“People That Don’t Hate Their Jobs And Make A Decent Wage, What Do You Do?” (50 Answers)
You know what they say: Do something you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life because there won’t be any positions available or any money in it! Okay, that’s not quite what Mark Twain once said, but you get the gist. Finding a job you love is much easier said than done, but that doesn't mean it's impossible.
Reddit users have been sharing the jobs they actually enjoy, so we’ve gathered some of their top responses below. Enjoy reading these replies that might inspire you to change your career path, and remember that it’s never too late to start doing something you love! (Or at least something you don’t hate!)
This post may include affiliate links.
I am a kennel attendant. I care for and feed both dogs and cats. One of my daily requirements if I have time to do it, is literally to play with a dog/cat or puppy/kitten. It’s called animal enrichment. It’s meant to help prepare them for a life outside the shelter. Doesn’t even feel like a job.
School janitor. $30/hour. 40 hours a week, 12 months a year. I get a s**tload of awesome medical/dental benefits, paid vacation, sick days, every provincial and federal holiday off paid.
However, the real perk that I f*****g love, is that I work alone. Once the teachers leave, I have the building to myself. I see my boss once a month, if that. I just show up, put on my favourite podcasts, do my job and go home, money shows up in my account twice a month. I might speak 100 words a shift. It’s absolutely glorious.
About the only thing I don’t like about it are the crappy hours (3-11pm, followed by 7-3 during the winter/spring/summer breaks, but you get used to it), and the lazy f*****g teachers that make my job harder than it needs to be. Overall, I’d give it a solid 8.5/10
This type of job sounds awesome until you hear kids running in the halls and laughing at 10pm.
National Park Ranger. Thirty-two years and counting. As with any profession, there are still bad days.
I make good money owning a nice dog boarding facility on my property. I do doggie daycare twice a week in addition to 24/7 boarding; picking up happy dogs around town is pretty damn fun. I love working at home, with dogs, and running my own business.
I work at a pet store (only supplies, no animal sales) and make $18 CAD/hr. That might not sound 'decent' but it's better than minimum wage with no meaningful increase in responsibility (aka stress) compared to any other retail worker. In fact, my work environment is lower stress than any other retail/food job I've had and the owner has a keen interest in our well-being. Yearly raises, Christmas bonus, profit sharing, get paid our full scheduled shift if it's shortened or cancelled for weather, aiming to become a living wage employer with promises to increase wages beyond that so long as the business continues to grow.
Plus no one asks 'why' if I turn down a shift or decline to stay later. Respect for personal time is huge. I'm treated like a human being, not a robot with no life outside work.
I give bubble baths to ducklings and piglets
I work in the pathology lab at a hospital. I process blood and biopsy samples onto microscope slides for the pathologists to read. I love it! I feel like I’m helping people, even though I never meet them and they have no idea who I am.
I worked in construction doing flooring for 25 yrs. I was always excited when the weekend came to an end and looked forward to the work week. My wife got to stay home and raise our kids. We went on 3-4 vacations a year. Put both my kids through college. So satisfying to be able to work with your hands everyday and create something beautiful in someones home, that will last for years to come. Then cash a nice paycheck for all your hard work.
I got to work at JPL for 35 years, designing and flying deep space missions. Galileo, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, Stardust, Solar Probe, InSight and others. It was an exceptionally fun job even when it was hard. And I met a whole bunch of very smart people.
This is one of the many space related jobs I’m considering and it sounds so cool!
Im a librarian and part of my job is organising and creating workshops for children/adolescents regarding STEM. So I get to fiddle around with 3d printers, lasercutters and all kinds of cool things. On the side I also do graphic design and build websites since my previous job was web developer.
My job is different every day and since I work for the government the benefits are really good. Only downside is the pay but I gladly earn a little less to do a creative job where I can basically do what I want.
Hospice nurse. My whole job is just to try to make people comfortable and relieve their pain.
Hospice nurses are a special, wonderful, extremely caring and very rare breed! Having dealt with Hospice 3x in my life, it's easy to see how much you truly care about your patients and their families. I've never seen one lose their temper, raise their voices, speak unkindly, fail to answer questions over & over, putting their patients & families ahead of their own needs,... I could go on and on. [[[HUGS]]] Thanks for all you do!
I’m a colorist. It’s like photoshop for movies. I love it. But I feel very lucky to have this job, and to be successful in the industry.
