• Equine Vet Shortage, Internships, and Field Mentorship with Dr. Chelsea Fishenfeld | Ready Vet Go
    Jan 17 2026

    In this engaging and eye-opening episode of ReadyVetGo, Dr. Dani Rabwin sits down with Dr. Chelsea Fishenfeld—an ambulatory equine veterinarian in California—to talk mentorship, emergency medicine in the field, and what it really takes to survive (and thrive) in modern equine practice.

    Chelsea shares what drew her to horses at age four, why she chose an intensive mentorship/internship after graduating from WesternU (Class of 2022), and how equine medicine is facing a sustainability crossroads—especially when vets are expected to do dentistry all day and colics all night.

    This conversation is packed with real-world perspective on internships, teamwork across large groups, building confidence in high-stakes scenarios, and the communication skills that can make or break client trust.

    📌 What You’ll Learn:

    • Why many equine vets benefit from doing an internship (especially for emergencies)
    • What’s broken in the equine emergency model—and what could fix it
    • How mentorship and collaboration keep practitioners (and horses) safer
    • How to teach clients in real time so they understand the value of care
    • A “mistake/complication” story that highlights why communication is everything
    • How to coach students out of freeze mode and into confidence
    • What grit really means in equine medicine (and why attrition is high)

    🎬 Timestamps:

    00:00 – Intro: Meet Dr. Chelsea Fishenfeld (equine ambulatory in CA)

    01:10 – “Horse vet since age 4”: barns, riding, tech life, and the long road to DVM

    03:05 – WesternU 2022 grad: why she chose an intensive mentorship/internship

    05:05 – Inside the equine hospital model: specialists at your fingertips

    07:10 – Equine emergency reality: why the current system isn’t sustainable

    10:05 – The fix: shifts, haul-in emergencies, and collaborative coverage

    12:05 – Finding mentors: choosing people, not “assigned” relationships

    14:10 – Teaching and leadership: students, pre-vets, and full-circle moments

    17:10 – Should you go equine? The honest talk: lifestyle, safety, grit, and burnout

    20:10 – Client education in real time: narrating colics, tubes, and “showing the value”

    23:10 – Mistakes/complications: when teeth fracture—and how communication saves trust

    26:10 – Where communication is learned: mentors, life experience, and repetition

    28:30 – Mentorship in action: letting students do the thing (and why it matters)

    31:20 – “Freeze mode” is real: building reps, confidence, and capability

    👇 QUESTION FOR YOU: What’s one skill you wish you got more reps on before you were alone in practice?

    Season 1 Ep 19

    ✅ If this helped, like, subscribe, and share with a vet student or new grad who needs it today.

    🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and all major platforms.

    📲 Follow: @readyvetgo_

    📧 Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #ReadyVetGo #VeterinaryMedicine #EquineVet #EquineMedicine #VetMentorship #VetInternship #NewGradVet #ClientCommunication #AmbulatoryVet #LargeAnimalVet

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    36 Min.
  • ReadyVetGo: New Grad Vet + Ultra Marathon Runner — Mentorship & Confidence with Dr. Jake Rastas | Ready Vet Go
    Jan 3 2026

    In this energizing and real episode of ReadyVetGo, Dr. Dani Rabwin sits down with Dr. Jake Rastas—a new grad veterinarian, rotating intern at the University of Georgia, and ultra marathon runner—for a conversation about mentorship, confidence, and mental resilience in early-career veterinary medicine.

    From Division I football to vet school to internship life, Jake shares how mentors shaped his path, how to stay competitive without becoming toxic, and why you don’t need confidence before doing something hard—confidence often comes after you do it. If you’re a vet student, new grad, or intern trying to build your skills while managing pressure, this one will hit home.

