I have done so many wildly different things for work. I really enjoyed electrical and think its one of your better choices out of the ones you mentioned.
Keep looking though, there are lesser known trades, with great pay, that are interesting ,and you may have never considered. Like Crane operators, Fire Alarms, Sprinkler Fitter, Elevator mechanic/tech, instrument techs, metal spinners, tower hands, mechanical insulator, arborist (trees).
As for electrical its suggested a lot bc its in demand and everywhere. You can easily have multiple solid career paths, all with ever increasing pay AND lower physical demands (which matters by 40) and there are different types of electrical, as well as variety in the types of jobs you take in that specialty.
For example, I started as a low voltage/ fire alarm tech, and did other control systems like access gates (10/10 highly recommend fire alarms!). This could mean installing systems in new commercial construction, doing retrofits/updates, pre/post inspection visits etc.
I also did residential and light commercial- mostly updating service panels, retrofits, service calls, some new construction etc).
and residential solar (which is its own specialty now)
There are more demanding electrical jobs like: utility work of all kinds, linemen, linemen in helicopters, oil field work, machines.
I ended up doing estimating, system design, then technical sales, etc. Office and site work, less physical, using same knowledge base. If you can get there, Master Electricians have even more options, and can charge a lot.
This is what I mean by there are lots of options and things you can do with the base skill set.
It can be physically demanding but this is variable and highly dependent on what you do, where you're at, and what skill level you have achieved. Unless your in the office, at minimum you will be on your feet all day, climbing, carrying stuff, pulling wire, in attics, crawl spaces, roofs. Its less physical than most other trades but still keeps you moving.
Good luck!!!