Farmer here. In the winter I can be in knee deep snow with numb toes and fingers fixing fence, and in the summer I can be working on an irrigation system with a heat index of 110°F. I never feel like I'm actually working. Life feels like an open world RPG with somewhat vague deadlines to meet throughout the year. The hardest part is keeping yourself motivated so you don't fall behind. We start planting in mid April, but we've been working on the planter for most of this week and should be field ready tomorrow. I could sleep in till noon every day if I chose to but the seasons are changing....
I could never be a farmer. I'm not a morning person (don't talk to me until I've been up a few hours) & getting up before the sun? I'll pass. I love animals, but the smells get to me. However, the machinery is cool, the views are amazing and the people are the best! FARMERS ARE AWESOME!
Electrician. It’s hard work most days, but satisfying seeing it all lit-up and functioning properly.
Knowing my work will still be in service many years from now feels good, and seeing customers marvel at their new light fixtures looking great is a good feeling
I do voiceovers. It's fun, and pays well after you establish yourself. Some days are a grind, and getting started was/is a lot of work for little pay, but overall it's great.
I am a NY state worker. My job mostly consists of paper work and database work helping to prevent people who have harmed children in the past from getting employment now in environments that involve children.
Also decent pay with tons of benefits and a strong union.
Still work at the same place I did when I did hate my job. Realized most of it was mental, and not appreciating how good my life was. Not saying that's always the case, but most people just aren't able to count their blessings.
I somewhat agree. I do feel some people who hate their job are actually at terrible jobs, or terribly managed jobs, and just don't bother to get out of it out of fear and the misconception there's nothing else out there for them, or that they'll end up at another terrible job. Other times, yes, it's all in their minds, their attitude, how handle the job and what they think will make them happy. The latter people will never be happy no matter how much their situation improves.
Not for everybody; but I am a lighting designer. Days are long, but there’s something amazing about finishing out a day by making a musicians show look as incredible as they sound. Used to tour, but hopped off the road because my partner and I had a kid, so now I’m working at local venues, and while you don’t build the same relationship as you do on the road, working a different show every time you go in means needing to be prepared for anything, it’s all very rewarding, and while the days can be super long, they’re very rarely dull. And I mean, I get paid to go to concerts, so that’s also a nice touch.
Technical Illustrator. I love working with 3D models and illustrating. I work from home half the time and keep whatever hours i want. My boss has faith that i will do my job so i rarely ever see him. Since starting this job 2 years ago i have paid off all my debt and even sent my parents some money for everything they have done for me.
I am the only IT guy for a family owned business. They know nothing about computers so as long as everything is running smoothly they leave me alone. I only put in about 45 minutes of actual work every week.
Nah he’s taking advantage of the trust of some people who don’t know much about IT. Not cool.
I do intraoperative neuromonitoring. When people have surgery that puts the nervous system at risk,we give the surgeon feedback as to the integrity of the motor system in the anesthetized patient.
I work in a logyard in S Oregon. Log trucks come in and are unloaded. The load is rolled out on the ground, and I scale the logs. I measure the lengths and diameters, calculate the gross volume in board feet, and make deductions based on defects such as frost seams, insect damage, burn scars, lightning strikes, etc. I work outside, so it can be rough in the winter/summer, but it keeps me moving, and it's an interesting gig. Been doing it about 6 years now. AMA
I’m an Estate Buyer, I travel all over the country buying peoples stuff. Antiques and what not. Pays well and I don’t spend a dime on travel, rental car, even my food is paid for. I just show up to an event and buy. It’s wonderful and I get to see a lot of cool stuff I’d normally never see.
I doubt people would consider what I make a decent wage, but I do since it's more than enough for me to live on. I work for a church. I love it, I get to help a lot of people and get to fullfil my religous side. I get a lot of freedom and have great health insurance for $400 a year. I get unlimited sick time and 2 weeks of vacation. I get free food because old ladies just bring me great food as a thank you for just being here
Guys these comments are unbelievable .. this person loves their job and are fulfilled, please stop slamming religious people who hurt no one. My last account was banned for saying this so here we go again.
I stock shelves at a grocery store, it’s a simple job where you can just shut off your brain while doing it
I work in retail, in the production side. I mainly sort clothing in a specific order of style, and then put the clothes out on the sales floor. I also get to put the tags on the clothes. It's harder work than it sounds, as quotas are tight and I'm working in a loose production line team. So, I basically have to keep up with several people. But the managers are helpful and the team encourages each other. Some days are tough and I've had a few anxiety attacks, mental breakdowns. That's more about my inner problems than what's going on with everyone else. It doesn't happen as often as my last job, which was every day. I get to sort and organize, which I love doing, and get to see some cool stuff we get in. I get 50% off on second hand soft items. My movie collection is booming. 2 weeks of vacation a year. Health benefits. Customers are overall pretty chill. I've not yet felt intimidated nor abused by a customer.
