18 Dec
18Dec

The One Who Found Me

I was born on the streets of Tulsa—

or so the humans believe.

My mother was a Great Pyrenees,

my father a mystery:

Rottweiler, Newfoundland,

maybe a little Golden light woven in.


I learned thirst from creeks,

hunger from trash cans,

and how to keep going

when my body weighed fifty

but my soul needed seventy.


They found me thin,

but not broken.

And they brought me

to the Golden Retriever Rescue of the Rockies,

where my body began to remember

what care feels like.


Still, I longed

for the kind of love

my Pyrenees mother once gave—

the kind that says

you belong without proving anything.


Then one day, she came.

I knew her before I saw her.

Left-brain proof doesn’t live here,

but truth does.


She arrived with a friend—

the only thing they shared

was their love of dogs,

and that was enough.


I greeted the friend first,

polite and joyful.

Then I went to my human. 

We looked into each other’s eyes.

I can do that—

hold a gaze,

tell a whole story in silence.


They invited her to walk me.

I walked perfectly beside her.

And the decision was already made.


But fear remembers.

Buildings scared me.

Cars confused me.

Leaving felt dangerous.

Staying felt impossible.

I carried a quiet storm inside—

what humans call

post-traumatic stress.


But my mother—

who had spent decades

loving children through fear—

knew exactly what to do.

She went outside with me.

Every time.

It was winter in Evergreen.

Cold. Snow deep and endless.


And still—

she never sent me out alone.

Each step we took together

taught me something new:

love doesn’t leave.

love stays.

love waits.


Six weeks later,

I walked out on my own.

Not because fear was gone,

but because trust had arrived.


Now it’s almost six years later.

We celebrate Adoption Day—

February 2, 2020.

Write it down.

A perfect palindrome.

Even the numbers knew.


My birthday is February 14, of course.

Love day.

I sleep in a bed called a loveseat.

I eat food made with care—

proteins, fats, supplements,

and devotion


All I want for Christmas

is what I already have.

And also—

we are waiting

For the right one.

A new dad for me.

A wondrous partner for her.

The one who completes the circle

we already trust is forming.


  I have a brother, too—

brilliant and kind.

And his daughter sees me

the way I see her:

perfect images of love,

recognizing themselves.


This is not just my story.

It is the story of what happens

when love walks beside fear

until fear learns

it is no longer alone.

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