
So you think rescuers have it bad? Putting their lives on the line with strange, scared dogs capable of anything? Yeah, its a rough life. But you know who else does that? Every day?
Vets.
In fact, vets may well be the most undervalued of animal welfare heroes. They do so much, and get so little recognition.
Being a vet is kind of like a mash-up of all the negative aspects of being a doctor (for humans), without any of the pluses. Think about it. Veterinary med school is just as hard, takes just as longbut with one crucial difference: you can count on one hand the ones wholl ever come close to making the big bucks people doctors make. Their patients cant talk, cant say where it hurts or what they last ate. At least pediatricians have a parent to fill in the blanksand a mom or dad can usually be trusted to follow instructions, call if something looks or feels wrong. (You wouldnt believe how many dog owners dont.) Also, people doctors restrict themselves to either general medicine (for anything more complicated than the common cold theyll give you a referral) or to a particular specialtyand only for a single species (humans). But vets are expected to cover all the specialties, from reproductive health to ophthalmology to X-ray technician to pathology to diagnostics to odontologyeven surgery! And theyre expected to do all that not just for dogs and cats but for all sorts of species.
Try asking your ophthalmologist about your digestive problems. Try asking him about your dogs digestive problems.
No, being a vet isnt easy. And, as if all of the above werent enough to qualify them for most challenging profession ever, they get all sorts of crap over their fees. Youve no idea how often I hear peoplesmart peoplecomplain about the vet bills they have to pay. Not long ago, at the vets waiting area, I witnessed a woman who refused to pay her bill. Shed brought in a puppy who had been diagnosed with parvovirus, too advanced to do anything but give him a painless way out. But his owner, this woman, didnt want to pay for the euthanasia. Why do I have to pay? Hes going to die anyway, right?
![]() |
| You small, pathetic piece of feces. I am a doctor. I dont poke around inin animals. Take it back before I sue you. |
She preferred, rather than pay a measly 50 bucks, to take the puppy home and let him die on his own, in pain.
(The vets waived the feewhich is to say, they paid for it themselvesand put the puppy down anyway. The woman left happy.)
This is why, back when I was around 15, I decided against becoming a vet. This situation, with me as the medical professional, wouldve ended in a lawsuit. Or me in jail. And this is, too, why vets are my heroes. The idiocy they put up with, the costs they absorb, the strength of character and the patience they exhibit to educate the more-often-than-not clueless, and only sometimes well-intentioned people that walk through their doors
And then theres the actual patients. A vets physical integrity is on the line with every single animal they see, Chihuahua dog or Arabic stallion. We rescuers talk about building trust and taking our time, we talk about kits and traps and tranquilizers, and then we celebrate when, after three weeks, we finally get a dog into a car. The vet? S/he wont get time to make friends, or to earn the dogs trust. S/hes got a job to doand that job means putting fingers and even noses closer to those unfriendly and very strong canine jaws than any rescuer. Do they balk? Do they say, Ah, well, lets try again tomorrow?
No. They GET THE JOB DONE.
Oh, and then theres the rescuers themselves. But this is a street dog. You should be doing it for free.
![]() |
| Comics got it wrong, yall. Clark Kent wasnt a journalist. He was a vet. |
Look. Vets volunteer enough of their lives to animal welfare already. Theyve committed their entire careers to low wages and the hardest, broadest, most challenging of medical professions because they care. No one becomes a vet for the money, or for glory, or even for academic recognition. No ones going to win a Nobel for veterinary medicine.* No ones going to name a hospital after you. No, if you chose to become a vet, its because your desire to help animals trumped everything else.
Compared to vets, then, us rescuers are nothing but dilettantes.

Seriously. Hug your vet today. Bring them some coffee next time you visit. Some homemade cookies. And, please, dont complain about your vet bill. If you have reason to believe youre being overchargedI wont deny it happens; theres unscrupulous people everywherethen change vets (because, if their ethics are faulty that way, then your dog isnt in safe hands anyway). But do your research. And check why a certain vet might be more expensive than another. If its talent, or commitment, I suggest you pay up.
* This guy actually did win a Nobel. Even if the research that earned him the prize had to do more with human well-being rather than with animals, it gives me hope that maybe the world is beginning to realize we owe veterinarians huge, and long-overdue, recognition.
Coming soon (in May, after weve all slept a week): HOW TO CHOOSE A VET
Hint: not because they treat you nice.
Thanks for the visit, everyone! This has been the most rewarding A-to-Z Ive done (its my 5th)and its all thanks to you. Your comments, the stories youve shared, the insights youve provided... Its been one heck of a special April. Masha danki! (Thats thank you in Papiamentu, the language of Curaçao.) Tomorrow therell be a special treat waiting here for you: Michele Truhlik, of Angels Bark, will be here to tell the rescue story of one of her own dogs; its guaranteed to stay with you for the rest of your life. (Bring Kleenex.)

