
May 01, 2025
May is Mental Health Month—a time to raise awareness, share stories, and shed light on the many facets of mental well-being. For those of us working in animal welfare, this month hits close to home. From the outside, our jobs may look like an endless stream of tail wags, purring, and adorable adoption photos. While there is no lack of those perks, there’s another side to our reality that is far more complex, emotionally taxing, and deeply human.
Let’s be honest: animal welfare work is often misunderstood. While there are beautiful, rewarding moments (yes, puppies and kittens are involved), there’s also grief, compassion fatigue, burnout, and moral distress. We carry the weight of lives—both animal and human—on our shoulders every day.
Every animal that comes into our care has a story. Some were neglected, others surrendered by people who love them but can no longer care for them. Some are strays who never had a home at all. We’re the ones who take in the broken and try to heal them. We celebrate every adoption, but we also mourn the ones we can’t save. And those losses? They don’t just disappear when we clock out.
We talk with owners facing heartbreaking decisions. We comfort families in crisis. We witness trauma and are asked to stay strong, stay kind, stay composed. That emotional labor adds up.
In this field, empathy is our superpower—but it can also be our kryptonite. Constant exposure to suffering, combined with the pressure to keep going for the sake of the animals, can lead to compassion fatigue. It’s a silent, creeping burnout that dims the joy and weighs down the heart.
Too often, animal welfare professionals put their own mental health last. We give and give until there’s nothing left, and then we give some more. That’s not sustainable—and it’s not heroic. It’s harmful.
So what can we do? First, we can talk about it. We can normalize conversations about mental health in shelters, clinics, and sanctuaries. We can encourage each other to take breaks, set boundaries, and seek support.
We can build teams that check in with one another—not just about the animals, but about each other’s well-being. We can push for mental health resources, trauma-informed management, and humane expectations for both staff and volunteers.
And we can remind the world that animal welfare isn’t just “cute and cuddly”—it’s real, it’s raw, and it deserves recognition.
If you’re not in the field but love and support the work we do, thank you. You make a difference. But also, take a moment to understand that behind every adorable adoption photo is a team of people carrying emotional weight most never see.
This Mental Health Month, let’s uplift the caretakers. Let’s hold space for the hard days. And let’s commit to a future where loving animals fiercely also means loving ourselves enough to care for our own hearts, too.
Because we don’t just play with puppies and kittens all day—we carry the whole shelter in our hearts.
Source: Austin Pets Alive