I'm a carpenter started in 2004 I love every aspect of my career ...
I’m an accountant for a bank.
Good salary, great benefits, tons of PTO and all holidays off.
It’s not particularly exciting, rewarding, or fulfilling but it gives me the security and freedom to make my life as exciting, rewarding and fulfilling as possible.
Helicopter EMS pilot.
Thank you for doing such dangerous work to help save the lives of others!
Art Director (graphic design, advertising, etc.) My goals are clear, project manager manages my tasks, generally healthy work-life balance, work from home. I live in the NYC area, make low 6 figures, live comfortably.
I'm a therapist.
Dealing with insurance is the worst but it's a small part of the job.
The pay is usually livable. It's pretty easy to find work in most states. I'm in private practice now so I take flexibility over benefits. I've always had supportive supervisors and a good community of co-workers when I did agency work.
You hear some deeply f****d up stories and it can be draining to hold space for people's trauma but these things happen and it feels good to be a support to the people that have lived them.
I studied psychology in college. Wanted to either a middle school counselor, work with testing or social worker. After doing some work at a clinic for kids (8 to 16), I had to rethink it. Mostly I heard stories - physical, sexual, emotional, verbal abuse - these kids suffered from the very people who were supposed to love them. Parents, family members, adults in positions of authority, foster parents (they & their kids, or allowing other foster kids to abuse them). I had a hard time not getting attached to some of them, especially the younger ones. It broke my heart to see them hurting and hearing what they were going through
I work as a housekeeper at a motel. I love my job. It allows me to work alone, I can listen to my music, and I enjoy making order out of chaos. Also, the money's pretty damn good. Because of the way our pay is structured, I make more than double the standard amount in this industry.
I work in Robotics and Machine Learning, love my job and most companies that have jobs in this field have very good work environment to attract good candidates. Pay is well above average if you have a degree. I earn around 220k total comp 4 years experience.
Pharmacist. Retail pharmacy sucked but once I got out of that and into hospital pharmacy it's pretty chill. I work second shift so I'm the only pharmacist on when I'm here. Running my own show, plus being paid pretty darn well isn't a bad gig. Having been at the same hospital a while (8 yrs) and being competent makes the job pretty easy. Get to see patients 4 hours a day doing med reconciliation keeps things fresh too. No real complaints besides administration being greedy a******s occasionally.
I work at home. I take care of my father in law 24-7. Sometimes, it is very trying, and my patience wears thin, but it sure beats working for a company only making crumbs.
Computational biologist. I'm a classically trained cellular and molecular biologist that specializes in computer analysis of biological data. I work in rational drug design, so more or less I receive concepts for for drugs from staff, do some genetics and modeling work, and generate molecule designs that I send off to a robot to synthesize. They screen them to see which work best, and those that show a favorable combination of potency and specificity ultimately proceed to becoming drug candidates and going into clinic.
It's nice in that I can frequently work from home. There's lots of problem solving. It's nice mash-up of computer science and biology. The company and my peers are all great. And it's still got that kind of cutting-edge this-is-the-future-today feel to it.
I'm a paralegal at an attorney's office. I essentially do all the writing and research for cases and assemble the files and information an attorney needs for trial.
I thought about going to law school, but during my internship clerking for the county courthouse I found that people with Bar cards were working clerk jobs like me, saying there's a too many lawyers out there to get a job.
I decided that throwing down 6 figures on law school and not even having a job guaranteed at the end is too big of a risk, and instead got a paralegal certificate for a fraction of that price, and have been doing paralegal work for 10 years now.
It's not crazy money by any means, but $40k+ a year supports me and my family and that's fine by us.
I've been a paralegal for 6years, it's easy work but very mentally unstimulating, big upside is everyone in every industry needs a lawyer at some point, so you get to network like crazy.
Air Traffic controller. Made around $120k last year with overtime. Staffing sucks. Availability of leave sucks. Tons of mandatory OT. But I still love my job. 10 years in, 13 years until eligible for retirement. Forced retirement in 19 years.