    📌 What You’ll Learn:

    • Mentorship that actually changes your career (and the “pay it forward” culture of vet med)
    • How to build confidence after the hard thing—not before
    • Ultra marathon mindset: “This is what hard feels like”
    • Healthy competition without rooting for others to fail
    • Time management during internship + intense training schedules
    • Learning procedures for the first time: readiness, reality, and resources

    🎬 Timestamps:

    00:00 – Intro: Dani + Jake (new grad, UGA rotating intern, ultra runner)

    01:30 – Jake’s path: D1 football → vet school → internship

    04:10 – Mentors who changed everything (and why “pay it forward” matters)

    07:05 – Competitive drive without becoming toxic

    10:20 – “This is what hard feels like”: ultra running as mental training

    13:40 – Confidence isn’t the prerequisite—action is

    16:05 – Internship time management + training while exhausted

    19:10 – First-time procedures: resources, prep, and staying safe

    22:30 – Handling pressure, feedback, and the learning curve

    25:40 – What Jake wants new grads to hear right now

    👇 QUESTION FOR YOU: What’s one hard thing you’re leaning into right now in vet school, internship, or practice?

    Season 1 Ep18

    ✅ If this helped, like, subscribe, and share with a vet student or new grad who needs it today.

    🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and all major platforms.

    📲 Follow: @readyvetgo_

    📧 Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #ReadyVetGo #VeterinaryMedicine #VetMentorship #NewGradVet #VetInternship #VetStudent #UltraMarathonRunner #Confidence #MentalResilience

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    40 Min.
  • ReadyVetGo S1E19: Vet Student Networking, Mentorship & Distributive Clinical Rotations with Noah Gershoni | Ready Vet Go
    Dec 20 2025

    In this inspiring and practical episode of ReadyVetGo, Dr. Dani Rabwin sits down with Noah Gershoni (he/him), a final-year veterinary student at the University of Arizona, to talk mentorship, networking with authenticity, and how to get the most out of clinical rotations—especially in a distributive model program.

    Noah shares his non-traditional path to vet school (community college prereqs, years working in ER), how meaningful connections opened doors like Venom Week, and why collaboration beats competition in veterinary medicine. They also dig into the realities of rotating through different clinics and states, the hidden challenge of housing logistics, and how to learn from every mentor and team—without coming off combative.

    📌 What You’ll Learn:

    • How to network without being transactional (and actually maintain connections)
    • Community college to vet school: confidence, resilience, and belonging
    • Why UA’s culture (no grades + group-based learning) builds collaboration
    • Distributive clinical year: real-world medicine, pros/cons, and logistics
    • Why general practice can do more than people think (and why it matters for access)
    • Mentorship on short rotations: how to ask questions well and respect time
    • Two must-use rotation tips: “keep the technicians happy” + find value in everything

    🎬 Timestamps:

    00:00 – Intro + pronouns: Noah (he/him) + Dani (she/her)

    01:44 – How they met: conference lunch line + service dog networking

    03:00 – ReadyVetGo networking night: “bring as many as you can” (20 students show up)

    04:39 – Networking that isn’t transactional: curiosity, real connection, follow-through

    06:35 – Non-traditional path: community college prereqs (no “traditional college” route)

    09:33 – Working in ER for 5 years: learning fast, growing responsibility

    10:42 – Falling for surgery: mixed animal + OR confidence

    11:35 – Why University of Arizona: Venom Week + meeting faculty through networking

    13:41 – Personal statement: vulnerability, first-gen story, resilience, family pride

    16:43 – UA culture: no GPAs/grades + group-based learning = collaboration over competition

    21:29 – Clinical year (distributive model): rotating clinics/states + real-world medicine

    22:18 – The tough part: housing/logistics + advocating for classmates

    25:23 – General practice “can do it”: accessibility, internal medicine in GP, specialization trend

    28:15 – Mentorship nuance: asking questions vs respecting time (the “dance”)

    30:07 – Evidence-based vs “old school”: how to ask “why” without being combative

    32:53 – Tip #1: keep technicians happy (donuts + teach-back + teamwork)

    34:23 – Tip #2: find value in everything (even “how not to do it”) + don’t take it personally

    👇 QUESTION FOR YOU: What’s one mentoring tip you wish you learned earlier in vet school or practice?

    Season 1 Ep 18

    ✅ If this helped, like, subscribe, and share with a vet student or new grad who needs it today.

