When the vet told me Cookie might only have a few months left, my first reaction was numbness. “Enlarged heart,” the vet said, pointing at the X-ray. “Kidney function is also declining. For a 14-year-old Yorkshire Terrier, this is a normal aging process.”
That night, I couldn’t sleep. I lay next to Cookie’s dog bed, watching her steady breathing, tears streaming down my face. 14 years—seemed long, but when you know where the end is, it suddenly becomes too, too short.
The Birth of the Bucket List
The next day, I made a decision. Instead of crying every day waiting for that day to come, why not make every day meaningful for Cookie? I took out a piece of paper and wrote down “Cookie’s Bucket List”:
- Go to the beach (Cookie had never seen the ocean in her life)
- Eat ice cream once (the vet said a small amount was okay)
- Play in the snow (we lived in the South, where it rarely snowed)
- Have a “dog party” with other dogs
- Sleep in my bed (not normally allowed)
- Pick out a toy at the pet store
- Have a professional photo shoot
- Go hiking in the mountains
- Try “dog spa” treatment
- Say “I love you” every day
Going to the Beach
The first weekend, I drove Cookie three hours to the nearest beach. When Cookie first saw the ocean, she was stunned. The sound of waves, the smell of sea breeze, the feel of sand—it was all new to her. I put her on the sand, and she carefully took a few steps, then suddenly started running—for a 14-year-old dog, this was almost a miracle.
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- Comfortable Dog Bed – Lets senior dogs sleep peacefully in their final days
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