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Maverick
October 12th, 2008, 11:08 AM
I saw this on MSN.com today and thought I'd share.


If you want to find a job that is free of stress, you're out of luck. Only characters in movies and on TV have jobs that don't cause occasional hair-pulling or high blood pressure. These are the same people who have huge apartments overlooking skylines and plenty of time to hang out with friends. Their jobs have unbelievably flexible hours.

In real life, however, every job you take, no matter how big or small, finds you stressed out once in awhile. Whether you're dealing with an endless line of customers, a demanding executive or an uncertain economy, anxiety will find you. It's just part of life.

According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, occupational stress originates from a variety of issues, including:

- Long hours with few or no breaks

- Employees unable to participate in the decision-making process

- Job insecurity and large amounts of impending change

- Physical danger

Some jobs have more stress than others. That's not to say they're bad jobs, they just require people who are strong enough to handle the increased stress that comes their way. Here are eight of them:

1. Retail Salespeople

Why: Jobs in sales require you to persuade customers to spend money. Customers don't necessarily want to spend money and even if they do, they have a variety of places to shop. Salespeople have to prove their merchandise is the best option. If that weren't stressful enough, retail compensation is often commission-based, which means your paycheck is tied to how much you sell.

What they earn: $24,530

2. Doctors and nurses

Why: Doctors and nurses deal with life and death on a regular basis, a pressure found in few occupations. They have to handle patients while accessing an encyclopedia of medical knowledge. Doctors and nurses who work in hospitals or clinics that don't keep regular business hours often work on little sleep and are on call even on days off. In recent years, doctors have also been forced to deal with an increase in malpractice lawsuits.

What they earn: Internal medicine physician: $166,420; Registered nurse: $62,480

3. Accountants

Why: Crunching numbers requires attention to detail that can make your eyes cross. Not only are you dealing with a client's finances, but you also have to take into account volumes of rules and regulations that change each year. Plus, you're expected to know about minute loopholes and read tiny print that nobody else does.

What they earn: $44,632

4. Teachers

Why: Elementary and high school teachers put up with a lot. Students aren't always easy to control or motivate. Parents who can't understand why their children aren't doing better often place the blame with teachers. And pressure to prepare students for standardized tests means they can't always stick to the lesson plans they'd prefer to teach.

What they earn: Elementary teacher: $43,421; High school teacher: $46,531

5. Firefighters

Why: When firefighters are on call, they've got to be ready to respond to emergencies that range from minor car accidents to huge explosions. They might go an entire shift with no emergency or they might get a call that keeps them out for hours. Perhaps most importantly, they're playing with fire, literally. That's stressful enough.

What they earn: $44,130

6. Farmers

Why: Agriculture requires constant attention, from waking up early to strenuous physical activity. That alone isn't stressful, but having no control over nature is. Droughts, floods, fires or other natural disasters can ruin months of hard work, and you can't do much about it.

What they earn: $23,508

7. Automotive assembly workers

Why: The automotive industry has always been volatile as manufacturers respond to the whims of consumers who want coupes one moment and SUVs the next. Add the pressure of assembling vehicles so that people who spend thousands of dollars can travel safely, and you've got a stressful job.

What they earn: $42,480

8. Stockbrokers

Why: You can feel a bit helpless working at a job that's at the mercy of the stock market and economy. When things are going great, you reap the rewards, but when the financial climate isn't so great or the future is uncertain, you have no choice but to ride it out. Plus, competition is high for these jobs.

What they earn: $61,151

*Salary data based on CBSalary.com's average annual salary and the Bureau of Labor Statistics's mean annual salary.

Serenity
October 12th, 2008, 11:30 AM
Elementary and high school teachers put up with a lot. Students aren't always easy to control or motivate.

And that's why I'm teachin' middle school. WOO!

Antares
October 12th, 2008, 12:51 PM
What happened to Air Traffic Controller?

And gosh teachers make more than I thought

Zephyr
October 12th, 2008, 01:17 PM
Go me... I want to do elementary education most likely, lol.

But I do feel bad for people in retail...
- Most people hate being bugged by sales associates
- I know I hate being pursuaded to spend money that I don't want to spend
- Some people are downright rude to those people

Bobby
October 12th, 2008, 01:18 PM
You can handle the stress :P

george
October 12th, 2008, 02:23 PM
Go me... I want to do elementary education most likely, lol.

But I do feel bad for people in retail...
- Most people hate being bugged by sales associates
- I know I hate being pursuaded to spend money that I don't want to spend
- Some people are downright rude to those people

Well in the end someones gotta have the job, like miners and people that work at oil rigs.

Hmm I feel sorry for stockbrokers right now o.O

Avalikia
October 12th, 2008, 02:56 PM
Ah, a top ten list of jobs I can't handle. I mean, I can handle some stress, but not very much and not very well. (three or four words: Stress-Induced Panic Attacks.) I'm working on becoming a dog trainer specializing in basic obedience and difficult dogs, so naturally the worst stress will be aggressive dogs. However, that's exactly the situation the stress response is designed for, so I can handle that. It's all the generalized stress from no specific source with no specific cure that really gets to me. You've got to respect the people who do these jobs though; especially doctors, nurses, teachers, and firefighters.

What I want to know is why the repo business isn't on this list. I mean it's a really good time for them business-wise right now but it's the civilian job where you're most likely to be shot at.

Oblivion
October 12th, 2008, 02:57 PM
Go me... I want to do elementary education most likely, lol.

But I do feel bad for people in retail...
- Most people hate being bugged by sales associates
- I know I hate being pursuaded to spend money that I don't want to spend
- Some people are downright rude to those people

Agreed
I hate it when my parents are rude to them,
But I understand why they are rude, because the salespeople are so freaking annoying
Specially at jewelry stores
Ug.

nachtspiegel
October 14th, 2008, 02:15 PM
I want to be a registered nurse.
I'm going to train to be a LPN, work for a year, and do a LPN to RN program.
Then, after I finish that, somewhere in the mix, try to do an RN-BSN program. Okay, so that's my idea. The closest bit of it would be this coming August, after I turn seventeen and start taking my first classes at the local technical college.

rsc4life
October 14th, 2008, 04:30 PM
They should add refereeing in there...

-Silence
October 16th, 2008, 09:35 AM
1. Retail Salespeople

Why: Jobs in sales require you to persuade customers to spend money. Customers don't necessarily want to spend money and even if they do, they have a variety of places to shop. Salespeople have to prove their merchandise is the best option. If that weren't stressful enough, retail compensation is often commission-based, which means your paycheck is tied to how much you sell.

What they earn: $24,530

Oops, lol. And it's commission too!


I like how we're on the high stressfull jobs list, but other than farmers, we make the least!

JoshDude
October 18th, 2008, 02:44 AM
In psychology we learned that Dentistry was also highly stressful.
Considering that many people hate having people in their mouths, dentists get nervous around nervous patients.