    🎧 Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and all major platforms.

    📲 Follow: @readyvetgo_

    📧 Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #ReadyVetGo #VeterinaryMedicine #VetMentorship #VetStudent #ClinicalRotations #Networking #NewGradVet #GeneralPractice #VetSchool #DistributiveModel

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    36 Min.
  • The Culture Cure: Psychological Safety, Mentorship & New-Grad Success | Ready Vet Go
    Jan 10 2026

    Is practice culture your biggest career risk—or your superpower? Are “lazy new grads” a myth masking broken systems?

    Host Dr. Dani Rabwin is joined by Dr. G (Gershon Alaluf) for a candid, high-energy conversation on building psychologically safe teams, real mentorship, and simple habits that make clinics fun, resilient, and effective for early-career veterinarians.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why culture is the practice: daily behaviors beat policies every time
    • Psychological safety: how to create space to speak up, debrief, and learn fast
    • The fear → worry loop: stopping post-op rumination with structured debriefs
    • Money clarity: production, basic P&L, and fair compensation conversations
    • Mentorship that works: modeling mistakes, role clarity, and paid trainer roles
    • Corporate vs. private: incentives, signing-bonus traps, and fit checks
    • Soft skills that cost $0: communication, feedback, and “make it fun” rituals
    • GP-led CE + realistic job previews: preparing grads for real-world medicine

    Who this is for

    • Early-career veterinarians and interns
    • Veterinary students and VBMA leaders
    • Practice owners, medical directors, and managers
    • Corporate/regional leaders shaping new-grad programs
    • RVTs/tech leads building training tracks

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro — why culture determines your landing as a new grad

    03:12 “Culture is the practice”: behaviors, not binders

    07:38 Money matters: production, P&L, and transparent goals

    12:04 Psychological safety: speaking up without getting burned

    16:41 Fear vs. worry: debriefs that prevent 2 a.m. spirals

    21:05 Mentorship that sticks: modeling mistakes & paid trainer roles

    26:22 Corporate vs. private: incentives, fit, signing-bonus cautions

    31:48 The “lazy new grad” myth: expectations, reps, confidence

    36:30 Phone-a-specialist: consult culture and referral relationships

    41:07 Leadership styles: servant & transformational in the clinic

    45:20 Action playbook: day-one moves to lift culture (anyone can do)

    Resources mentioned

    • Culture & debrief checklists (psychological safety prompts)
    • New-grad mentorship outline (skills, soft skills, debrief cadence)
    • GP-led CE initiatives + realistic job preview resources

    Ready Vet Go — because mentorship matters, and vets shouldn’t have to go it alone.

    Follow: @readyvetgo_

    Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #practiceculture #mentorship #psychologicalsafety #vetmed #ReadyVetGo

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    1 Std. und 2 Min.
  • Bring Back the Fun: Leadership, Grit & Real-World Mentorship | Ready Vet Go
    Dec 27 2025

    Are we training vets to lead—or to chase grades? How do we build grit without burning out?

    Host Dr. Dani Rabwin sits down with Dr. Peter Weinstein for an energizing deep dive into leadership, resilience, and bringing the fun back to vet med—without skipping the hard stuff. Perfect for new grads, students, and anyone building healthy, high-trust hospital cultures.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • The origin story of a “leadership guru”: lifelong follower → practice owner → MBA → mentor
    • Why fear kills growth—and practical ways to reframe risk while staying safe/ethical
    • Grit vs. burnout: modeling mistakes, normalizing failure, and building psychological safety
    • Pass/Fail & PBL: how assessment models shape collaboration, confidence, and readiness
    • Communication > memorization: how to find answers fast and build client trust
    • Why 3+ DVM teams accelerate learning and reduce stress
    • Servant leadership: bottom-up culture, listening first, empowering teams
    • “Fun injectors” that boost morale without lowering clinical standards

    Who this is for

    • Early-career veterinarians & interns
    • Veterinary students (any year, any track)
    • Mentors, medical directors, practice owners
    • Hospital managers & team leads building resilient cultures
    • Faculty/curriculum designers exploring PBL & pass/fail