Longshoreman. But specifically operate large machines. I'm alone, outdoors, getting paid really good. I'm really good at my job. I'm on the spectrum with some ADD. Having so many variables all day is actually relaxing. Also work with my mom occasionally. Also get to make my own schedule so I never miss anything with my kids
Longshore man nepotism is a real thing. Tacoma is the worst. Way more qualified than their lazy incompetent cousin (caused millions in damages) and still didn't get the job 3x because of their structure/ nepotism/ union bs
Massage therapist, ~70/hr I work 2.5 days a week and bring home ~950. I am in an incredibly supportive environment, clients are great, love my coworkers.
I’ll be returning to med school soon and will have to quit🥲😭😢
Independent Dog walker, all of my clients I either found on my own through dog walking apps I was using (and then moved off the apps), or were referrals. I live in a city big enough that it provides me with a healthy income.
I love dogs but I’m more of a cat person. Unfortunately cat walking is not a thing.
I’m a statistician and work with a government agency. I particularly really enjoy not having to interact with too many people.
I had the opposite experience in a similar role with Government. People who know nothing about data questioning the reporting they're given, from the data they supplied: "is this data right?" "my manager said it should be higher/lower." Nope, that's what I was given. "By who?" By your manager. 😱
Aerospace Engineer
I'm pushing 40 and a Mechatronics Engineering student in my senior year. I landed an internship at a robotics firm this summer. I'm making the most money I've ever made and doing EXACTLY the type of work I dreamed of when picking my major. The educational journey has been long and grueling (and expensive...) but I finally feel like it's paying off and I feel incredibly lucky to be in my position
Gym Owner. I get to help people transform their lives. It’s a very rewarding and fulfilling career.
I'm an IT generalist. They fit me in wherever help is needed. I don't love my job, but I definitely don't hate it, and it pays well. I think one of the things I like though is that I sometimes end up with weeks of downtime where I have very little to do.
School teacher, although decent wage is a fairly broad term. I’d love to make more.
Tattoo artist
This isna very demanding job imp, I find it exhausting, although fulfilling. Can't see myself sitting for hours focusing in my art, I'm not very patient.
Sales. There are annoying aspects as with any job. But it’s a very people-oriented business that draws people who like to talk and laugh and have fun whenever they can. The added benefit of having leverage over your employer with regards to how much $$ you’re bringing in allows you a ton of freedom with regard to how you conduct your day and year. Nobody cares if you take a month off every year when you’re making the company a couple million dollars every 12 months. Unlimited paid sick time. Really no such thing as UNPAID time off actually. Company car, phone, company fuel card for all my gas. Gaming PC for working from home paid for by company. If you’re semi-competent and minimally social I really couldn’t recommend it enough.
I see a lot of work with animals at the top of this list and I don't think that is a coincedence
I just have to say I noticed a great deal of very nice and positive comments from Brenda. Thank you for being so kind Brenda! It's very refreshing and I really enjoyed reading them and this thread! We need more positivity like this here :)
I found this article refreshing. It seems like a lot of what we see on BP is people complaining about everything. Most the respondents on this list don't have jobs that are better than any others; they have attitudes that are better. They choose to find meaning and joy in what they are doing, and don't spend their days fixating on what they don't like. Cheered me up.
Home health nurse. RN, director for many years. When I left the hospital and went in to home health, I knew I had found home. (Pun intended)
I drive a tour bus. Part of an Elite group in my city; there's not 200 drivers that do what I do in this city. Given that tourism is our 4th largest industry where I live, we're always busy. I work outside, and I am an ambassador for this city - it's always great to tell people how awesome this place is. Sure we have bad days (Start of the school year in particular), but there are many more good days than bad. Plus, I think of it more as being in show business, except I drive my stage.
This was a good read, refreshing to hear positive work stories. I’m an American high schooler, and I have been interested in becoming a historian, archeologist, anthropologist, curator, or something similar for some time now. I have a huge interest in history and I enjoy reading about it and writing papers (nerd I know); I also love connecting puzzles, and piecing things together using context, which I think would be really important. I would also LOVE the opportunity to travel occasionally for digs in foreign countries. However, I want to hear the opinions/insights of any pandas who are in the field themselves, or someone who knows anyone who is. What are the greatest challenges/shortcomings? What’s unexpected? Etc. thank you so much for anyone who leaves me an answer!
