeway Attendant
A job that handles passenger boarding and alighting guidance, safe operation management, control panel monitoring, and inspection tasks at ropeway or gondola facilities.
Route Truck Driver
A job that drives predetermined routes, loading, transporting, and unloading cargo.