Stress is a weird one. You can deal with it until you can't.
I left a good job in London because after three years in a demanding role (running my own department of a large PR agency, aged 23) - was having an enormous effect on my physical and mental health. Oddly, I'd been fine for the first two years, but year three just poleaxed me. To this day I'm not sure why.
I ended up moving to Brighton and now do a similar, even higher pressured job in town. There are hard days, long days, never-going-to-manage-this days - but I do. And there are a fair few I-cant-believe-I-get-paid-to-do-this days as well! The big change was the location. I'm back in a city I love, with the people I love. And I now have an amazing wife and two beautiful daughters and they help me keep perspective on what is, and what isn't worth worrying about. That's not to say I don't worry about stuff, of course I do but I've found ways to cope. Before I'd rely on drink, partying and social activities I'm now much calmer. If I have a lot on my mind a long walk with the dog massively helps. Talking it through over a cup of tea with my mum, brothers or wife. Taking the girls on a fun day out.. all these things stop me bottling it up as that's when things go wrong I find. It's OK to be stressed, it's sort of normal tbh. But you need to find a healthy way to deal with it.
I should add that I'm also a Catastrophic Thinker. By that I mean my mind always (and I mean always) goes to the worst-case scenario. Usually that's losing my job and not being able to pay my mortgage/support my family. To deal with this I've managed to build a decent-sized savings pot, enough to live on for five/six months. I do not touch it. It is my 'worst case' fund. It means if I lost my job, we could go on living a reasonable life/pay our bills for six months why I find another job. It gives me HUGE piece of mind. I live pretty hand-to-mouth and the temptation to dip into this fund is quite strong but knowing it's there is a huge crutch during darker moments.
My advice would be talk to your boss, and try and work out your issues. Be specific and offer solutions where you see them. If work doesn't change, look for a job with a better balance. You have a very employable skill-set from the sound of things. If you are able to save a small amount, and equate that value to how long it would support you, then do it.
I left a good job in London because after three years in a demanding role (running my own department of a large PR agency, aged 23) - was having an enormous effect on my physical and mental health. Oddly, I'd been fine for the first two years, but year three just poleaxed me. To this day I'm not sure why.
I ended up moving to Brighton and now do a similar, even higher pressured job in town. There are hard days, long days, never-going-to-manage-this days - but I do. And there are a fair few I-cant-believe-I-get-paid-to-do-this days as well! The big change was the location. I'm back in a city I love, with the people I love. And I now have an amazing wife and two beautiful daughters and they help me keep perspective on what is, and what isn't worth worrying about. That's not to say I don't worry about stuff, of course I do but I've found ways to cope. Before I'd rely on drink, partying and social activities I'm now much calmer. If I have a lot on my mind a long walk with the dog massively helps. Talking it through over a cup of tea with my mum, brothers or wife. Taking the girls on a fun day out.. all these things stop me bottling it up as that's when things go wrong I find. It's OK to be stressed, it's sort of normal tbh. But you need to find a healthy way to deal with it.
I should add that I'm also a Catastrophic Thinker. By that I mean my mind always (and I mean always) goes to the worst-case scenario. Usually that's losing my job and not being able to pay my mortgage/support my family. To deal with this I've managed to build a decent-sized savings pot, enough to live on for five/six months. I do not touch it. It is my 'worst case' fund. It means if I lost my job, we could go on living a reasonable life/pay our bills for six months why I find another job. It gives me HUGE piece of mind. I live pretty hand-to-mouth and the temptation to dip into this fund is quite strong but knowing it's there is a huge crutch during darker moments.
My advice would be talk to your boss, and try and work out your issues. Be specific and offer solutions where you see them. If work doesn't change, look for a job with a better balance. You have a very employable skill-set from the sound of things. If you are able to save a small amount, and equate that value to how long it would support you, then do it.