In the end, it was cancer that took Lucy from me.
I don’t want to talk about this, but I can’t help but tell the story. I can’t speak the words without breaking down, so I’ve told nobody so far. I’ve already given you the big picture view of losing her very early this morning, but here’s how the last day of her precious life really went.
I had known for months that Lucy was declining, so I’d been preparing myself. She didn’t have any symptoms of anything wrong out of the ordinary, but I’ve been through enough death with dogs and cats to recognize when the end is approaching.
Each time I returned home from work this past week, I feared that I would find her dead. I had the same fears about her each morning when I woke up. I knew it was that close. I knew it was inevitable.
I was surprised when she made it to another weekend, but I was overjoyed to have a little more time with her. When Saturday started, though, I had no idea how much would change by the time my long day would end Sunday morning.

Freedom lovers, why do so many of you still blindly trust the GOP?
Meeting with dead man left me pondering choices of life, death
With each ‘improvement,’ we’re losing family and community
Lesson of ‘judgment day’ error? Certainty doesn’t indicate truth
Federal debt default? So what? It happened before — in 1979
Visit with high school best friend leaves me pondering my old fears
Do they allow dogs at the hotel? Question is why they allow people
Nightmarish dreams mean dead can continue to play mind games
Why do humans keep running from the things we really need the most?