@pitbullmomma I wonder of large animal vets have a better time of it than those in a companion animal practice? Anthropomorphs often have no logic.
Brilliant point, aart, and one that I have pondered myself many times. I have even thought of switching gears completely and going into large animal medicine (even though that was totally not my passion, at all) for that very reason. (Just so I can still say I am a practicing vet, and really, who cares, aside from me? True answer: nobody.)
I am a complete anthropomorph, and so are probably 98% of people who get into the profession. But the mindset of people who get into the large animal side of veterinary medicine is COMPLETELY different. Less emotionally involved, and from what I have seen, more healthy and balanced. The production-animal mentality (vets and owners alike) is waaaaay different than the small animal mindset.
Here is a disgusting little story illustrating this very point. Not for the squeamish, so be warned...
When I was in vet school, I was required to do equine and food animal rotations, even though I was a small-animal-only person. When I was doing my food animal visit one day to the dairy barn, my instructor had us palpating cows. This involves sticking your hand and arm up a cow's butt. We went from cow to cow. When I asked my teacher where was the lube and the gloves to change into between each cow, he laughed at me, reached down into a pile of still-warm cow poop, rubbed it all over his arm glove, and used the poo as lube for the next cow. I was SO grossed out I almost puked.
His mentality about vetting, and emotional connection? Much different than this girl, who talks for her dogs in different voices, and whose chickens are more spoiled than most people's babies, probably.