Caitlin Fry

Caitlin Fry Caitlin Fry is a freelance content creator who resides in Northern California. Fur mom to 3 rescue k

I spent most of 2023 returning to the vast realm of UX design via the .hq UX career track and received my official certi...
11/01/2024

I spent most of 2023 returning to the vast realm of UX design via the .hq UX career track and received my official certification of completion earlier this month. ⭐️

This was hard, y’all and I am incredibly proud of myself for sticking with it despite many many MANY obstacles that never got the memo to eff off and leave me be 😅

The work isn’t over, though. The industry is a hot mess right now, I’m definitely not at a place where I’m impressive enough to be hired, but instead of talking down to myself I’m leaning HARD into continued education and camaraderie.

I still have hella anxiety (I see you insomnia), but I’m privileged to have access to a therapist, online resources, and many cute fur friends when people are just not cutting it. 🤣

So, if you have any friends or colleagues in the UX world feel free to hook a gal up! I’d love to chat with them, learn from them, and maybe even share a few laughs along the way 🙃

Posting this now before I go back into my sick AF coma and sleep the days away… My hope for 2024 is that more folks do b...
29/12/2023

Posting this now before I go back into my sick AF coma and sleep the days away…

My hope for 2024 is that more folks do better by animals because the same people can’t do it all and we are tired of trying to do it all 🫠

One of our greatest gifts this year: Miss Betty Bob Barker Cinnabon from . If you’re considering adding a pet to your fa...
02/12/2023

One of our greatest gifts this year: Miss Betty Bob Barker Cinnabon from .

If you’re considering adding a pet to your family this season regardless if she/he/they have fur, hair, scales, or is nakey, consider rescue!

Also, make sure you have legacy plans in place for your babies as you never know what can happen in life + many assume family will help out when that is not necessarily the case. ❤️‍🩹

💔 There aren’t words to express the deep grief I feel about losing Barley Ben this week. 🌈 Never have I wanted to give a...
29/06/2023

💔 There aren’t words to express the deep grief I feel about losing Barley Ben this week. 🌈

Never have I wanted to give another creature every possible positive, loving, and joyful experience possible.

I am so grateful to have a partner who is so giving and solutions-oriented so we can give our fur babies the best palliative care possible.

I know we went above and beyond for this boy, but I will always wish our love were enough to have given him the opportunities we wanted for him.

Thank you to and for trusting me as his pet sitter and then trusting us to take over his care ♥️

Barley Ben, you are so so so so loved. I hope you are giving our fur cousins hell over the rainbow bridge and using those little legs to jump, run, play tug of war, all the things that you were limited in doing in your earthly body 🌈

Hi, my name is Caitlin and I have depression and anxiety disorder. 💊 These photos were taken throughout the year.😊 Can y...
30/11/2022

Hi, my name is Caitlin and I have depression and anxiety disorder. 💊

These photos were taken throughout the year.

😊 Can you tell which smile shows genuine happiness?

💔 What about heartbreak or stress?

💕 Love? Excitement?

😧 Fear? Uncertainty? Shame?

I debated posting this for some time because I wanted to understand what I was hoping to give myself in sharing this.

🤗 I am a caregiver. In the most basic sense as well as in personality. I get energy from helping others. So much so that I don’t know how to help myself. By posting this and sharing with “everyone” that I am not as strong, as confident, as certain, as positive as you think I am on a regular basis maybe I’ll be able to start helping myself because I will no longer feel ashamed of who I am, what I’m feeling/struggling with, and what I hope to experience in this life. And maybe sharing will help someone, too. ❤️‍🩹

19/03/2022

So incredibly grateful to for taking this video. 💔

Angela McPherson wasn’t related to me by blood, but I always saw her as my grandma. She passed away this morning. My heart is breaking that I’m in California and not in Naperville.

Angie was a strong, opinionated, loving, and fierce woman - the absolute best Italian grandma.

For over 20 years she stood in wherever she could as my grandma whether it was watching my soccer games, making sure I was well fed, giving me advice about friends, boys, and college… the door was always open no matter what.

The best part about moving to IL as a kid - living across from the McPhersons.

