The first time I ever saw Alex, he was lying next to a food bowl outside of the Winn-Dixie grocery store near my house.
He looked up at me with big sad eyes as I walked into the store one night. I didn’t know who he belonged to or what he was doing at the store, so I asked while I was checking out.
“He’s been here all day,” the cashier said. “Some woman put him out of the car this morning with that bowl and a ball. She took off and he’s been here ever since.”
On the way out the door, I stopped to visit him. He didn’t have a real tail, but he wagged a little stump of a tail at getting some attention. Another store employee told me that people had been petting the dog all day, but nobody was interested in taking him home.
As I was petting the dog and trying to figure out whether I could help him, a couple of other customers stopped to talk. They were both big animal lovers, they said, and they both expressed a willingness to help. Each said she knew someone who wanted a dog, but neither had a place to keep him that night.
New YouTube channel launched for video versions of my essays
To become extraordinary people, we can’t behave in ordinary ways
Join me Tuesday for some live radio — if you can stomach an hour of me
‘Self government’ means you govern yourself, not obey your neighbors

No ebooks for me: Reading is about more than simply absorbing data
Peace won’t come until you quit obeying long-gone programmers
Sharing mundane details of life is underrated joy of loving someone