Sunday, August 18, 2013

Why I Quit Animal Rescue


I am 6 months into my animal rescue sabbatical. I've always been drawn to the world of animals, and I know that the animal rescue world needs me. But I can not on good conscious ever return, at least not anytime soon. Not until I see that world remember its humanity. Because truly, before we can assist another species in achieving the dignity they deserve, we must first learn to treat each other with compassion and kindness. Right now, what I see falls glaringly short. It's a shame, because the innocent suffer as a result of our human selfishness. Not just the dogs, the cats, or whatever species you choose to alleviate suffering. But humans are suffering, whether emotionally or physically. And the animal rescue community couldn't care less.

Four years ago, to the day in fact -- entirely coincidental that I should be up in the middle of the night contemplating this blog post on the very anniversary of my former rescue's incorporation -- I began a passionate journey to do something that I saw a desperate need for. That need was a strong group of people who cared about pit bull-type dogs. After the support behind mine and my partner's "independent" rescue of our dog, Spiderman, I saw a group of people who only needed a name. We could do so much good in the world, or in North Carolina at the very least, if we all worked toward the same goal. The idea, at first, was not even mine. As a joke, our friends began to press, "What will be the name of your rescue?" This very question kept me up night after night, ringing in my head. Pit bull rescue had stopped being a choice, and instead, had become a calling. There was hardly anyone that wasn't willing to stand behind our endeavors. There were so many dogs to be saved.

The first few months were almost too easy and too successful. We recruited foster home after foster home, and after careful screening, placed dog after dog into seemingly amazing homes. This was my life's work, I thought. I never had felt so complete, so needed, so appreciated, and so much a part of the greater good.

I'm not sure the exact moment it began to crumble, or more accurately, when I began to crumble. I know it wasn't really a defining moment, but instead a compounding of disappointment and heartache that drove out every ounce of passion I had in me. I woke up in the morning, and almost physically instead of metaphorically, I didn't recognize myself. I just wanted to sleep, and never wake up. I wanted to cry until my eyes were dry. I was always hungry, but nothing had taste, and nothing sounded good. I didn't want to get dressed, or see people, or, quite frankly, try at at anything. I know for at least two years of my life I didn't cook a single meal. It was a costly habit that I couldn't break b/c I just couldn't garner the motivation to make any effort to take care of myself. I showered and bathed knowing it was a societal expectation and I really didn't want to be the smelly pit bull rescue lady. I after all, had some dignity.

I always knew the dogs needed me, but the phrase "going through the motions" settled into my psyche like a headache I couldn't rid myself of. I packed up the monthly heartworm and flea & tick medications; not really remembering why I once found this monotonous task so empowering. I drug myself to another shelter for another temperament test and became fleetingly excited as I saved another dog's life, but the high was so short lived, I was barely back in the confines of my own home before I was ready to crawl into my cave and shut out the world.

By January of this year, I felt so miserable on a day-to-day basis, that I convinced myself that if I just quit my job and delved into putting all of myself into the rescue, as a full-time paid non-profit employee, I could help a lot more animals. It was totally irrational and ill-advised; but consider I was suffering from severe depression, and my brain was fried from 3 1/2 years of over-caring. The freedom of being my own boss picked up my spirits for a few days or so, but that too, was short-lived. The drawback of not only suffering from depression but bipolar disorder as well, is that we often make hasty decisions in manic moments, only later to come crashing down when the results don't meet our expectations. At this time I was on so many medications for anxiety, depression, and insomnia, that my bipolar tendencies did not always come to light. However muted, there they were, the highs and lows; the vicious cycle that as an animal rescuer, I was apt never to recover from. I was 29 years old and felt 50. My hair had almost completely washed out to gray from the roots to halfway back on the crown of my head. My body ached, I was always tired. I wasn't living anymore. I was killing myself.


Meanwhile, it was a curious thing of the relationships that were around me. Once I had ran out of fingers and toes, I stopped counting all the "friends" who had hurt me when my executive decisions didn't match their vision. People didn't simply turn away, or go quietly into other endeavors. They left kicking and screaming and dragging my name in the dirt. Their backlash consistently hurt the reputation of the rescue my partner and I had built, and over time it became more and more difficult to find donors and foster homes because of other people's claims it "should be about the dogs"-- a phrase, I by, the way, hate with a passion. The very people that toss this phrase around as an antidote to explain their cruel behavior against another human being, are the very ones who have made it nearly impossible to continue rescuing. There is no one left to take in returned dogs, let alone bring in new ones, when other rescuers have driven all the foster homes and financial resources away with rumors and scandals.

