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Postpartum & Pets: Navigating a New Normal

If you’re a veterinary professional, chances are that your love for animals runs deep. Your pets have likely been your loyal companions through the ups and downs of life and the chaos of clinic life. But if you’ve recently welcomed a newborn into your home, you may be experiencing something you never expected: frustration with the pets you once doted on.

You’re not alone and you’re not a bad person. This is normal.

 

The Unexpected Shift

Many new parents (especially those in the veterinary world) imagine an idyllic scene: baby snuggled in your arms, your Golden Retriever curled protectively at your feet, your cat purring softly in the nursery window. And while moments like these do happen, they’re often sandwiched between diaper blowouts, sleepless nights, and a whole lot of barking, scratching, and chaos.

Suddenly, the things that used to roll off your back – muddy paw prints, 3am zoomies, or the sound of your dog barking (just as the baby finally fell asleep for their nap) – start to feel like a lot. You may catch yourself snapping at your pets, resenting their needs, or even questioning your ability to juggle it all. Cue the guilt and confusion.

As a veterinary professional, you’re supposed to love animals. So why do they feel like such a source of stress now?

 

What’s Really Going on?

Becoming a parent is one of the most physically and emotionally demanding transitions you’ll ever experience. Sleep deprivation, hormonal shifts, and the mental load of caring for a tiny, helpless human can deplete your reserves faster than you ever thought possible. your nervous system is on high alert, your time no longer feels like your own, and suddenly, even your most loyal companions can feel like just another demand on your overdrawn energy.

The disconnect can feel especially sharp for those of us in the veterinary field. We’re used to being the caregivers. We’re used to managing stress. But this…this is a different kind of stretch – one that asks us to rewrite our relationship with our pets, at least temporarily.

 

It’s Normal – And It’s Okay

Here’s the truth: you’re not failing your pets, and you’re not a bad pet parent. You’re adapting, and adaptation takes time.

What you’re experiencing is a shift in capacity, not love.

That old version of you – the one who never minded walking the dog late at night, or laughed off shredded toilet paper – still exists. But right now, you’re doing your best with very real, very limited emotional bandwidth.

 

How to Lessen the Stress

You can get through this without sacrificing your sanity – or your relationship with your pets. Here are a few ways to ease the tension:

  1. Lower the bar: Your pets don’t need a perfect pet parent right now; they just need a present one. If your walks are shorter, playtime is limited, or meals come from puzzle feeders more often than usual, that’s okay. (And remember, it’s temporary.)
  2. Lean on your village: Ask friends, family, or pet sitters to help out – walk the dog, clean the litter box, or give your pets a bit of extra attention. You don’t have to do it all by yourself.
  3. Create pet-free zones: It’s okay to set boundaries that protect your peach. Baby gates, closed doors, and designated quiet spaces can help you recharge without guilt. (This was one of the most helpful things I did when I was in the early postpartum period with my son, it honestly makes such a difference.)
  4. Try enrichment over effort: Frozen Kongs, puzzle toys, or a new perch near the window can go a long way in keeping your pet stimulated without requiring more from you.
  5. Talk to your vet team: Talk to your colleagues if you need behavioral help or creative solutions tailored to your pet’s needs. This is the time to lean into the profession’s support system.

 

You’ll Find Your Rhythm Again, I Promise

The early postpartum period is intense – but always remember, it’s temporary. Give yourself permission to grieve your old routines, adjust your expectations, and forgive yourself for feeling things you never imagined you would.

Your love for pets hasn’t disappeared. It’s just had to make room for something enormous, fragile, and entirely new. In time, you’ll find your rhythm again – and your pets will still be right there, wagging, purring, or snoozing next to you.

You’ve spent your career extending compassion to others. Now it’s time to offer some to yourself.

 

Not in the Postpartum Phase? This Information is Still Useful!

Even if you are not personally going through the postpartum phase, this information can still be valuable. Maybe your partner just had a baby, or a coworker on the clinic floor is adjusting to life as a new parent. Understanding how the arrival of a newborn can shift a person’s relationship with their pets gives you a chance to show empathy instead of judgement. You might offer help by walking their dog, giving them a break at work, or simply acknowledge that what they’re feeling is valid and normal. Sharing this with someone who’s in the thick of it could be the quiet lifeline they didn’t know they needed.

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