Kristina Kiefer
Colleagues: do you remember taking the veterinary oath? Can you remember what you swore? Veterinary students: have you looked ahead, and read the oath? You are committed to the long road, which commits you to taking this oath. What does it mean to you when you say “I solemnly swear that I will use my scientific knowledge and skills for the benefit of society. I will strive to promote animal health and welfare.”?
I don’t know about you, but I envisioned puppies and kitties, frolicking, decidedly free of rabies and distemper, with the occasional intervention on my part to help maintain the frolicking. And the occasional hobby farm animal that I trimmed horns or hoofs on, or some other such romantic, Herriot-like scene.
I don’t know about you, but I missed a major point I should have recognized. Based on our stats for suicide risk and burn out, I’d hazard a guess that most of you missed this particular point as well. Read it again: “I will strive to promote animal health and welfare.” How are you doing on that front? My guess is you are working pretty stinking hard to make that happen. However, I have a gentle critique here. I’ll hazard a guess you’ve missed one of the most important animals in your responsibility. Whoa there, kiddo. Stop flagellating yourself over how long your dog had to wait to go potty because you didn’t get a moment to breathe all morning. No castigating yourself because you’ve spent more time at work with someone else’s pets, than with your own cat. You’ve entirely missed the point! And yet, therein, lies my point. When I tell you that you’ve failed the most important animal in your life, you will start to panic, because you can come up with a long list of possible failures. And you just keep feeling worse about yourself. Punishing yourself. Ignoring and/or abusing your most important animal!
Since when has your precious soul been excused from the animal kingdom? You swore. You promised to promote your health and welfare. I’ll ask you again: How are you doing on that front? Think I’m stretching this a bit too far? What about the part where you solemnly swore “I will use my scientific knowledge and skills for the benefit of society”? You know how important nutrition, prevention, enrichment, relationships, love and companionship are to your patients. Your education and knowledge is a necessary part of their welfare. Your welfare is the building block of their welfare!
If you’re anything like me, you’ve been trained to be a savior. Save the animals. Save the practice. Save the office work environment. Save your personal relationships. Save all the things. The system has used your empathy and compassion and given you the warped perception that you are a savior.
Even my scrubs imply I should be a savior!
You have completely forgotten that you began this journey with the heart of a healer. What difference does it make? A savior is expected to be perfect. A savior is responsible for the outcome, and a savior that fails, is no savior at all. How can we live with ourselves if we put those expectations on our shoulders? Painful point: We aren’t. We are losing left and right. Lives, professions, careers.
We. Are. Not. Saviors. We need to be practicing as healers. We need to be teaching our students to be healers.
Healer: Something that alleviates a person’s/animal’s distress or anguish.
Healer: A person or thing that mends or repairs something.
Think you can do that? You do. Every single day. And the expectation for perfection seems comfortably missing, doesn’t it?
I’m not intending to simplify the problems that place veterinarians at risk for suicide or burnout, but I believe this mindset is a very large component attributing to our risks.
I was reading a book to learn how to better communicate feedback, and the authors referred to “fixed versus growth” mindsets. A table, summarizing the differences was included (see below), and as I studied it, I was ‘fixed’ (pun intended) on the fixed mindset. The column of Fixed Mindset reeked of the veterinary profession. Particularly, fresh from the trenches of veterinary students!
I sat in shocked silence, as I realized this is a monster we’ve created! When I applied to vet school, nothing less than perfect on all fronts was a gamble for a letter of acceptance. And this is the mindset pre-veterinary students are conditioned to achieve. Our entire college education, and frequently even before: perfect is the art of the game. Perfect is the standard. YEARS of conditioning. And then we show up on that first day of vet school. That conditioning we learned in our earliest years as scholars blends right into our practice. Never failing an exam becomes never failing our patients. Being the best student we can possibly be becomes being the best doctor we could possibly be. Finding favor with our instructors and mentors becomes finding favor with our clients and colleagues. If we can’t do this, we aren’t succeeding. We aren’t “good enough”.
