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Confessions of a Veterinary Receptionist: I Came for the Puppies, I Stayed for the Chaos

I’ll be honest, when I took my first veterinary receptionist job 10 years ago, I imagined myself sipping coffee, answering phones with a cheerful cadence, and offering dog treats like Oprah – “You get a biscuit! You get a biscuit! Everybody gets a biscuit!!

Fast-forward a few short months ahead and my coffee is cold, the phones are all ringing at once, someone’s parrot is trying to eat the ficus in the lobby, a resentful Chihuahua just peed on the corner of our reception desk, and a client is telling me they’re “pretty sure” their 120-pound dog is friendly as it attempts to scale the front desk like King Kong.

Welcome to the front lines of veterinary medicine.

The Phone Calls: A Symphony of Surprises

There’s a special kind of adrenaline that kicks in when the phone rings and it’s that client – you know, the one who wants an estimate for “that thing you did last year to the brown dog.” No name, no patient file, but they’re pretty sure it was on a Tuesday. Of course, as you are digging around in last year’s schedule for a brown dog seen on a Tuesday, a possible pyometra call AND a possible intestinal blockage call come through at the same time – leaving you juggling more emergency calls than a vet clinic cat juggles lives – nine times the chaos, none of the claws.

 

Scheduling: The Puzzle of Doom

Scheduling appointments is an Olympic sport. You think you’ve perfectly spaced the day, and then someone walks in with a cat in a shoebox saying “he hasn’t been able to urinate in 3 days.” Add in the “I need to be seen today, but only at 3:07pm on dot” crowd, and you’ve got yourself a calendar held together by duct tape and dreams.

 

The Lobby: A Social Experiment

Nothing tests your multitasking skills like managing a lobby full of pets and people. You’re smiling at Mrs. Henderson while gently trying to keep her Corgi from starting a turf war with the Chihuahua in the corner. Meanwhile, you’re answering phones, restocking brochures, mopping up bodily fluids off the floor, and mentally reminding yourself that you need to finish checking in Bella as soon as you sit back down.

Also, shoutout to the client who always shows up with three dogs and zero leashes. You are the reason our reflexes are elite.

 

Why We Love it Anyway

Despite the chaos, the fur, and the constant bodily fluid mishaps that you tell yourself is just water (let’s be honest..it is never just water) we wouldn’t trade it for anything. Because in between the wild moments are the wagging tails, the grateful clients, the team that becomes family, and the deep satisfaction that comes from being the calm voice in the middle of a veterinary tornado.

Plus, let’s be honest..puppy kisses are a pretty solid perk.

 

So here’s to my fellow veterinary receptionists…
Masters of the schedule, wranglers of the walk-ins, heroes with headsets. You are the first face, the steady hand, and the voice behind the chaos.

Now if you’ll excuse me, someone just walked in with a ferret in a fanny pack, and I think they’re gonna need backup.

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