You will definitely be working with many people. I have never heard of a vet working by themselves unless they live in a small town where veterinary technicians, receptionists, etc. are not necessarily needed.
Do you mean does it require the skill to work with people or work alone? If so, yes.
i would think not because you are already working and have cerrent people to treat so i would think not and thats just my opinion
Being a doctor is a profession. Indeed being a hospital doctor rather than a GP is a profession. However working FOR a particular hospital is employment. EDIT: Having a job other than working for yourself is employment, what you do in that job, including working for yourself is a profession.
not being yourself and not being mindless come on people be mindless be yourself
By being yourself, and talking to people
Politeness is the key to having successful working relationships. Willing to learn and being enthusiastic are other factors to maintain and show that you have the capability to put yourself out. Other elements such as encouraging helpfulness, kindness, and being involved will all aid in creating and maintaining a healthy working relationship.
In most cases yes, especially when you are a new hire without seniority.
You can ground yourself by being more level-headed. You can surround yourself by people who are grounded to see how they live their lives.
Smile and listen to people
some people may not know the definition of respect; but the definition is being confident about yourself/others, or being nice to others and yourself, respect is not being rude to a person.
It is very important to be liked for yourself, because if you're liked for something you're not, then it means that you yourself are not really being liked. This means that the people who like you like only an illusion of you. It leaves you only with unhappiness and people you can't be honest with.also you dont get in anybodys bussiness.
They are being protected by people. A community group working for the penguins is an example.