Safety and Health Management × 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.
70 jobs found.
Scarfing Worker
Scarfing workers remove scale and defects from the surface of heated steel materials using flame lances in the hot rolling process, enhancing rolling quality as a manufacturing job.
Tin Miner
Specialized worker who excavates tunnels, operates blasting and excavation machinery in tin mines, and mines and transports tin ore.
Stone Material Carrier
Worker who transports and unloads heavy stone materials using manual labor or cargo handling machinery at quarries, factories, and construction sites.
Lime Manufacturing Worker
A profession that manufactures lime products such as quicklime and slaked lime by calcining limestone at high temperatures.
Limestone Mining Worker
A site worker responsible for mining limestone from limestone deposits, including accumulation, transportation, and processing.
Cement Manufacturing Machine Worker
This occupation involves operating, monitoring, and maintaining machinery from raw material blending to firing, crushing, and quality inspection in a cement manufacturing plant.
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.
Ship Dismantling Worker
A job that involves dismantling the structures of obsolete ships and collecting and transporting them as metal scrap.
Ship Chief Engineer and Engineer (Excluding Fishing Vessels)
Specialized technical role overseeing the engine department of non-fishing vessels such as merchant ships and tankers, managing the operation, inspection, and maintenance of main engines and auxiliary machinery.
Shipbuilding Winch Operator
Specialized job operating winches and hoists at shipyards to safely and accurately move and lift hull blocks and components.