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro — leadership, grit & bringing the fun back

    03:14 Follower → leader: ownership, MBA, mindset shifts

    08:52 Fear vs. growth: safe steps to try procedures and learn in public

    13:40 Modeling mistakes: the mentorship exercise that unlocks grit

    18:05 Pass/Fail & PBL: teamwork over perfectionism

    23:47 Communication as a clinical skill: trust, clarity, outcomes

    28:21 Multi-doctor advantage: daily consults, faster learning, less stress

    33:09 Culture design: servant leadership + bottom-up ideas

    38:12 Make it fun: low-lift rituals that raise morale

    42:30 Action list for new grads: day-one leadership moves

    Resources mentioned

    • Leadership onboarding programs at vet schools
    • Organized vet medicine pathways: local VMA, CVMA/SAVMA, VetPartners
    • Ready Vet Go mentorship packs, small-group role-play & skills training

    Ready Vet Go — because mentorship matters, and vets shouldn’t have to go it alone.

    Follow: @readyvetgo_

    Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #leadership #grit #communication #vetmed #ReadyVetGo

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    53 Min.
  • RVT Retention & Mentorship That Works (Alt-Route Paths + VTS Tracks) | Ready Vet Go
    Dec 13 2025

    How do we keep great technicians in vet med—and build mentorship that actually lasts? What can veterinarians learn from RVTs about communication, culture, and training?

    Host Dr. Dani Rabwin sits down with Phil Snow, RVT—military veteran turned RVT, educator, and co-founder of an alternate-route vet tech school—for a candid conversation about career pathways, mentorship, VTS specialization, the mid-level debate, and avoiding (and owning) mistakes.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Military → medicine: leadership lessons and entering vet med via the kennel
    • Tech → teacher → school founder: building an alternate-route RVT program in SoCal
    • Vet–tech partnership: case discussions, med checks, and speaking up effectively
    • Mentorship models that work: compensation, growth, and the “training RVT” role
    • Career ladders beyond the clinic: VTS, insurance, reps, teaching, research, public sector
    • Burnout reality (often 7–10 years) and practical retention strategies
    • Alternate-route vs AVMA programs: who each path serves and why
    • Mid-level practitioner debate: opportunities, risks, and accountability
    • Owning mistakes: the “wrong-leg shave” story and building better safeguards

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro — Phil Snow, RVT: why techs matter

    3:18 Kennel → assistant → mentors paying for school

    07:42 - RVT to educator: guest lectures to full-time teaching

    11:05 - Building an alternate-route tech school (SoCal campuses)

    15:10 - Military lessons: discipline, responsibility, leadership

    18:44 - Vet–tech communication: raising concerns without conflict

    23:02 - Mentorship models: training techs, compensation, “training RVT” role

    27:36 - Career ladders: VTS, insurance, rep roles, teaching, public sector

    32:15 - Alternate-route vs AVMA degrees: who each serves, VTNE destination

    36:48 - Mid-level practitioner debate: promise, pitfalls, accountability

    41:30 - Owning mistakes: wrong-leg prep + better checklists

    45:05 - What’s next: accreditation goals, keeping talent in vet med

    Resources mentioned

    • OC Veterinary Assistant School (alternate-route RVT training)
    • California Registered Veterinary Technicians Association (advocacy & policy)
    • VTS pathways (ECC, Anesthesia, Dentistry, and more)

    Ready Vet Go — because mentorship matters, and vets shouldn’t have to go it alone.

    Follow: @readyvetgo_

    Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #readyvetgo #RVT #veterinarymentorship #vetmed #veterinarypodcast

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    48 Min.
  • New-Grad ER Survival Kit: Mentorship, Scripts, and Open-ER Trust | Ready Vet Go
    Dec 6 2025

    How do you build real confidence when your first job is solo ER overnights? Can open, transparent care and shared decision-making transform client trust?

