Do not easily interfere with the karma of others.
Whoever you sympathize with, you will bear their fate. Whoever you pity, you will endure their suffering.
As far as I know, most kind-hearted people who take in a large number of stray cats and dogs eventually die from poverty and illness, and very few heads of large stray cat and dog shelters have a good ending. To obey the way, the laws of nature are such; winter is meant to cull many animals, and stray cats are no exception. If you do not allow these stray cats to be eliminated by nature, then in spring, many birds and rodents will suffer. What seems like doing good is, in fact, evil done out of personal favoritism, going against the heavens will bring retribution! Personally, I believe the fate of stray cats and dogs is determined from the moment they are born. Whoever tries to change it must bear their misfortunes.
The elderly in the village can live to be over a hundred years old, largely because they do not meddle in others' affairs. If the mud is fine as it is, you insist on propping it up against the wall. If the salted fish lies well as it is, you insist on flipping it over; it was originally a piece of rotten wood, yet you insist on carving it into something useful. Doing these things goes against the laws of nature.
Of course, I am not advising everyone to choose indifference; rather, one must first shoulder their own mission, grow their wings strong, and only then help others. We should be kind, but we must also have the ability to protect our own kindness.

