
#1

Look, again, not as bad as those others but I’ve seen and read enough that my decade in has been enough. I’ve had students murdered (one kid was shot for twelve dollars worth of weed. I also taught the murderer), I’ve called DCS on many parents because my student came in beaten or starving (I paid for one of my student’s lunches because she was pregnant and couldn’t afford school lunch), seen brutal fights that have ended with hospitalization and have also been hospitalized due to breaking up fights. You watch brilliant students discover d***s and overdose, you see kids with bright futures get pregnant and refuse to go to college because they “will be supported” by the baby’s father who skipped town the day she gave birth, and you see kids fall through the cracks in the system to never be seen again. I’ve also reported two f*****g pervert teachers; one didn’t have enough evidence but he was still let go while the other currently enjoys prison.
My first year, a few of us teachers started a “club” that would have lock-ins at the school because some of the kids needed a place to get food, get clean, and be away from the danger of home. I’ve never played more Monopoly in my life or eaten more Papa John’s and I really didn’t like doing it but it was worth it at graduation when one of my students that never missed Club thanked me because, “it was the one night her mom’s boyfriend couldn’t get her.” I still cry about it. I’m crying now.
There were amazing positives. I have a few students that are now doctors that were once told that they would never graduate. Getting kids who couldn’t read at the beginning of their freshman year to graduate with a full ride to college is a feeling that I can’t really compare to anything.
But, at the end of the day, the lows are too low. I left the first school that I taught at six years ago because we had an “incident” that definitely *wasn’t* a school shooting that failed only because the kid turned the corner directly into our school officer and, out of fear, the kid killed himself instead of the kids on his list. I should have left then but I thought it would get better; that I could handle it all.
I can’t. I’m tired.
#2

Edit to add: they have to watch these videos looping back over and over to record audio, names, places, numbers, background noises, and any other evidence that might connect persons to acts or cases to other cases.
#3

I trained and got certified in computer forensics. As a result I spent many, many hours poring through thousands upon thousands of child sexual abuse images and videos.
The seething, white rage that would build up inside of me would necessitate an occasional break to go punch a wall or other inanimate object. The other detectives outside of our enclosed lab got used to the occasional outbursts by my other computer forensic examiners and me.
Most of the time I could endure it, but sometimes certain acts or victims would trigger rage in me that still affects me to this day. This in spite of the mandatory and regular therapy for our examiners that was established by policy. There is no redemption for people who abuse children.
Sometimes, your job might be stressing you out so much you start thinking: "Are other people living like this, too?" The author of this thread, u/VenkyFromAnakapalli, found themselves in a similar situation. "I was inspired to ask other Redditors this question because my job at a molecular biology lab was stressing me out," they told Bored Panda in a message.
"I found myself feeling more and more reluctant to go work, so in frustration, I turned to Reddit. I wanted to just see how other people's jobs were affecting their mental health." And Reddit didn't disappoint. People pointed out many professions where people have to sacrifice their mental health, like trucking or air traffic controllers.
#4

1. the racist : It’s very hard to go on your day taking care of someone who spits in your face and calls you dirty while you’re trying to help them wash up.
2. The way people just die, after you’ve finally had a relationship with them and cared for them for months and how fast that empty bed gets occupied. You don’t get any counselling or therapy but you’re expected to go on normally with your work shift.
#5

#6

Every time you meet a new patient it’s during one of the worst (if not THE worst) time of their lives. And it’s up to you to break it to them/their families if the toxic treatment you have been administering is working or if they should give up hope and get their affairs in order.
On top of that you have them attending appointments telling you the kind of toll the cancer is taking on their marriage **(SO MANY people walk away from their “beloved” partner of 30 years rather than support them through this)** not to mention their finances.
u/VenkyFromAnakapalli tells us they work long hours at a lab, making it a pretty mentally exhausting job. "It can be fun at times, but with paper deadlines [and] grant proposal writing, as well as routine/repetitive experiments, it gets tiring," they admit.
"Add to that a stressful PI, as well as colleagues who don't always want to help, [and] it gets demanding sometimes." After reading the many answers from people, u/VenkyFromAnakapalli feels lucky to have the job they have. "I feel more blessed that my job never got as bad," they say.
#7

