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One day a man was
taking a sunrise walk along a beach. In the distance he caught sight of
a young woman who seemed to be dancing along the waves. As he got closer
he saw that the young woman was actually not dancing, but picking up starfish
from the sand and tossing them gently back into the ocean.
"What are you doing?"
the man asked.
"The sun is coming
up and the tide is going out; if I don't throw them in they'll die."
"But young woman,
there are miles and miles of beach with starfish all along it--you can't
possibly make a difference."
The young woman bent
down, picked up another starfish, and placed it lovingly back into the
ocean, past the breaking waves.
"It made a difference
for that one," she replied.

If you give of your
life energy to help animals, professionally or as a volunteer,
you know this story. You live it. You know the urges of compassion;
you know the driving desire to help. And you know the pain of
seeing how many more there are, and the pain of realizing you
can't save them all. And you know the joy and fulfillment that
comes from helping and saving the ones you can.

Giving love and
support to animals in need, animals in pain, is a sacred thing. It fulfills
our own healthy need to give, to help, and to love. Along with the rewards,
there can be heartache in helping animals, deep wrenching heartache. Continued
exposure to the results of cruelty, ignorance and apathy toward animals,
seeing the suffering, the lack of compassion and love in others' actions
toward animals can burn us out. It can turn us hard with anger. It can
make us feel lost in anguish and hopelessness. Whatever our role, wherever
we work--animal rescue work, sheltering work, animal control work, political
activism work, as volunteer, employee, supervisor, administrator, board
member, in an open admission or a limited admission facility--this work
requires more than a mere sentimental love of animals. It's hard work
which requires tremendous emotional fortitude and can drain our resources
physically, emotionally and spiritually. In devoting ourselves to a cause,
we can lose ourselves. Sometimes all that compassion we feel and give
to the animals and the causes we've dedicated ourselves to can take so
much out of us we don't have much energy left for ourselves. Sometimes
it seems all we have has been given away.
Compassion fatigue
is what we feel when we've cared for others more than ourselves, when
our sense of responsibility to others has become exaggerated or out of
balance. Do you ever feel that you:
- love and care
for animals or others more than yourself?
- actually take
on the suffering of animals or others, actually feel their suffering
and keep it as if it were our own?
- feel compelled
to rescue every one, make it all better, fix it or solve problems for
every animal or person you help? And feel like a failure when you can't?
- focus your energy
on others' pain and trauma as a way of avoiding and working on your
own issues in need of healing?
- sometimes feel
almost addicted to helping and being needed?
If any of these issues
are true of you, you may be experiencing compassion fatigue. The following
pages are offered as resources to help you balance loving yourself with
caring for others--still feeling the joy of giving and helping but in
a way which allows you to be whole at the same time. Caring for ourselves
and not others is selfishness. Caring for others and not ourselves is
martyrdom. Caring for ourselves and others is the most healthy balance
of loving, and perhaps living, that we can achieve.
The opposite of
stress or compassion fatigue is the state of inner peace. Inner peace
is easy to experience when no conflict exists for us. If all humans practiced
responsible pet ownership, if all humans wanting a companion animal rescued
through adoption rather than adding to overpopulation through breeder
and pet store purchases, if all pet owners spayed and neutered their animals,
if all pet owners worked hard to find solutions to keep their animals
rather than easily surrendering them, if all landlords allowed pets, if
there were enough homes for every animal in every shelter, if no animals
were either euthanized or kept long term in cages, if all organizations
and agencies worked in respectful collaboration... well, in such ideal
circumstances, experiencing inner peace in the midst of animal welfare
work would be easy! But we have mountains to climb, solutions to create
and work through together, even when we disagree. Yet amidst such challenge
finding inner peace, and integrating beliefs, actions and practices which
help us maintain it, is also a tremendous opportunity for growth. It is
an opportunity to deepen our care and love of ourselves and our respect
of others. It is an opportunity to learn to love ourselves and others
in a way that can, perhaps, even match our love of animals.
Finding inner peace,
preventing, coping with and healing compassion fatigue, is not a once
and done activity. It's not a finite project like building a house. It's
more like the ongoing creation of a garden. It's never done. It requires
ongoing attention. Yet, like the joy of tending and continually creating
a garden, there can be great joy and satisfaction in tending to our own
bodies, hearts and souls. Yes, service to the animals is sacred. And so
is taking great care of ourselves.
I hope you will
find the following pages and links to further resources helpful.
These pages are
dedicated to animal welfare workers everywhere. It is you--shelter workers,
animal control workers, rescue and rehab workers--who are the true heroes
in the circle of all of us who love animals. It is you who do the hardest
work for the animals of our communities. Thank you for the tireless, endless,
thankless work you do to rescue, love, care for, adopt and sometimes have
to euthanize animals that other members of your community neglect, abuse,
abandon and throw away at your shelters' doors.
Thank you for enduring
the on-going sorrow, anger, frustration and guilt you often have, for
the love, compassion and courage you so freely give. May you always have
the strength, support and resources you need to carry on. May the care
and love you've bestowed upon so many animals be returned to you tenfold.
Know that you are
acknowledged, deeply respected, and loved.
Thank you for being there for the animals.
Namaste'
Teresa
Wagner
Note about
The Starfish story: The scientific term for a starfish is sea star. They
are invertebrates, not fish.
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