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“I’m Fine” & Other Lies we Tell Ourselves

Recognizing Compassion Fatigue in Vet Med

You love this field. You love the animals. You care deeply about your team. You believe in the medicine, the mission, and the power of helping others.

So why does it feel so heavy?

Why are you exhausted before your shift even begins?

Why does a routine euthanasia hit harder than it used to?

Why do you feel emotionally fried – even when nothing “bad” happened today?

 

You might be experiencing compassion fatigue – and you’re not alone.

 

What is Compassion Fatigue?

Compassion fatigue is the emotional residue or strain of exposure to suffering. It’s a natural, human response to caring deeply for others who are in distress – especially when you’re doing it over and over again, without time to recover.

It’s not burnout, exactly…burnout is about workload, hours, systems, and stress.

Compassion fatigue is about emotional depletion from caring.

And in vet med, it’s everywhere.

 

Why is Vet Med so Vulnerable?

  • We’re managing sick pets and distressed clients every day.
  • We’re expected to be calm, empathetic, and professionals – no matter how emotional the situation.
  • We often deal with death, grief, guilt, and anger – sometimes all within a single interaction.
  • We internalize the pressure to always care, always fix, always save – even when it’s not humanly possible.
  • And sometimes, we’re so focused on everyone else that we forget to check in with ourselves.

 

Signs You Might be Experiencing Compassion Fatigue:

If you’ve found yourself thinking things like:

  • “I don’t even feel anything anymore.”
  • “Why do I get so irritated so easily?”
  • “I’m just numb – I can’t take one more sad case.”
  • “I used to cry during euthanasias. Now I just feel…tired.”

Or if you’re noticing:

  • Emotional withdrawal from clients or cases
  • Feeling detached from coworkers or patients
  • Chronic exhaustion (physical or mental)
  • Dreading going into work
  • Trouble sleeping or frequent illness
  • Feeling like your empathy has run dry
  • Increased irritability or apathy

…these are all red flags.

Not of weakness.
Not of failure.
But of a heart that’s overextended itself too long without support.

 

You Can’t Pour From an Empty Cup

The tricky part? People with the biggest hearts are often the most at risk.

You show up. You give it your all. You carry your team. You comfort clients. And at the end of the day, there’s nothing left for yourself.

But here’s the truth:

Compassion fatigue is not a personal flaw – it’s a workplace hazard.

And just like we take safety precautions for radiation or Sharps injuries, we need to create safety nets for emotional fatigue as well.

 

What Helps?

  • Talk about it: Say the words “compassion fatigue” out loud. Normalize it. It’s not taboo.
  • Check in with your team: You’re not the only one feeling it. Peer support is powerful.
  • Take real breaks: Even short ones. Step outside and breathe air that doesn’t smell like isopropyl.
  • Protect your time off: Days off aren’t lazy, they’re necessary.
  • Find outlets outside of work: Hobbies, movement, therapy, boundaries.
  • Reignite your why: Reflect on what drew you to this field, and what still brings you meaning – on the good days and the hard ones.

 

Final Thoughts

You can care deeply and take care of yourself.

You can be a great vet/tech/assistant/receptionist/manager and have days where your empathy feels like it’s running on fumes.

You can love this job and acknowledge when it’s too much.

Compassion fatigue doesn’t mean you’ve stopped caring..
It means you’ve cared so much, for so long, that you need some care too.

And you deserve that just as much as the patients you continue to show up for every day.

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