Maybe I could have persevered if these were simple disagreements; to agree to disagree, if you will. Sure, it was dizzying, to be at one moment giving a dog "too many chances"; but in the next breath "giving up too easily", on for example, a dog with a bite history. But it wasn't even about the "business" of rescue anymore. I was being attacked personally. My very character was called into question. I have tried to kick out the residents renting free space in my head, so I have forgot a few of the choice adjectives that have described me, but I can't help but remember a few. I was described as a "dictator posing as a democracy"; my mental illness was "a convenient excuse"; and during my short few months being unemployed Oct 2011 - February 2012 (when the spay/neuter clinic I worked for was closed) I was told to "quit being lazy and just get a job". Long scathing emails, texts, and Facebook messages on what a horrible human being I am, were more commonplace on a week-to-week basis, than not. And for someone suffering from severe depression, this drove me further into the abyss of hopelessness.

I wasn't the only one suffering. Though not my place to air other people's private struggles, I will say briefly that if I was suffering from severe depression, my partner was suffering from incapacitating depression, and honestly, still is. Where I was one to want to get up and achieve something from time to time, he was apt to be too tired and too much in pain to do the things that needed done. And when I say achieve something, I mean, perhaps, just folding the laundry, or going to the store (not that I really was wanting to leave the house much in those days). I had no one around me that offered any kind of hope for the future. I was aging rapidly, and my partner, who was already much older than me, had aged 30 years in just 3. I could no longer love someone who didn't love himself. I honestly, I didn't love myself very much either. With my passion completely dried up, I was a struggling shell of an animal rescuer at best. After the past few years of revolving door foster homes and severed business ties, the rescue itself wasn't fairing much better. After all, other people had all along thought they could do it better. After being part of placing over 250 dogs in 3 years, I was ready to make my exit. Or, as many see it, The Great Escape. The dog intake was at a minimum, and there were people in place who loved these dogs. I couldn't keep "going through the motions" just because the dogs needed me anymore. I needed me, and I had lost that.


When I let my colleagues know of my intentions, I had an eerie feeling that I could not be swept under the rug fast enough. Without my consent, people started trying to push my partner out of his rightful position as the surviving director. Depressed or not, the rescue had been his vision as it was mine. It was his livelihood, and to take the rescue from him would be to take everything he had. He had known every dog that had passed through the metaphorical doors of the rescue, and I wanted him to be the soul decision maker for their futures, shall they ever come back to the rescue again. And most of all, he told me that is what he wanted. I love him, and I love what we had built, and every bone in my body was telling me that he was the rightful predecessor to my Presidency. I did what I thought was best at the time.

Unfortunately, when the revolving doors turned again in opposition, it cost the rescue nearly everything. Rumors and half-truths swirled, and after 6 months my absence, there was no one left to sustain the dogs. Those that remained placed as many as they could, but when dogs were returned as the rescue was closing, where were they to put them? I have been snidely asked what my plan was for any returning dogs, when there was no longer a rescue for them to turn to. The answer is simple; I never fathomed that the rescue would one day not exist, not for a moment. I thought I had found my calling. The unwavering support at the beginning was misleading, and I thought we could only build onto our support system. Why would anyone want to quit supporting a rescue that saves lives? These are questions I never even asked, because they seemed ridiculous. I was passionately optimistic. And that's what made our rescue successful. The more you would tell me that I couldn't do something, the more I would try to prove you wrong. When that optimism was crushed, the rescue had run its course. I was no longer doing right by the dogs.