Every job can be enjoyable for the right person if pay is good enough and the scheduling is fair and you can gain the means to retire properly and in good health. Yes even lower jobs or less prestigious jobs. Even cleaning toilets can be fine and a great job if people are hold accountable to not make it hell and the pay is decent and you get all equipment to do it safe. And no, there's absolutely no excuse in no job ever not to pay a living wage and not to give people what they need to stay safe while doing it. And if you think there is, then you are a bad person. And that's my opinion and I won't change it. Fact is, we need all jobs out there more or less. But the so called 'unskilled' jobs are often more needed and more important than the prestigious ones. No one, absolutely no one needs actors or curators or people with a degree in fine arts. Everyone need nurses, cashiers, cleaning personell and janitors. So f*****g pay them fairly
Procurement - buying things. For the right person it can mean really making the difference for everyone
I'm a proofreader/editor/translator in the finance industry. Hours are sometimes very hectic and sometimes very chill. I earn a really good salary because big companies are willing to pay a lot to the people working on their reports, and my bosses are amazing. Great coworkers, mostly nice clients. I love everything about my job 😁
Isn't it funny that a lot of these are related to animals or trades or working outdoors and so very few are corporate? There MUST be a reason s/
I went all the way through this wondering if there would be an adult education teacher. There wasn't, but it is very rewarding teaching adults who dropped out of school and then decided to come back because they now know that they need a HS diploma and skills to improve their lives. Zero discipline issues and motivated students, a teacher's dream.
I am a neuroscientist. I couldnt imagine I could do anything else than medicine/biology since I was a child. The decent wage is a bit ridiculous while I allways have known Im not gonna gettin any wealthy in this job.
I'm a game designer and absolutely love it. I got lucky to work for a company that is the biggest in its field, but relatively small compared to the major players like big mobile companies. It means the pay is great and our games don't have to be massively predatory like other companies do. I also get to work with management that actually yells at people if they work too hard or on weekends if it's not absolutely an emergency - which maybe occurs once a year. They actually respect people private lives.
Up teach at a university on a non academic contract rather than an academic contract. It’s great. No research pressures (I can do research but it’s not publish or perish) and I work my contracted hours each week. I’ve got a great work-life balance and my students are awesome.
Customer service on a ferry. 2 weeks on, two weeks off. Every day is different, could be busy, could be so dead you're looking for something to do, could be dealing with nice people or entitled AH. I live on a boat two weeks a months, my days are 12 hours long but the upside? When I'm off shift, all I need to do is go to my cabin (all mine), and just relax, there are no chores waiting for me (except potentially laundry), I don't need to cook as that's done for us. Two weeks off are mine to do with as I please, without worry. It's a company with lots of room for growth and pays well. And despite the fact that the route for the ferry doesn't change, I'm not sick of the scenery, it's still gorgeous. And full of whales.
I design tooling. I make more than most engineers at my company. It's 3D modeling now, although I came up with AutoCAD. Served an apprenticeship as a Tool and Die Maker, now Master many moons ago. There is always something I do not know. I've mastered geometry completely but some new guys in the shop are always teaching me new ways to look at it. Some work, some don't, but I enjoy what I do. I can guarantee that at least one tool I've worked on or designed (edit: has produced an item that) is in at least 25% of households in the US. Skilled trades are rewarding.
Copywriter for a progressive-thinking marketing agency. WFH. Agency is acquiring the coolest clients and has been growing for decades. My only task: write copy. I love it.
My good job's in grain product packaging (ie. flour, cake mix, etc.). The machines do most of the work for you, and the only really annoying bit is the deep clean-outs between product types. Even that's not so bad, you get a few hours of peaceful detail work with basically no need to talk to anyone.
I see a lot of work with animals at the top of this list and I don't think that is a coincedence
I just have to say I noticed a great deal of very nice and positive comments from Brenda. Thank you for being so kind Brenda! It's very refreshing and I really enjoyed reading them and this thread! We need more positivity like this here :)
I found this article refreshing. It seems like a lot of what we see on BP is people complaining about everything. Most the respondents on this list don't have jobs that are better than any others; they have attitudes that are better. They choose to find meaning and joy in what they are doing, and don't spend their days fixating on what they don't like. Cheered me up.
Home health nurse. RN, director for many years. When I left the hospital and went in to home health, I knew I had found home. (Pun intended)
I drive a tour bus. Part of an Elite group in my city; there's not 200 drivers that do what I do in this city. Given that tourism is our 4th largest industry where I live, we're always busy. I work outside, and I am an ambassador for this city - it's always great to tell people how awesome this place is. Sure we have bad days (Start of the school year in particular), but there are many more good days than bad. Plus, I think of it more as being in show business, except I drive my stage.
