Current:Home > reviewsHow one dog and her new owner brought kindness into the lives of many -Edge Finance Strategies
How one dog and her new owner brought kindness into the lives of many
View
Date:2025-04-17 12:17:02
Gaia is a Husky with a story to tell about how when one life ends, sometimes an even better one begins.
In Dallas, Texas, Gaia's life was confined to a tiny backyard, because her loyal owner, Sandra, was hospitalized. Sandra's next door neighbor, Lisa Kanarek, noticed that the nine-year old female looked lonely, so she offered to walk her.
"I walked in and then Gaia came up to me very slowly," Kanarek recalled. "And then I said, 'Oh, hi.'"
One walk turned into three weeks of walks. Then, the question Kanarek wasn't expecting came from Sandra's dear friend, Gilda Levy. "Two weeks before Sandra died, [Levy] said, 'I don't know if you've thought about this, but would you like to take her?'
Kanarek's response? "Sure. I would love to."
So, when the time came, Kanarek was summoned to Sandra's home. The 80-year-old neighbor she barely knew was gone. "She had just died," Kanarek said. She clipped Gaia's leash on and walked the husky out of Sandra's home, and into hers.
And from that moment on, Gaia's life changed.
Kanarek wanted to get Gaia out more, and she noticed, on walks around the neighborhood, that Gaia was so calm around children. So, she and Gaia enrolled in, and passed, a pet therapy program.
"I can tell, when I put on her vest, she's ready to go," Kanarek said.
Their first assignment was Children's Medical Center Dallas.
Here was an elderly dog, who rarely ever left Sandra's home, now finding a home with Kanarek, and in the hearts of young children.
Brooklyn, an 18-year-old patient, said, "Dogs are, like, the best thing that ever happened to me, like, in this hospital."
Kanarek thought the piercing blue-eyed beauty was just right for another kind of therapy: hospice. It just so happened that when Gaia's owner died, Kanarek was finishing her training to be an end-of-life doula.
Today, she and Gaia minister to the terminally ill.
Asked whether she was doing all of this for Gaia's benefit, or for herself, Kanarek replied, "I think I'm doing this for both of us. I think it benefits both of us. She gets to go out and see people, and I get to see the response that she gets when she's out. There's just nothing better than that."
Gaia has brought the writer out of her shell, so much so that Kanarek wrote about their life together in an essay for the Washington Post:
"Gaia's life changed when she became part of our family. She interacts with the kids down the street (her fan club) during our walks, and she provides laughter and levity to sick children, all with her tail wagging. She goes with us on road trips and to outdoor festivals where she knows that people will stop to run their hands down her fluffy back or ask her for a high-five.
"My life is different too. Meeting dozens of people during our visits has brought out the extrovert tendencies I lost during the pandemic. Before I knock on each patient's door, I breathe in, then greet families with confidence, knowing the reaction my sidekick will receive. …"
"As we pass through the halls of children's hospital, I think of Sandra and hope she's smiling, knowing how much joy Gaia brings to everyone she meets."
"I'm trying not to cry," Kanarek said, describing her new life with Gaia. "I don't know. It's just knowing the effect she has on people. It makes me happy; it makes me sad, because I wish I had known Sandra better, but I think this is the way that I'm helping keep her memory alive."
David BegnaudDavid Begnaud is the lead national correspondent for "CBS Mornings" based in New York City.
Twitter Facebook InstagramveryGood! (54472)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Taylor Swift pens some of her most hauntingly brilliant songs on 'Tortured Poets'
- Buying stocks for the first time? How to navigate the market for first-time investors.
- American Idol Alum Mandisa Dead at 47
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Expert will testify on cellphone data behind Idaho killing suspect Bryan Kohberger’s alibi
- San Francisco restaurant owner goes on 30-day hunger strike over new bike lane
- 'Days of our Lives', 'General Hospital', 'The View': See the 2024 Daytime Emmy nominees
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Inside Caitlin Clark and Connor McCaffery's Winning Romance
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Buffalo Bills QB Josh Allen publicly thanks ex-teammate Stefon Diggs
- Top Cuban official says country open to more U.S. deportations, blames embargo for migrant exodus
- Judge drops some charges against ex-Minnesota college student feared of plotting campus shooting
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- What Each Zodiac Sign Needs for Taurus Season, According to Your Horoscope
- Scientists trying to protect wildlife from extinction as climate change raises risk to species around the globe
- Taylor Swift’s Tortured Poets Department: Who Is Clara Bow?
Recommendation
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
Firefighters douse a blaze at a historic Oregon hotel famously featured in ‘The Shining’
Poland's Duda is latest foreign leader to meet with Trump as U.S. allies hedge their bets on November election
Taylor Swift breaks our hearts again with Track 5 ‘So Long, London'
Travis Hunter, the 2
Eddie Redmayne, Gayle Rankin take us inside Broadway's 'dark' and 'intimate' new 'Cabaret'
New York closing in on $237B state budget with plans on housing, migrants, bootleg pot shops
USA TODAY coupons: Hundreds of ways to save thousands of dollars each week