Fleeing to Florida was not a convenient escape, but it was the path I was meant to take. That's why it was carved out so perfectly. My best friend of many years had relocated here 3 years before, and I missed him more than I cared to admit. And breaking away from a rescue was a bit like leaving the mafia; its the kind of thing that follows you. Many late nights of baring my soul to the one person that truly cared about me and not their own agenda, developed into much more than a friendship. Suddenly, in one fell swoop, it became clear what I had to do. There was only one person that could change my life, and that was ME. I needed sunshine, I needed a career change, I needed love, I needed my passion back. My heart led me to pit bull rescue, and in February 2013, my path had changed, and my heart led me to Florida. Never had the puzzle pieces of life fit so perfectly together. I was smiling, I was happy, and I was being exactly who I wanted to be. As per my passionate nature, I fell head-over-heels in love before I even set foot on Florida soil, and yes, just 4 months later, Michael Tubbs and I were married. We were even expecting a baby! Sadly, a week after the big announcement, we lost the baby due to miscarriage. It's not the kind of thing we shared publicly, and because it wasn't publicized, there were quite a few people interested in my surprise pregnancy who thought they would use it as a cruel jab to hurt me. I received a text from a rescue volunteer who had left the rescue nearly 2 years ago and she said something to the effect of "Congratulations on your baby ... dogs are dying because of you ... I don't know how you sleep at night." Ouch. It was at that moment I once again saw perfect clarity of why I left animal rescue.

This brings me full circle to why I started this blog, and that is to emphasize the importance of human compassion. It's our human interactions that drive us and empower us, and if you are consistently trying to hurt others, there will be no one left to achieve great things. Animal rescue or not, our actions toward others say a lot about ourselves. Don't point the finger and seek to hurt those that are part of the solution, because soon, they may no longer be, and you will have no one to blame but the person staring back at you in the mirror. Be a reflection of exactly what you wish to see in the world. Today, I am finally doing just that.



19 comments:

  1. Amanda,

    I never knew of all the pain and suffering you were facing on top of the drama that goes along with managing a group of people & a rescue organization... I admire you even more now than I did when I was a foster home for you.
    Please know that dogs are NOT dying because of you, they are safe and in loving arms. Sadie & Sawyer are laying in bed with me right now; I could not ask for better life companions. Mona is in a fantastic home and loved beyond belief- she must be on her fourth Mr Bill toy by now. These are just some of the many dogs you helped find love.
    You have captured the major issue society is faced with in your eloquent words...while there are many people who in truth are not good but selfish, bitter, jealous, or all of the above, I believe there are just as many truly good souls out there. You may have been unlucky in being surrounded in the end by "not so good" folks, but don't ever believe that's how the world is. In your new found happiness and enlightenment you will begin to develop your own "senses" about people that will begin to help you steer away from the bad ones.

    I "took a sabbatical" from fostering for reasons I never told you- I have a spouse who is has no understanding or patience; this along with severe financial issues resulted in constant bickering to the point it wasn't a healthy environment for me to foster dogs. I am figuring out my own situation, and if it wasn't for Sadie and Sawyer I might be in the same mental state you found yourself in. I am happy that I got to be a part of what you were doing.

    Please don't ever let the behavior of others keep you away from helping animals. That is part of you, there are so many ways to help besides running a rescue. I know you will find your area of comfort. Even though we never met in person I love you. Thank you for writing your heart.

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  2. What a heart breaking journey, I've taken that same tour.

    Thank you for posting what needs to be said - and you said it SO well.

    Wendy

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  3. Wow Amanda I had no idea! I am very happy to see though that you had the courage to make the changes needed in your life to be in a happy place. I am sorry for your loss...the whole lot of them and I am very glad to see you are happy.

    A very well posted blog post, painfully true. You will forever have a shoulder should you need one. - Xavi Gb

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  4. I am very sorry for your struggles. However I am glad you have seen the light and made a change for you. Always you must help yourself because you can help anything. I wish I was more surprised by the actions of other "rescuers" but I, myself, was attacked by a small group in Ft. Laud and the Great Bahamas.

    This is an excellent blog and it is amazing how some rescue people act nicer and more compassionate to their animals then humans. Their loss.

    You saved lives of animals and now it time for you to take care of yourself.

    Agreed with Wendy above and yes this should be read by everyone in rescue.

    I am glad you found peace, are positive, healing and most importantly happy and healthy. God Bless you and everything you have done and do.

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  5. Your future and your happiness is in the very thing you do so well, caring and being you. I'm so proud of you even as a child there was that always present selfless nature you were born with....loving beyond yourself. I admire you. Even as my child I have to strive to reach the level of your inner quality of giving. Please know I will die a happy dad because you exist in my life.

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  6. First, I'm sorry for your loss. Second, I'm proud of you for rescuing yourself. I know of a couple of animal rescuers who have killed themselves recently. Those of us who suffer from depression usually share a special bond with animals, often putting their needs ahead of our own. It takes a lot of courage to break that cycle. Now I need to rescue myself. Enjoy your new life!

