archive

All of my posts in one place

I wanted this page to feel like old blogs used to feel: a little crowded, very browseable, and full of odd categories you only understand once you have been here a while.

personal story scene
December 11, 2025 Personal Stories

The morning I stopped waiting for the big changes

The kitchen floor feels like the center of my world every morning. I reach for the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, listening for the familiar click of nails on the linoleum.

0 comments senior dogs • personal story
brain health scene
November 22, 2025 Dog Brain Health

Why I started looking at the flow of things

I used to explain away every hesitation or missed cue by saying it was just a part of getting older. It was a comfortable way to quiet my own anxiety while standing by the coffee maker, waiting for the water to heat.

0 comments senior dogs • brain health
brain health scene
November 8, 2025 Dog Brain Health

The language of the long goodbye

When I first heard the term cognitive dysfunction, I felt a familiar internal resistance that had nothing to do with the dog and everything to do with my own fear of labels.

0 comments senior dogs • brain health
Senior dog resting near a doorway
November 3, 2025 Dog Brain Health

What I Rule Out Before I Blame Aging

The checklist I use so I do not lazily call something “just aging” when it may be pain, sensory loss, illness, or something else that needs attention.

11 comments rule-outs • senior dogs
brain health scene
October 20, 2025 Dog Brain Health

When the lights go out and the pacing begins

I usually hear the first sign of trouble from the hallway rug runner. It is a soft, repetitive sound, not the frantic scramble of a dog who needs the back door, but a slower, aimless shuffle that persists long after the house has settled for the night.

0 comments senior dogs • brain health
brain health scene
October 19, 2025 Dog Brain Health

The line between getting older and losing the thread

I used to assume that any change in my senior dog was simply a matter of joints getting stiff or energy levels dipping. I kept my ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker filled with treats, and I waited for the usual signs—a bit more napping, perhaps a slower rise from the rug r

0 comments senior dogs • brain health
circulation scene
October 2, 2025 Dog Circulation

The math of a shorter walk

I used to judge our morning route by how many blocks we covered before returning to the leash hook by the door. I wanted a specific number of steps to feel like a good dog mom. If Walter and Mabel did not look tired by the time we reached the kitchen, I thought I had failed.

0 comments senior dogs • circulation
brain health scene
September 19, 2025 Dog Brain Health

The quiet architecture of a senior dog's sleep

I once assumed that a sleeping dog was just a dog who did not need anything from me for a few hours. I would walk past the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, hear the heavy silence of the house, and think of it as a simple pause.

0 comments senior dogs • brain health
symptom watch scene
September 18, 2025 Dog Symptom Watch

When the line between pain and confusion blurs

I often stand by the coffee maker in the early morning, staring at the ceramic dog-bone jar on the counter while I try to sort out what I see in my house. My foster, Pickle, has been struggling with his movement lately.

0 comments senior dogs • symptom watch
circulation scene
September 2, 2025 Dog Circulation

What I measure when I watch the bowl

My mornings begin with the familiar clatter of the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker. I used to watch Mabel and Walter with a focus on speed, wanting them to eat with the same energy I expected from a healthy dog. Now, I watch the way they stand.

0 comments senior dogs • circulation
brain health scene
August 21, 2025 Dog Brain Health

Why I pay attention to the confusion after sundown

The kitchen feels different when the sun dips below the horizon. I notice it first by the ceramic dog-bone jar by the coffee maker, which suddenly seems to hold a shadow that was not there during the bright morning hours.

0 comments senior dogs • brain health