Wait....what? Where did you get that? Limiting contact with the public and coworkers?
I am a tier 2 technical support advisor for um, well, let's just say, you've heard of my company and leave it at that. I work in one of the company's largest tech support facilities- an office of several hundred people. One of the things that I really like about the job is that I have a LOT of really cool coworkers. This is a job that's really stressful for a lot of people, and being tier 2 means that *I* am literally taking on the most difficult and stressful situations that other people have been unable to deal with, either because a screaming customer keeps making unreasonable demands, because they just couldn't fix a problem, or something else.
Personally, I thrive in this job. I was a bit afraid of the stress when I was told I was going to be promoted to my current position, but I was very happy to find out that, despite the overall much higher potential for stressful situations due to its very nature, my current position also has certain elements built into it that make it much easier to manage the stress. Actually, I find that the ability for more interaction with my coworkers is one of those very helpful elements. Once I have a case, it's a very rare situation where I am able to escalate it elsewhere, whereas back in tier 1, I always had somewhere to escalate to. But in tier 2, we are far more able to identify different people's areas of strength and expertise and if I'm not sure what to do for one sort of problem, I know who to ask for advice, and if I have a different sort of problem, my first choice for help might be someone else. On the flip side, other people see me in that way too, people tend to come to me for help on certain types of problems more than others. And of course, we can all use each other for venting. Human interaction most definitely helps me to maintain a higher level of existing in the real world.
Some people in my company do this job from home. I couldn't do that for this very reason.
I would say, for me, the most DP-related issue that I have with my work is that I get these bouts of what I think is a really odd sort of vertigo from tie to time- they seem to come up most often when I spend a lot of time sitting at a computer, and it makes me feel like I'm in an MC Escher print or something- I literally can't really tell which end of me is up, I feel like I'm facing upside down, backwards, forwards, and sideways all at the same time. It tends to not be so good for the grip on reality. I've seen doctors about that before and they just shrug, tell me there's nothing wrong with me and to spend less time in front of a computer.
I've noticed, however, that the more time I spend pacing around while on calls instead of just sitting in front of the computer, the less likely this is to happen. So I've taken to spending most of my day on my feet and sitting down for just a few minutes at a time when I need to type more than a few words. Thankfully, my supervisor has recognized my need for pacing around and recently moved me to a desk where I have all the room for pacing that I want.
The upshot to this is that spending all day on my feet means I get a small degree of excercise throughout the day to my otherwise stationary job.