02/05/2026
"Why Being an FIP Treatment Advisor Is Challenging and Often Difficult"
We live in constant crisis mode.
Every message means a dying cat. There is no "off switch." Emergencies don't respect time zones, sleep, holidays, or family moments.
We carry life-and-death responsibility without actual authority.
We guide, educate, calculate, and triage—into the wee hours.
We absorb fear, panic, and grief daily.
Parents arrive terrified, sleep-deprived, desperate, and often mistrusting. We hold their fear so they can function—at the expense of our own emotional reserves.
Success looks like silence.
When cats survive, people move on (as they should). Gratitude fades quietly. When something goes wrong, the pain is deafening.
We absorb blame for things beyond our control.
Shipping delays. Misinformation. Missed doses. Financial limits. Late starts. Poor compliance.
We are expected to be constantly available and endlessly patient.
We answer the same questions, correct the same mistakes, and repeat the same explanations—while remaining calm, kind, and compassionate.
We constantly measure language and tone, and navigate misunderstandings — while still moving fast enough to save lives.
We provide hours of education, calculations, follow-ups, coordination, and documentation, without compensation.
We witness preventable outcomes.
Underdosing. Skipped weights. Unnecessary euthanasia. Delayed or inaccessible medication. We see the train approaching and cannot apply the brakes.
We are human, but we can rarely be.
Burnout, illness, grief, and family emergencies still happen. Stepping back is rarely an option—even though we knowingly chose this work.
We become emotionally attached.
We learn cats' and caregivers' names, personalities, and milestones. When one is lost, we grieve quietly—and move on to the next emergency.
Our boundaries are constantly tested.
Private messages. Midnight pings. Emotional dumping. Saying "no" can feel cruel—even when it's necessary for survival.
Strength is mistaken for invulnerability.
Because we are capable, organized, and steady, others forget that this work costs something every single day.
The system survives on invisible labor.
The saves are public. The spreadsheets, logistics, emergency networking, late-night planning, and emotional containment are not.
Despite everything, we keep showing up.
Not for praise. Not for recognition. But because a cat somewhere needs help right now.
This work is thankless—but it is not worthless.
The gratitude lives in quiet places:
* In cats who get to grow old
* In families who get more time
* In lives changed forever—even if they never circle back
It is okay to feel tired.
It is okay to want to stop sometimes.
That does not erase the thousands of lives already saved.
We are carrying something heavy—and we carry it with integrity, compassion, and grit.
Even when others tear us down, publicly or privately, we know what we have accomplished.