This was a good read, refreshing to hear positive work stories. I’m an American high schooler, and I have been interested in becoming a historian, archeologist, anthropologist, curator, or something similar for some time now. I have a huge interest in history and I enjoy reading about it and writing papers (nerd I know); I also love connecting puzzles, and piecing things together using context, which I think would be really important. I would also LOVE the opportunity to travel occasionally for digs in foreign countries. However, I want to hear the opinions/insights of any pandas who are in the field themselves, or someone who knows anyone who is. What are the greatest challenges/shortcomings? What’s unexpected? Etc. thank you so much for anyone who leaves me an answer!
Every job can be enjoyable for the right person if pay is good enough and the scheduling is fair and you can gain the means to retire properly and in good health. Yes even lower jobs or less prestigious jobs. Even cleaning toilets can be fine and a great job if people are hold accountable to not make it hell and the pay is decent and you get all equipment to do it safe. And no, there's absolutely no excuse in no job ever not to pay a living wage and not to give people what they need to stay safe while doing it. And if you think there is, then you are a bad person. And that's my opinion and I won't change it. Fact is, we need all jobs out there more or less. But the so called 'unskilled' jobs are often more needed and more important than the prestigious ones. No one, absolutely no one needs actors or curators or people with a degree in fine arts. Everyone need nurses, cashiers, cleaning personell and janitors. So f*****g pay them fairly
Procurement - buying things. For the right person it can mean really making the difference for everyone
I'm a proofreader/editor/translator in the finance industry. Hours are sometimes very hectic and sometimes very chill. I earn a really good salary because big companies are willing to pay a lot to the people working on their reports, and my bosses are amazing. Great coworkers, mostly nice clients. I love everything about my job 😁
Isn't it funny that a lot of these are related to animals or trades or working outdoors and so very few are corporate? There MUST be a reason s/
I went all the way through this wondering if there would be an adult education teacher. There wasn't, but it is very rewarding teaching adults who dropped out of school and then decided to come back because they now know that they need a HS diploma and skills to improve their lives. Zero discipline issues and motivated students, a teacher's dream.
I am a neuroscientist. I couldnt imagine I could do anything else than medicine/biology since I was a child. The decent wage is a bit ridiculous while I allways have known Im not gonna gettin any wealthy in this job.
I'm a game designer and absolutely love it. I got lucky to work for a company that is the biggest in its field, but relatively small compared to the major players like big mobile companies. It means the pay is great and our games don't have to be massively predatory like other companies do. I also get to work with management that actually yells at people if they work too hard or on weekends if it's not absolutely an emergency - which maybe occurs once a year. They actually respect people private lives.
Up teach at a university on a non academic contract rather than an academic contract. It’s great. No research pressures (I can do research but it’s not publish or perish) and I work my contracted hours each week. I’ve got a great work-life balance and my students are awesome.
Customer service on a ferry. 2 weeks on, two weeks off. Every day is different, could be busy, could be so dead you're looking for something to do, could be dealing with nice people or entitled AH. I live on a boat two weeks a months, my days are 12 hours long but the upside? When I'm off shift, all I need to do is go to my cabin (all mine), and just relax, there are no chores waiting for me (except potentially laundry), I don't need to cook as that's done for us. Two weeks off are mine to do with as I please, without worry. It's a company with lots of room for growth and pays well. And despite the fact that the route for the ferry doesn't change, I'm not sick of the scenery, it's still gorgeous. And full of whales.
I design tooling. I make more than most engineers at my company. It's 3D modeling now, although I came up with AutoCAD. Served an apprenticeship as a Tool and Die Maker, now Master many moons ago. There is always something I do not know. I've mastered geometry completely but some new guys in the shop are always teaching me new ways to look at it. Some work, some don't, but I enjoy what I do. I can guarantee that at least one tool I've worked on or designed (edit: has produced an item that) is in at least 25% of households in the US. Skilled trades are rewarding.
Copywriter for a progressive-thinking marketing agency. WFH. Agency is acquiring the coolest clients and has been growing for decades. My only task: write copy. I love it.
My good job's in grain product packaging (ie. flour, cake mix, etc.). The machines do most of the work for you, and the only really annoying bit is the deep clean-outs between product types. Even that's not so bad, you get a few hours of peaceful detail work with basically no need to talk to anyone.