Tag: books

  • Welcome Back, Clyde

    Today is Clyde’s gotcha day, and I want to tell the truth about rescue. The kind of truth that doesn’t fit on a bumper sticker or a tote bag. The kind that lands in your chest and stays there like a warm stone.

    People like to say we rescue dogs, and yes, we do. We pull them out of shelters and ditches and bad luck and someone else’s failure to keep a promise. We sign papers and pay fees and buy the good kibble and the ridiculous toys that end up under the couch like lost planets. We do all of that, and still the real rescue runs in both directions. Sometimes it runs harder the other way.

    Clyde found me again, and I know how that sounds to anyone who only believes in what can be proven under fluorescent lights. Those of us who know, just know. Some souls have a homing signal. Some love has a map. Some devotion takes the long way around the block and comes back wearing a different coat.

    The first Clyde, the original Clyde, was something else entirely: a four-legged myth, a shaggy guardian angel with dirt under his nails. A dog who carried my heart on his four paws. He lived with me in my car on the edges of the UCSC campus. He followed the Grateful Dead with me. He watched me build a life out of whatever I could carry. He witnessed the whole strange, gorgeous circus of my becoming. He inspired Clyde’s Cookies, my vegan, organic chocolate chip cookies: a survival spell baked into a name, a business born from love and necessity and a dog who never once asked me to be anything other than alive.

    He stayed. He stayed until he was seventeen, which feels like a small miracle when you remember what we were doing: miles, highways, parking lots, fields, weather, music, midnight. The kind of living that makes a person feral and holy. The kind of living that turns a dog into a legend.

    And then time did what time does. It took him, and it took something out of me right along with him. Life kept life-ing. The world kept spinning. There are days I have wanted to step off the carousel. There are days my nervous system has felt like a live wire. There are days the weight of everything has made gravity feel personal.

    And then this Clyde arrived.

    Here he is, coming in for the heavy leans, snoring beside me on my pillow every night like he pays rent, making certain I show up. Making certain I eat. Making certain I walk outside and see the sky. Making certain I keep my appointments with the living world. He has taken the job seriously, like he clocked in and said: I’m on it.

    He knows things, and I don’t mean in the cute “dogs are intuitive” way. I mean he knows. He knows when I’m going to have a seizure. He knows before I do. He shifts his whole body into readiness. He watches me with that steady, ancient focus. Guardian dogs just know. They read the weather inside us. They stand between us and the cliff. They become the tether, the anchor, the soft alarm system with fur and breath and unwavering devotion.

    So yes, this is a gotcha day post, and also it isn’t. It’s a gratitude post, and also it isn’t. It’s a love letter to rescue, and to everyone who has ever walked into a shelter and felt their heart split open. It’s a reminder that the animals waiting behind those gates are not “less than.” They are not damaged goods. They are not charity cases. They are beings with stories, with courage, with the kind of tenderness that survives impossible things.

    Rescue is holy work, and it isn’t only holy for the animal.

    Sometimes you walk in thinking you’re saving a dog, and you walk out with the one creature on earth who will keep you on the planet. The one who will press his weight into your legs when you start to float away. The one who will insist on morning. The one who will drag you into the present moment by the sleeve. The one who will love you through all your versions, even the ones you don’t know how to love yet.

    Clyde, my beautiful boy, my guardian, my snoring, heavy-leaning, heart-tethering miracle: thank you for finding me. Thank you for coming back around. Thank you for choosing me again. Thank you for making a home out of my body and my bed and my life. Thank you for the way you keep showing me what devotion looks like when it has four paws and no agenda.

    If you’ve ever rescued an animal, you already know. The rescue runs both ways. The love arrives like a rope thrown into dark water, and sometimes it’s the only thing that pulls you back to shore.

    Happy gotcha day, Clyde. We’re still here. We’re still singing. We’re still walking forward. And tonight you can have the whole pillow, like always. 🖤🐾

  • This is not the end of the story…

    Today I hiked in the sunshine with Clyde.

    It was a Tuesday — just a regular Tuesday — and we walked into the foothills the way we always do. Clyde investigated every sagebrush like he was conducting a scholarly examination of the state of the world. I let the sun warm my face and tried to remember that my body is real, and here, and mine. Two feet on the ground,

    While we were climbing, my phone pinged — an email from NBC telling me all about Bravocon in Las Vegas. All the Bravolebrities. The VIP lounges. The velvet ropes. The Important Lanyards. The whole spectacle.

    And I laughed.
    Because there was a time (blogger years are geological time) when I went to events just like that — shipped home boxes of absurd SWAG because it was too much to carry — and once rode an escalator completely naked:

    Down.
    Walked around.
    Back up.

    A perfect loop.
    A Tuesday.

    I texted my friend Lydia — who works for NBC — and asked her why we were not attending Bravocon, because obviously we would be trouble with a capital T and a glitter cannon.

    She laughed.
    She agreed.
    And I also reminded her — gently — that what I truly want is to be Snoop Dogg’s sidekick for the WINTER OLYMPICS in Italy in 2026.

    And the best part?

    Lydia could actually make that happen. Ratings Bonanza! xo

    This is what I mean when I say: life is bizarre and beautiful when you don’t pretend to be smaller than you are.

    After the hike, Clyde and I ran into Joesephine (hello, Love Beets) and through the ancient art of neighborhood witchcraft, we managed to skip the entire line at Coffee Garden and both got our coffees exactly the way we like them. No fuss. No apology. Just a little everyday magic.

    Joesephine looked at me — the real kind of looking — and said:

    “If you’re applying for jobs, only apply for dream jobs. Don’t shrink. Don’t back up. Don’t forget who you are.”

    And here is the part I have been circling around:

    I’m no longer at SLC Qi.
    The ending was sudden.
    I didn’t get to say goodbye.

    There’s sadness there.
    I spent years welcoming people, holding them, tending a community like a flame cupped in two hands.
    To leave without closure feels like walking out of a story mid-sentence.

    But this is not a story about loss.

    This is a story about return.
    To myself.
    To spaciousness.
    To possibility.
    To mischief.
    To joy.
    To Tuesdays that begin in the mountains and end with delicious espresso magic and olympic-level daydreams.

    This is the part where I remember:

    I have a lot to offer the world.
    And I am now available.

    So if you’re looking for:

    A storyteller.
    A community builder.
    A joy conspirator.
    A dog-led pilgrim.
    A woman who knows how to hold grief and glitter in the same hand—

    I’m here.

    Not under a bridge.
    Not disappearing.
    Not diminished.

    Just in the doorway, barefoot, grinning, hair a little wild, absolutely ready.

    The world cracked open a little this week.
    I felt the draft.
    I stepped toward it.

    So stay with me.

    We’re packing snacks.
    I’m even making sandwiches.
    Clyde is doing important sniff-based reconnaissance.
    The universe is already rearranging furniture.

    Italy just might be calling.
    Snoop Dogg is warming up.
    The glitter is unbottled.
    The mischief is humming.

    Let’s fucking go.