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April 5, 2024 by Community Team

Veterinary Jobs - Vet Jobs - Veterinarian Jobs - DVM Jobs - Veterinary Surgeon Jobs - Veterinary Nurse Jobs - Vet Nurse Jobs - Veterinary Technician Jobs - Vet Tech Jobs - Veterinary Medicine Jobs - Veterinary Surgery Jobs - Vet Life

🚧 Say ‘No’ to Burnout: Boundary Setting 101

In the demanding world of veterinary care, the lines between work, life, and play often blur, leading to a career that’s extremely fulfilling but one that also comes with challenges. Recognizing the signs of burnout and establishing healthy boundaries is crucial for veterinarians seeking to maintain their passion for animal care while enjoying a rich personal life. With the help of feedback from our Community, we delve into seven practical steps to help veterinary professionals like you navigate the complexities of work-life balance, emphasizing the power of saying ‘no’, prioritizing self-care, and fostering a supportive community…

Find your next job…the Fresh Way

It starts with a definition

When taking a fresh approach to something, it’s often best to start with a clear definition of the element in question. Usually, a dictionary removes all the fluff and sticks to the facts. And so if we’re going to start reassessing our own boundaries, and others, we need a clear definition.

Boundary: a line that marks the limits of an area; a dividing line.

That seems like a pretty good start. Now, how do we start to apply this in practical, tactical situations?

A daily self-check

We are all creatures of habit. Some more than others. Change isn’t easy. It takes 30 days to establish a new habitual change that will stick and just 3 days to undo it.

So, you need to define your boundaries. These will vary greatly, but for most of us, this list will be a good start:

  • Define the number of hours you are comfortable working on a normal day
  • Define the number of minutes you want to have as clear breaks in your day
  • Keep track of how many times you say no in your day
  • Do not take real “Work” work home

Now, go to your smartphone. Open the notes app and write your list of boundaries. Open the alarm app and set an alarm for 15 minutes before you normally start work each day. Call the alarm ā€œBoundariesā€. Each time the alarm sounds, go to the notes app and read your boundaries, aloud if you can. This is how you create or change your boundary habits.

You need to have a conversation about hours

One of the biggest pressures we all face is the number of hours we work. Not only what is expected, but also what we often self-imposed. Working long days and extra unpaid hours is often seen as a right of passage or a badge of honor, especially in the medical space, be it human or animal. Stop that. It is not a badge of honor; it is a slippery slope towards the challenges our industry faces in terms of mental health and retention of veterinary professionals within the industry. Talk to your manager, and your fellow team members, about what is a reasonable number of hours for you to work in a day or week, and then agree on a mechanism that will allow things to be addressed when exceeding your boundary hours becomes the norm instead of the exception.

And if you are starting a new job, this is an ideal opportunity to set your boundaries in relation to working hours. Once you have a signed employment agreement, you need to have a reaffirmation of what you probably only touched on during the recruitment process. A simple, clear conversation that revisits the work-life balance that you more than likely mutually discussed and that defines starting times, ending times, what constitutes overtime, how much overtime is reasonable for all parties, and how formal breaks are structured and managed.

Give me a break

Relentless, constant pressure creates stress. Stress is bad. Formally defined breaks create discontinuity in that constant pressure that allows us all to regroup, gather our thoughts, take a deep breath, and recharge.

The keys to successfully creating boundaries around breaks include:

  • Agree on break times with your peers and managers and help each other to stick to the break time you’ve agreed.
  • Set an alarm on your phone to prompt you that it is time for your break
  • Plan to do something in your break that you enjoy
  • Find a place to take your break that is away from the day-to-day hubbub, or go for a walk

Real work stays at work

Reading, online research, listening to a podcast. All reasonable ā€œat homeā€ extensions of work that can be both useful as well as interesting. But doing ā€œWorkā€ with a capital W at home is simply a recipe for disaster. It’s such a big boundary breach, and yet so many of us are drawn into it. The recent trends towards working remotely for at least some of the time make this boundary even more difficult to establish.

The easy answer is don’t bring ā€œWorkā€ work home. Period. And for those of us who do need to work outside of a defined workspace, create a defined area in your home that is only for work. Work there, and only there, and when you are not there, don’t do work. Oh, and use the term ā€œI’m working remotely todayā€ and not ā€œI’m working from homeā€; it makes a difference.

And speaking of habits, you need an ā€œend of workā€ habit. For some, that is as easy as walking out the door, or the commute home listening to your favorite music or podcast. Others need something more, such as taking their dog for a walk, playtime with children, or a short yoga or meditation session when you get to the end of your workday. Remember that definition we mentioned at the beginning? ā€œA dividing lineā€ is what these create.

No is not a taboo

In a world where we have been brainwashed into saying yes at almost every moment, saying no seems to have become taboo. It’s not. But how to say no is an art.

So when you are asked to do something outside your boundaries, the ideal response for you is any variation of ā€œThat’s kind of you to think of me, but I can’t.ā€ No reason, no excuse, not even a because. And then wait. Nine out of ten times that will be it. And when you do get the ā€œWhy not?ā€ā€¦the reply is another simple oneā€¦ā€œIt doesn’t suit me.ā€ And for the one percent who push harder, something more direct. ā€œI’m trying to establish an ideal balance between my work and my life, and doing that is going to put that at risk.ā€

This will take some practice.

10,000 hours

In his book Outliers, Malcolm Gladwell, author of five New York Times bestsellers on the subjects of change and success, said it takes 10,000 hours of intensive practice to achieve mastery of complex skills and materials, like playing the cello like Yo-Yo Ma or getting as good as Bill Gates at computer programming.

Hopefully, it won’t take you 10,000 hours to master how to set boundaries, but it will take some practice. That daily self-check we began with is an essential couple of mindful minutes at the commencement of your workday that will set the scene for the rest of the day and remind you about the importance of setting boundaries.

And here is your boundary-setting checklist:

  • I am going to repeat my defined boundaries to me
  • How many hours did I spend at work yesterday?
  • How many minutes did I sit down and have a clear break yesterday?
  • Did I take any work home yesterday?
  • Did I say no to anything yesterday?

Now practice these.

What will success look like?

In the end, few people completely master the art of setting boundaries.

We are all human, and in the veterinary world, in particular, our destiny on a daily basis is often at the whim of circumstance…a poorly pet with an unexpectedly complex condition, a colleague with a family emergency, or even a pandemic. In those situations, we do what we do best…we help, and we deal with the longer-term impact when we have the opportunity to think more clearly and objectively.

Outside of those situations, we need to create boundaries and set limits in order to balance out those unplanned experiences. Talking openly about expectations, regular non-critical hours, defined breaks, learning to say no and creating habits around those elements, and more, will help build a more solid foundation for your own mental health, and that of others.

So don’t think of setting boundaries as a dividing line, but more a recognition and acceptance of our limits, limits that we can become more comfortable with, and that may well help guide us all on the right path to improving the overall mental health of the veterinary profession.


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