Living with me wasn’t Lucy’s first home. I wasn’t even her second family. I was her third home.
She first lived on a chain in someone’s back yard in a dangerous neighborhood. After she was rescued from that life, she lived in an overcrowded apartment with a couple who had far too many rescued animals, including five dogs.
When that couple had to move, they could take only three of the dogs. Someone else wanted the fourth dog, but nobody wanted Lucy. On the day before the couple had to be out of their apartment, I agreed to take her. So she lost the only people she knew — once again.
When I brought her home with me on Jan. 25, 2016, she was confused and scared. I promised her that day that she now had a home for the rest of her life.
Roughly 10 years later, that promise has been fulfilled. I lost this precious girl very early Sunday morning.

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What would your obit say about you — if you could write it yourself?
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Could free cities turn reservations from abject poverty to prosperity?
How would you live differently if you knew when death was coming?
Far-left political idiocy is ruining remake of Disney’s ‘Snow White’
Desperate need to be special drives me to try to matter to those I love
Maturity asked me to learn that I’d never win certain arguments