Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you tell them?
That not everything in life is about money.
That they should do what they love in life.
By your logic there are many jobs that should be avoided and we should all be finance bros or big firm lawyers who work a zillion hours per week.
And if you are the latter, be prepared to pay your vet. A lot.
Sadly, you are paying your vet a lot and it isn’t going to the vet, It’s going to private equity. The older vets who were retiring did extremely well as PE outbid the next in line vet who would have taken on the practice. There really isn’t a pathway anymore for younger vets. They’ll be slaves to
PE until the practice is bled dry, bought and sold again by PE or bankrupted and they’ll be looking for a new vet job.
Anonymous wrote:It really doesn’t make financial sense. All the tofurkey and soy cheese is way more expensive.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not seeing how this makes much financial sense. The starting salary for newly graduated vets can be as low as 80-100k, median salary is 110-130k, and 90th percentile salary is 200k. Seems super hard to justify the high cost of vet school and debt to make this much. What do you tell your teen?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you tell them?
That not everything in life is about money.
That they should do what they love in life.
By your logic there are many jobs that should be avoided and we should all be finance bros or big firm lawyers who work a zillion hours per week.
And if you are the latter, be prepared to pay your vet. A lot.
Anonymous wrote:What do you tell them?
That not everything in life is about money.
That they should do what they love in life.
By your logic there are many jobs that should be avoided and we should all be finance bros or big firm lawyers who work a zillion hours per week.