The Sock-Eating Lab: A Never-Ending Saga

Every veterinary clinic has one.

Not a microscope.

Not a stethoscope.

Not even a haunted centrifuge that makes that noise.

 

No…we’re talking about The Sock-Eating Lab.

 

Chapter 1: The First Sock

It always starts small. One random athletic sock. The owner swears they “don’t know how he got it.” The lab in question looks up from the treatment table with those big, guilty-but-not-really eyes, tail thumping like a metronome of chaos.

Rads confirm the truth: a sock, crumpled in the stomach like a sad origami swan.

The team sighs: “Okay, ONE sock. No big deal.”

 

Chapter 2: The Collection Grows

But socks are never just socks.

Socks are appetizers. Socks are training wheels for the fine art of textile ingestion.

 

Because next week? It’s two socks.

The week after? It’s a sock AND a pair of underwear.

By the end of the month, you’re staring at an abdominal film that looks like someone stuffed an entire laundry basket into the stomach of a 90-lb Labrador.

 

Chapter 3: The Owner’s Denial

The owners rarely help.

  • “But we keep the laundry in a basket!” (Translation: An open buffet.)
  • “He’s never done this before.” (Translation: This is visit #4.)
  • “He only eats my husband’s socks, never mine.” (Translation: Marital counseling needed.)

 

Chapter 4: The Surgical Reveal

There’s a unique sound in surgery when the doctor pulls the fifth sock out of a GI tract. It’s somewhere between “plop” and “regret.”

The techs count them out loud like a demented game of veterinary Bingo:
“One sock…two sock…red sock…blue sock…”

And yes, the whole treatment team is now quoting Dr. Seuss in unison.

 

Chapter 5: The Aftermath

The lab? Bounces back like NOTHING happened.

Wags tail. Eats dinner. Tries to steal the surgeon’s scrub cap on the way out.

 

The team? Emotionally scarred, never looks at a laundry basket the same way again.

 

The Billing Question

At what point do we, as a profession, stop pretending this is an “emergency GI obstruction” and start billing by the load

  • FB Sx: $X
  • IV Fluids & Hospitalization: $Y
  • Sock Extraction Surcharge (per pair): Don’t tempt us 😛

Because somewhere out there is a Labrador plotting its next attack on a load of laundry like it’s Mission Impossible: Sock Protocol.

And we’re just here with the surgical scissors, waiting.

 

Moral of the Story:

Socks aren’t clothing to a Lab.
They’re a lifestyle choice.

And for the vet med team…they’re job security. ✨🔒

When One Employee Isn’t Pulling Their Weight: A Guide for Practice Managers

When One Employee Isn’t Pulling Their Weight: A Guide for Practice ManagersBecause ignoring the problem isn't a strategy - and neither is hoping it fixes itself. One of the hardest parts of being a practice manager isn’t managing schedules, budgets, or inventory. ...

Supporting a Grieving Team Member: A Practice Manager’s Guide

Supporting a Grieving Team Member: A Practice Manager’s GuideLeadership isn’t about having all the right words - it’s about showing up in the right ways. Vet med is an emotionally demanding profession, even on the best of days.  When a team member is grieving the loss...

Fireworks, Fear, and Front Desk Chaos: Preparing Your Clinic for the Fourth of July Rush

Fireworks, Fear, and Front Desk Chaos: Preparing Your Clinic for the Fourth of July RushBecause if you work in vet med, you know what’s coming.   For most people, Fourth of July means:  Cookouts.Pool days.Fireworks.Patriotic t-shirts.And someone insisting they can...

Scaling Without Breaking Your Team

Scaling Without Breaking Your TeamHow veterinary clinics can grow without burning out the people who got them there.  Growth is exciting. More appointments.More new clients.A busier schedule.A stronger reputation. For many veterinary clinics, growth feels like proof...

Things Veterinary Clinics Should Have Warning Labels For

Things Veterinary Clinics Should Have Warning Labels ForFor the safety of the public - and the sanity of veterinary professionals. Most products come with warning labels. Coffee is hot.Ladders are tall.Chainsaws are dangerous.  And yet somehow, veterinary clinics...

What Veterinary Clinics Should Measure (Besides Revenue)

What Veterinary Clinics Should Measure (Besides Revenue)Because your profit-and-loss statement doesn’t tell the whole story. Revenue matters. Without revenue, veterinary clinics can’t pay staff, invest in equipment, grow services, or continue caring for patients. But...

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists Prematurely

Phone Calls That Age Veterinary Receptionists PrematurelyAn entirely scientific study. Veterinary receptionists answer a lot of phone calls. Some are easy.Some are routine. And then there are the ones that remove approximately six months from your life expectancy...

Why “Working Harder” Isn’t Fixing Your Veterinary Clinic Problems

Why “Working Harder” Isn’t Fixing Your Veterinary Clinic ProblemsAt some point, effort stops being the solution. Vet med is full of hardworking people.  Teams stay late.Skip lunches.Cover shifts.Answer one more call.Squeeze in one more appointment.  And for a while,...

If Veterinary Clinic Were Dating Profiles

If Veterinary Clinics Were Dating ProfilesSwipe right at your own risk. At some point, someone in vet med described clinics as a “fast-paced environment” and honestly, that feels wildly understated.  Because if vet clinics had dating profiles, they would all sound:...

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has

The 5 Employees Every Vet Clinic Has You know them. You love them. You’ve absolutely hidden in the treatment area to avoid one of them. Vet med is a beautiful mix of personalities held together by caffeine, teamwork, and increasingly concerning coping mechanisms. No...

Is Your Vet Tech Answering Your Phones?

Is Your Vet Tech Answering Your Phones?In February 2023, the AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association) wrote an article stating veterinary technicians were being paid more, yet are still facing concerns over wages, burnout and debt. Due to Covid-19, many...

The Best People to Answer Your Calls

The Best People to Answer Your CallsKnowledge is power. You wouldn't have someone with no knowledge of dentistry answer at your dental clinic, so why would you have someone without veterinary knowledge answer your phones at your veterinary clinic? Veterinary...

Reasons Someone May Call a Vet Clinic

Reasons Someone May Call a Vet ClinicIn today’s world and technology, clients have the skills and resources to do their research. What does this mean for a veterinary clinic? It means that it is important for your team to offer the best customer service and veterinary...

The Importance of a Veterinary Receptionist

The Importance of a Veterinary Receptionist Just as with any team member, the receptionist plays a vital role in the success of a business and its clients. This is especially true for veterinary clinics. Our loveable fur babies rely on us to provide them with food,...

Call Answering Customer Service – The Introduction

Customer Service: The Introduction How To Make Your Callers Feel Special.(608)296-91206592 Lake Road Suite B8 Windsor, WI 53598info@vetreceptionists.comWhen you answer a call, you set the foundation for the judgment that will inevitably happen. The caller wants to...

Veterinary Answering Services
You were not leaving your cart just like that, right?

Almost set!

Enter your best email to get assigned a lead to your new account right away.