If you’re the praying sort, please pray for her, her husband Jack, and their family. ♥️

I’ll just leave this here… 🚩
02/08/2021

I’ll just leave this here… 🚩

For those visiting our parks, please be aware of your surroundings not just for your own safety but also the safety of t...
17/07/2021

For those visiting our parks, please be aware of your surroundings not just for your own safety but also the safety of the animals who live in those beautiful places 💔

Speeding Kills Bear

We get this call a lot. Too much, to be honest. “Bear hit by vehicle, dead on the side of the road.” Sadly, it’s become routine. I log the coordinates into my phone, gather the equipment I may need, and head to the location. This call came in cold; it sounds like the collision happened sometime around noon and it’s 4 pm now. The location is an hour’s drive away, so by the time I get there it’s well after 5 pm. I pull off on the shoulder, lug a large backpack of equipment over my back, and head off down the road. My job here is easy, really: find the bear, move its body far away from the road to prevent any other animals from getting hit while scavenging on it, fill out a report, and collect samples and measurements for research. Then I’m off on my way again with another number to add to the total of bears hit by vehicles this year—data we hope will help prevent future collisions. Pretty callous. However, the reality behind each of these numbers is not.

Per the coordinates I was given, I’m still a few hundred yards off, so I continue down the road scanning it for blood as cars whiz by. I try to remember how many times I’ve done this now and, truthfully, I don’t know. This is not what any of us signs up for, but it’s a part of the job nonetheless. Then something catches my eye. It’s small and artificial, and laying in the middle of the road. As I walk closer, I see that it’s a broken shapeless car part, likely from an undercarriage. More cars whiz past. I turn my gaze from the car part down the embankment on the side of the road and there it is.

A cub. Its tiny light brown body laying just feet from me and the road, nearly invisible to every passerby. It’s a new cub—couldn’t be much more than six months old, now balled up and lifeless under a small pine tree. For a moment I lose track of time as I stand there staring at its tiny body, but then the sound of more cars whizzing by reminds me of my place and my role. I let out a deep sigh and continue on with my task.

I pick up the cub—it couldn’t be much more than 25 pounds—and begin carrying it off into the woods. I have no certain destination; I’m just walking until I can no longer hear the hiss of the road behind me. I see a grassy spot surrounded by a semi-ring of down logs and gravitate towards it. The least I can do is find it a nice place to be laid. I lay it down in the grass protected by one of the nearby logs and sit back on the log opposite of it, slightly relieved that it looks far more in place now than when I found it earlier. I take another moment and then continue with my work.

I slide off my backpack, remove a binder, and start the assessment. It’s a female. This immediately triggers thoughts of the life this bear may have lived—perhaps she would have had cubs of her own—but before I finish that thought I hear a stick break and look up. Just beyond the ring, there’s a familiar figure intently staring back at me. It’s another bear. Surprised, I stand up quickly and the bear runs off into the brush but stops not far off and looks back at me. Acting on instinct, I pick up a stick and smash it over a tree to scare the bear further away. I stand there quietly, listening as I hear the bear’s footsteps tapper away.

A few silent minutes pass, and I settle back into my task. Timely coincidence, I think at first. It could be a bear coming to scavenge or this could be a common crossing area for whatever reason—we did have another bear hit and killed not far from here last week. But then I hear it, and it changes my mind completely. From behind me there’s a deep toned but soft sounding grunt. I immediately know what it is. It’s a vocalization, the kind sows (female bears) make to call to their cubs. I turn and look in its direction and there she is, the same bear from before intently staring back at me. It’s no coincidence. I can feel the callousness drain from my body. This bear is the mom, and she never left her cub.

My heart sinks. It’s been nearly six hours and she still hasn’t given up on her cub. I can just imagine how many times she darted back and forth on that road in attempts to wake it. It's extremely lucky that she wasn't hit as well. The calls to the cub continue, sounding more pained each time. I glance back finding myself hoping it would respond to her call too, but of course, nothing. Now here I am, standing between a grieving mother and her child. I feel like a monster.

I get up, quickly pack my bag, and get out of there. It is time to go even though my task is not done. Quickly, I set up a remote camera. Why? Every year we report the number of bears that get hit by vehicles, but numbers don’t always paint a picture. I want people to see what I saw: the sad reality behind each of these numbers.

So please, remember this. Remember that when traveling through Yosemite, we are all just visitors in the home of countless animals and it is up to us to follow the rules that protect them. Go the speed limit, drive alertly, and look out for wildlife. Protecting Yosemite’s black bears is something we can all do.

Learn more at http://keepbearswild.org/vehicle-bear-collisions/.

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