#8

#9

I just wanted to save lives - and I already have saved more than I thought I would. But it’s become so hard to put my vest on and get myself to work lately - and it crushes me to see some of my friends making 3x my salary - working 6 hours a day from home while I’m out here in the trenches every night. Every decision I make affects somebodies entire life and freedom or could cost me or my coworker’s life. The amount of red tape I have to go through to do my job is insane. Most of the criminals I break my back to capture get released the next day or get let go in court on some stupid technicality.
Nobody wants the job I have anymore so there are never enough coworkers to help me - we are always understaffed and by the time I show up to the lower priority calls I’m met with hate because the response time is so bad. I get to hear Karen scream in my face about showing up hours later to her broken car window even though 15 minutes ago I just got done watching jimmy gurgle his last breath succumbing to stab wounds while his mom looks on in horror.
Even if I quit tonight, I believe most of my naive innocence and optimism for life could be shattered and the mental health effects could last me for the rest of my life. And the weird cherry on top is that I’ve become kind of addicted to the adrenaline and activities that used to excite me in my non working life can sometimes feel mundane and purposeless now.
"I guess my life is easier compared to the answers I heard, some of which [were] hard to believe just because of how brutal and demanding they described their job as, but some jobs really are that hard, so I do think everyone was just telling the truth."
"I feel like the question was a good way to gain perspective in the life of someone else while letting off your stress by sharing it with others," the Redditor added.
#10

High probability of bio illnesses/bio hazards (blood/airborne pathogens).
100% will affect a sane person.
#11

imlumpy:
My vet cried with me when we put my cat to sleep. I was touched, but it was a bit of a surprise since I was apparently the second euthanasia appointment of the day.
What I hear from vets is that the people are the worst part of the job. Seeing evidence of neglect or abuse, clients refusing to pay for necessary medical interventions, etc. Watching animals suffering is hard enough, but knowing you (or the owner) could do something about it but can't/won't has to be rough.
headoftheasylum:
Veterinary work, specifically animal welfare and rescue. The things that people will do to another living creature is horrendous. I dislike the entire human race. I think the world would be better off if we all just f****d off and died.
#12

Intelligent-Box-3798:
Definitely have seen multiple die, as well as plenty of already dead, brains on walls, etc.
None of it was nearly as bad as responding to a dying infant then having to stand around while EMS is going through the motions for the sake of the parents.
#13

Lily_Hylidae:
Social workers, particularly those in Child Protection. My friend has been signed off for months now. She said she doesn't think she can ever face going back. The thought of it is giving her severe panic attacks.
#14

Things I did in my career:
Watched people burn to death in a car wreck.
Did trauma care multiple times. Saved some. Lost more.
Searched a house for a dead baby. Found her in a bag in a wardrobe.
Searched another house for a severed penis and a testicle that a mentally ill man had cut off.
Saw multiple murder victims and blood covered crime scenes.
Told multiple people their family members were dead, including telling a six and a seven year old their parents were dead because Daddy had shot mummy then himself.
Suffered daily abuse from the public for 30 years.
Got assaulted numerous times.
Been to multiple autopsy's including child autopsy's.
Watched videos of murder and sexual abuse including of children in order to prepare it as evidence.
Worked horrid shifts and lives an unhealthy lifestyle for years.
Got virtually zero support for mental health in all that time.
Was massively overworked the whole time.
Dealt with the stress of trying to keep people alive and carrying massive case loads knowing one slip up
Yeah policing is terrible for your mental health. I can't imagine much worse.
#15

#16

#17

I lost her to COVID bc stupid people ran our country.
#18

#19

It’s not for the weak of heart, because even those who have the toughest hearts are struggling with depression.
#20

l337hackzor:
Bit of a second hand story but I dated a girl, in her home town the slaughter house was a big employer that paid well.
Apparently they had X number of what are basically mental health days (and this was 20 years ago before that kind of thing was more top of mind) because people would have breakdowns or just walk off in the middle of a shift.
Rather than fire these people or have them assume they can't come back they just gave them a bit of paid time for it.