How many of the fixed mindset traits do you identify with? What would your day to day practice and well-being look like, if you could shift to the growth mindset? I’m waging a bet here: I’d bet we would lose a lot less colleagues, if we put the time and effort to actively change our conditioning. We need to teach our veterinary students to approach their education and career with a growth mindset. We need to teach ourselves to do the same. As a profession, let’s kill the savior mentality, and grow into a sustainable and joyful profession. Let’s be healers. Heal our patients. Ourselves. And our profession.
Sincerely,
Kristina Kiefer, DVM, PhD, CCRP, DACVSMR Healer
Hola! I’ve been following your website for a while now and finally got the courage
to go ahead and give you a shout out from Humble Tx!
Just wanted to mention keep up the good job!
Thank you a bunch for sharing this with all of us you actually
understand what you are talking about! Bookmarked.
Please additionally consult with my website =). We can have a hyperlink exchange agreement between us
Great article.
This is very interesting, You’re an overly skilled blogger.
I’ve joined your rss feed and look forward to in quest of more of your great post.
Additionally, I have shared your website in my social networks
Thanks for every other informative website. The place else may I get
that type of information written in such a perfect way? I’ve a project that I
am just now running on, and I’ve been at the glance out for such info.
Interesting blog! Is your theme custom made or
did you download it from somewhere? A design like
yours with a few simple tweeks would really make my blog jump out.
Please let me know where you got your theme. Bless you
Right here is the right site for anyone who wants to understand this topic.
You know a whole lot its almost hard to argue with you (not that
I really would want to…HaHa). You definitely put a new spin on a subject which has been discussed for years.
Wonderful stuff, just great!
Hi there would you mind stating which blog platform
you’re using? I’m going to start my own blog soon but I’m having a hard time deciding between BlogEngine/Wordpress/B2evolution and Drupal.
The reason I ask is because your design seems different then most blogs and I’m looking for something unique.
P.S Sorry for being off-topic but I had to ask!
It’s awesome in support of me to have a site, which is
helpful designed for my know-how. thanks admin
Every weekend i used to pay a visit this web site, for
the reason that i wish for enjoyment, since this this web site conations in fact
nice funny data too.
What’s up everyone, it’s my first visit at this web site, and paragraph is actually fruitful for me, keep up posting these articles.
0mniartist asmr
Hi there! This blog post could not be written much better! Going through this article reminds
me of my previous roommate! He always kept talking about this.
I will send this post to him. Fairly certain he will have a
good read. Thanks for sharing!
No matter if some one searches for his essential thing, thus he/she wishes
to be available that in detail, thus that thing is maintained over here.
Great post. I was checking constantly this blog and I am impressed!
Very useful info specifically the last phase 🙂 I care for such info a lot.
I used to be seeking this certain info for a long time.
Thank you and best of luck.
I was suggested this website by way of my cousin. I’m now not sure whether this put
up is written by means of him as nobody else know such precise approximately my
difficulty. You’re wonderful! Thank you!
Another thing I’ve noticed is always that for many people, low credit score is the result of circumstances further than their control. For instance they may are already saddled having an illness so that they have high bills for collections. Maybe it’s due to a work loss or the inability to go to work. Sometimes divorce process can truly send the finances in the undesired direction. Thanks sharing your thinking on this weblog.
Awesome article.
Hi there! This post couldn’t be written any better! Reading this post reminds me of my old room mate! He always kept talking about this. I will forward this write-up to him. Pretty sure he will have a good read. Many thanks for sharing!
Another thing I have noticed is always that for many people, bad credit is the reaction to circumstances further than their control. As an example they may be really saddled with an illness and as a consequence they have substantial bills going to collections. It can be due to a occupation loss and the inability to work. Sometimes divorce proceedings can really send the finances in an opposite direction. Thanks for sharing your ideas on this blog.
Hey! I just wanted to ask if you ever have any trouble with hackers? My last blog (wordpress) was hacked and I ended up losing months of hard work due to no back up. Do you have any methods to protect against hackers?