    Host Dr. Dani Rabwin is joined by Dr. Morgan Stoddard, DVM (UIUC ’20) for a fast, practical deep dive into ER mentorship, communication that lowers stress, and leadership that leads with love.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why structured ER mentorship matters—especially on solo overnights
    • Client language that lowers the load: “I’m the recommender; you’re the decider”
    • Trust-builders you can use immediately (narrate-the-exam, in-room X-rays/laptop, let clients listen)
    • How to bring “open ER” transparency to any clinic—no remodel required
    • Mistakes & recoveries: dystocia hemorrhage stabilization + when to phone a mentor
    • Owning outcomes: communicating clearly after a “negative explore” following prior R&A
    • Feedback that helps: lead with love, tailor delivery, and use a “wins box”
    • Confidence scripts for “You look so young!” and curbside → face-to-face transitions
    • Burnout to fit: when to pivot and how to find the right mentorship structure

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – Intro: Dr. Morgan Stoddard—ER path, UIUC ’20, why confidence is built (not born)

    03:02 – First job reality: solo overnights during curbside and the hidden upsides

    03:02 - Solo overnights during curbside: reality + hidden upsides

    07:18 -Scripts that save you: recommender/decider + looking things up gracefully

    11:06 - Shared decisions, not sales: reducing moral weight

    15:20 - Open ER transparency: narrate-the-exam, X-rays in-room, stethoscope listening

    20:44 - Case lessons: dystocia hemorrhage & phone-a-mentor

    26:03 - “Negative explore” after prior R&A: owning outcomes + next steps

    31:12 - Leading with love: feedback, safety, and the wins box

    36:25 - Curbside → face-to-face: age comments + clinical presence 41:10

    Resources mentioned

    • Sample “recommender/decider” scripts (ER & GP)
    • Narrate-the-exam + transparency checklist
    • Tough-case debrief template (+ wins box idea)

    Ready Vet Go — because mentorship matters, and vets shouldn’t have to go it alone.

    Follow: @readyvetgo_

    Contact: info@pacificlensstudios.com

    #ERveterinary #mentorship #communication #vetmed #ReadyVetGo

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    1 Std.
  • Are We Choosing the Wrong Vets? Dr. G Exposes Vet School Admissions, Burnout & EQ Gaps
    Sep 19 2025

    This one’s a game-changer. In Part 2 of his Ready Vet Go interview, Dr. Gersh Alaluf (Dr. G) takes a hard look at who we’re accepting into veterinary school — and what that means for the future of our profession.

    🔥 Are we selecting for IQ over EQ? 🔥 Are perfectionists more prone to burnout in vet med?

    🔥 Are schools doing enough to prepare students emotionally for real-world practice?

    Joined by host Dr. Dani Rabwin, Dr. G unpacks how admissions criteria, mentorship gaps, and emotional blind spots are fueling stress, imposter syndrome, and attrition among new grads. He shares real stories of mentorship done right, burnout avoided, and moments that almost broke him — and why communication, empathy, and community are the true skills that will save the profession.

    🧠 In This Episode:

    • The theory that sparked Dr. G’s doctoral research: Attraction–Selection–Attrition (ASA)
    • Why Ready Vet Go bridges the gap between what vet school teaches and what vet med requires
    • Real-life board complaint stories — and how emotional intelligence helps prevent them
    • How mentors can pick up the phone for their mentees in moments of crisis
    • What to say when things go wrong (and how to say “I’m sorry” without accepting blame)
    • The 3-part burnout triad — and how to break it
    • Condolence card wins, thank-you boxes, and how to hold on to why you started this journey

    Whether you’re a vet student, new grad, mentor, or practice leader, this conversation is a roadmap to sustainability, self-worth, and staying power in veterinary medicine.

    ep. 10

    #ReadyVetGo #VetAdmissions #VeterinaryBurnout #EmotionalIntelligence #VetMentorship #VetSchool #VeterinaryEducation #EarlyCareerVet #MentorshipMatters #EQinVetMed #VeterinaryPodcast #VetMentalHealth #LeadershipInVetMed

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    42 Min.