    Alden

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  7. Sorry to hear about your struggles. Although loosing a person like yourself from the NC pit bull rescue community is a great loss, you planted a seed in many other rescues. Rescues that wouldn't exist without the struggles and sacrifice that you endured. Take care of yourself. Be happy knowing that you changed the lives of hundreds of pit bulls and your legacy lives on in the harts of the rescuers you touched.

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  8. Hello, I don't know you, or the rescue you sustained for 3 years, but I do know that people who personally attack others who have dedicated themselves to service are seriously missing some brain cells. And the former volunteer who said such an incredibly cruel thing to you has an unpaid bill from Karma. Sometimes the path we have in this life will take some puzzling turns, but your path apparently took you to a brighter future with LOVE. The lessons you learned with your first rescue will undoubtedly come into play in the future. Don't count anything out... take care of yourself and know that there are many people out here thinking of you with kindness and gratitude, and the people thinking other things just don't count. <3

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    Replies
    1. Courts are awarding large payments for the carnage Pits inflict on victims. last one was 2.2 million... can your rescues afford that? It's time for all Pit owners to wake up from the sleep they've been led into a realize they have the blood of children and seniors on their hands... but then they are primarily sociopaths that think that their dog can do what it wants... it was bred to attack and kill and they can just say ... but he was so sweet... no aggression... right up to the moment they attack and maul. Maybe not today... but tomorrow? next week? next year... last year four Pit rescuers were killed by their own Pits... raised from puppy hood they weren't abused.. don't think that those killed by their own Pits raised them to kill them or their children... it IS the breed.


      Pit bulls killed eighteen people so far this year. Twelveof the seventeen dead are children. Remembering and mourning them again here:

      Child fatalities by pit bull type dog:
      Christian Gormanous - 4 yrs old.
      Isaiah Aguilar - 2 yrs old.
      Ryan Maxwell - 7 yrs old.
      Dax Borchardt - 14 mos old.
      Monica Laminack - 21 mos old.
      Tyler Jett - 7 yrs old.
      Jordyn Arndt - 4 yrs old.
      Beau Rutlidge - 2 yrs old.
      Ayden Evans- 5 yrs old.
      Nephi Selu – 6 yrs old.
      Arianna Jolee Nerrbach – 5 yrs old.
      Deeon Higgins - 2years old

      Adult fatalities by pit bull type:
      Betty Todd - 65 yrs old.
      Elsie Grace - 91 yrs old.
      Claudia Gallardo - 38 yrs old.
      Pamela Devitt - 63 yrs old.
      Carlton Freeman - 80 yrs old.
      James Hardin - 62 yrs old

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  9. Did you ever worry about the pits you placed who would wind up attacking their family members, neighbors, friends of the adopting family? Did it ever bother you to worry that other dogs would be attacked and killed by the Pits you placed? Did you ever bother to really learn the breeding and reasons for the Pit's existence.... to fight... to attack without warning or provocation and to not give up until the target or the Pit is dead?

    Did you ever consider all the other dogs who died because people fell for the 'edgy' risky dog in the personification of the Pit Bull.... they died because they didn't get a loving home... a home you placed a killer dog into instead of a lower risk dog? you need to do some reading before acting.


    Here is a collection of 14 relevant documents I have collected on studies, Interviews and research regarding Pitbulls.

    Mortality, Mauling, and Maiming by Vicious Dogs 2011 - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSba3p4NW5CT09ZX0E/edit?usp=sharing

    Breeds of dogs involved in fatal human attacks in the United States between 1979 and 1998 - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbU1JHWGZPWHZ3a0E/edit?usp=sharing

    Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada September 1982 to May 25, 2013 - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbenlWVkQwY2kwbDA/edit?usp=sharing

    Interview with Gary Wilkes from Article from Off-Lead & Animal Behavior Spring 2010 - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbdzhIVTdwUVFkUFk/edit?usp=sharing

    Aggressive Behavior in Adopted Dogs (Canis Familiaris) that Passed a Temperament Test - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbNnpieXl4Qmotd1E/edit?usp=sharing

    Dogmen: The Rationalization of Deviance - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbYkdBejJKMzNqcjA/edit?usp=sharing

    Ownership of High-Risk (“Vicious”) Dogs as a Marker for Deviant Behaviors - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbc3NwT0ttcHdlbEk/edit?usp=sharing

    Vicious Dogs: The Antisocial Behaviors and Psychological Characteristics of Owners - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbLUxaS2ttRFpDZlU/edit?usp=sharing

