My first experience of unconditional love came on four legs.
As a little girl, I did not feel safe in my home, but I felt safe with my dog. She was my companion, my comfort, my refuge from a world that often felt frightening.
When I left home after high school, I was told she could not come with me.
I had to let her go.
I don’t know that I ever truly grieved that loss.
Years later, life brought me another beloved dog. By then, I had spent years caring for my grandmother with Alzheimer’s and walking beside my daughter through her addiction. I was exhausted in ways I didn’t yet understand.
When it came time to move, I made the painful decision to rehome my beloved friend.
At the time, I had many reasons.
I told myself I was doing what was practical.
What was necessary.
But years later, a deeper truth surfaced.
I had done to myself what had been done to me as a child.
I had taken away something I loved.
Something that brought me comfort.
Something that made me feel safe.
Not out of cruelty, but out of a lifetime of believing that love was something to be sacrificed.
The grief of that decision still lives in me.
Not because I made the best decision I could with what I knew then, but because I never allowed myself to mourn what was lost.
Perhaps that is what is asking for my attention now.
Not judgment.
Not guilt.
Grief.
A grief that has been waiting patiently for many years to finally be felt.
And maybe healing begins by letting my heart break for what it loved.