A little pre-amble, I make a good but moderate salary at a company with a great culture. For the most part I don't experience much stress day to day, and don't bring work home with me. I'm much more technically competent than the job requires, and don't find much of what I do hard to complete.<p>I could see myself getting a bit bored of it down the road, though, and I'm curious about the lived experience of software engineers in high-paying roles. Looking at remote roles across the United States, for example, there are some astronomical salaries available. But I'm wondering to what extent I'd pay for salaries like these in stress, and high pressure environments.<p>In your estimation is there a correlation between above-average pay and stress? Have you found making a high salary worth it?
Stress describes a person’s reaction to and perception of a situation. It doesn’t describe an inherent property of a job or salary.<p>Some people experience stress from minor everyday annoyances. Other people don’t skip a beat in their high-paying and high-responsibility jobs. No one can answer your question meaningfully because no one can know whatever stress you might experience in any given situation.
I dealt with a ,highly paid, Unix network engineer. It seemed like he just strolled thru his day. He was as calmed as they come. My believe is that if you can control your environment, network in this case, then the job does not have to be stressful but that has to do a lot on the person doing the job. Their experience, knowledge and ability to do the job.