    Dogs Decoded Transcript - PBS Airdate: November 9, 2010 - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbMV9QVDRmLWdaa00/edit?usp=sharing


    Dog Fighting Detailed Discussion By Hanna Gibson Animal Legal and Historical Center Publish Date: 2005 Place of Publication: Michigan State University College of Law - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbTm1IRTVsWUtWRjA/edit?usp=sharing

    The following quotes come from a collection of articles compiled in The Complete Gamedog- A Guide to Breeding and Raising the American Pit Bull Terrier by Ed and Chris Faron. - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbN3FHdlZaMklJaUE/edit?usp=sharing

    Plastic surgeons view & why Pit Bull attacks are so severe - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbMUR0YzZvbHFnNWc/edit?usp=sharing

    ARE "PIT BULLS" DIFFERENT? AN ANALYSIS OF THE PIT BULL TERRIER CONTROVERSY - https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_TQhn0TrPSbTTZLZ19FdGltNDA/edit?usp=sharing

    Psychological Characteristics Owners of High Risk for Aggression Dog Breeds | Psychology Today
    http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/canine-corner/200903/psychological-characteristics-owners-high-risk-aggression-dog-breeds

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    Replies
    1. JoAnna why don't you go back to dogsbite.com or wherever you came from. Your misinformation doesn't belong here.

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    2. Joanna - You are exactly the type of person that Amanda spoke about in this blog. You are rude, mean and hurtful! How sad that you thought this blog was a place for your crazy rantings. Didn't your mother ever teach you that if you have nothing nice to say, don't say anything at all?

      Amanda - I am so sorry for everything you have gone through and then some rude person has to go and post a comment like this. God Bless You on the next chapter in your life.

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    3. I cannot believe that you think this in an appropriate place for your comments. How many people kill each other every day? Should we just round up the entire human race for euthanization because they cause death? Your "collection of documents" is just some shit you dug up on Google. Please find something better to do with your time than blame a breed that you know nothing about.

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  10. TO JOANNA;;I am not a pit bull person--by that I just mean I haven't been owned by a pittie--I grew up with labs and irish wolfhounds, still have one now. I haven't had any pit bulls myself--but I know MANY--and not one of them is a bad dog. not one of them has bitten ANYONE. OR attacked ANYONE. All the Vicktory dogs have new homes (except one)--the oldest dog, also rehomed successfully--unfortunately passed away recently. There is nothing wrong with Pit Bulls as a breed. What the dog is like--how he or she is raised--is the important thing--as it's what makes the dog. I have known more vicious dogs--two Chihuahuas and a beagle (which is the only dog I've ever been bitten by--I have nothing against either breed because I've known great dogs from both)--the owners of these dogs were not decent people, and therefore didn't train their dogs to have manners or behave themselves. DOGS ARE A REFLECTION OF THEIR PEOPLE. If a dog is bad or mean--you can bet the person is too. There are at least 4 awesome pitties on facebook that I check in with daily(one was raped by a HUMAN); there are many (TOO MANY) great pit or pit mixes going through the NYC 'shelter' system--many get killed--but guess what--many more have been saved. Even from NYC shelters, and elsewhere. I've seen you post these things before. I know bad things have happened because of pits--but saying all pits are bad is misrepresenting the breed as a whole...it's like saying because a person that has a particular ethnic backround stole from you--that all people of the same ethnic backround are bad. That's prejudice...and that is wrong. You haven't said if you've had a bad experience yourself...if you have--if this is what drives you--I'm sorry. If there is a person at the end of the leash (whether or not the dog is actually on it)--he or she is the one to blame--not the dog. ANY dog can bite or cause trouble...those things aren't limited to breed.

    I also agree with the two ladies that posted above me. Why would this lady--who has been through so much because she loves these animals--go through what she has gone through if the breed was so terrible? This kind of 'thinking'--what you've posted--is also getting innocent animals seized from the people that love them and killed---even if they've never done anything to anyone! Is that okay with you, really? Because it could be YOUR breed next.

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  11. Joanna does seem full of distrust and dislike of the Pit breed, but until all the Pits everywhere have hurt someone or even threatened to hurt someone, her argument has absolutely no validity. Preferring a smaller breed of dog doesn't constitute safety. I prefer the love aspect of this blog, not the attack that Joanna prefers.

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  12. THANKYOU THANKYOU THANKYOU. I have been running a cat rescue now for 7 years and my life is made hell ish every day by people letting me down, breaking promises, outright lying, backstabbing, cruelty and ebung rude or mean in ways my usually strong heart and head cannot get around. I am also being investigated for MS ...After being sick for 9 years. I've had upwards of 21 cats in house at anyone time and it kills me every time I say no. I've said a few times ill quit but walking away is terrifying. I wasn't a happier soul before the world of rescue without a doubt and.most of that was down to not knowing about the level of human cruelty. there is. I'm made of tough stuff but I can't see a broken animal.soul.and turn my back it just kills me. Although I really really need to. I can do ate and maybe foster for others later but I have to walk away now and im so.grateful to find this. Thankyou you were incredibly brave to not just start your rescue but for having the courage to change your life. ... and for posting this. Thankyou.

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  13. THANKYOU THANKYOU THANKYOU. I have been running a cat rescue now for 7 years and my life is made hell ish every day by people letting me down, breaking promises, outright lying, backstabbing, cruelty and ebung rude or mean in ways my usually strong heart and head cannot get around. I am also being investigated for MS ...After being sick for 9 years. I've had upwards of 21 cats in house at anyone time and it kills me every time I say no. I've said a few times ill quit but walking away is terrifying. I wasn't a happier soul before the world of rescue without a doubt and.most of that was down to not knowing about the level of human cruelty. there is. I'm made of tough stuff but I can't see a broken animal.soul.and turn my back it just kills me. Although I really really need to. I can do ate and maybe foster for others later but I have to walk away now and im so.grateful to find this. Thankyou you were incredibly brave to not just start your rescue but for having the courage to change your life. ... and for posting this. Thankyou.

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  14. Thank you Amanda for opening up and writting this down and I'm so sorry for what you went trough. I have left animal rescue myself a few years ago for very similar reasons. It wasn't the animals, the hard work of finding homes or even the vet bills what killed my soul and pushed me into depression, but people, fellow rescuers did. For me animal rescue feels like a maffia, once you are in it is close to impossible to ever get out. If you try you will have to face threats, endless judgement, emotional blackmail, shaming and blaming on top of already feeling guilty for not being able to help more animals. No one cares if you as a humanbeing lost your job, gotten ill or anything... sadly there is very rarely any compassion for people amoung rescuers.

    I always been a person who instead of blindly following others would rather stop, evaluate and think and than make a decision. I always believed happy volunteers are the ones who can help on the long run the most. If we overwhelme or emotional blackmail people to do more than what they happily feel they can, we will loose them. They will either burn out or run away. I often stood up against cyber bullying at internet cat adoption and rescue forums as it always crunched my soul seeing how cruel people can be and how pointless such an act is. Yes, rescuing is hard but it won't get any easier if rescuers start openly shaming people with less "rescue knowledge". Or for example by publicly shaming people when they ask if they can adopt a certain breed of pet will not guilt trip them into adopt a less popular breed or a mixed breed, it will just drive them away. It's like "adopt don't shop ( but you better adopt any cat or dog we want to give you or the neediest out of all, otherwise we just gonna think you are a discriminative cat/dog hatting monster). Same goes for shaming rescuers who run a rescue for a certain breed of cats or dogs only. I have a friend who does such, and the amount of time she been asked questions like "why do you hate other dogs" is just crazy... She doesn't hate any dogs, she just has the passion for a certain breed and she started running a rescue for these dogs and its great! Its a positive thing! Why people have to put others who are trying so hard to make a positive change in this world down? Shaming people will only do harm...
    Once I was even told that "I can only be on the side of people or cats but not both".
    I still rescue very rarely, maybe once a year if I personally by chance come across a very needy animal. I won't walk away but I try to make sure to rehome these animals somehow without having to enter rescue and adoption sites and get into the system again. I can't emotionally deal with that. I wish people sometimes could stop and just look into the mirror and try to see that while they are doing the amazing job of saving animal lives, life is not just about that, and I wish they could for a second see who they actually became and how many people or even animals they hurt around themselves.

    I do not live in the States so the reality of animal rescue might be different where I live to compare to how it is in the US but I feel the essence of it is very similar.

    All the best Amanda in your life and stay happy, healthy and balanced and do what your heart tells you, don't listen to people who just try to put you down! Just the simple energy of happy people can make everyone around them feeling better. If we are feeling miserable ourselves we can't do much good in this world.

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