06/05/2026
The kennel card read: MUST BE SEPARATED.
I almost didn’t look twice.
The shelter was overcrowded—loud, chaotic, overwhelming. I had come in to foster just one dog, just to help take a little pressure off. That was the plan.
Then I saw them.
Two six-month-old pitbull puppies, standing side by side at the front of the kennel. Same gray coats, same soft eyes… same tiny white patch on their chests like matching hearts.
“They came in together,” the volunteer told me. “Owner said they play too rough. Too much energy. Too clingy.”
Too much love, is what she meant.
She reached for the latch.
And that’s when it happened.
The second her hand touched the door, one of them let out this sound—sharp, desperate, panicked. The other pressed closer, wrapping his paws around his sibling like he was trying to hold on with everything he had.
Not barking. Not aggression.
Fear.
The kind that says: “Please don’t take them away from me. They’re all I have.”
I felt it in my chest instantly.
“Wait,” I said. “Don’t open it.”
The volunteer paused.
“I’ll take them both.”
That was supposed to be temporary. Just a weekend. Just until the shelter found space or another option.
That was six months ago.
Now they sleep tangled together on my couch, still glued to each other like nothing in this world could ever pull them apart again.
The shelter reached out today, asking when they’d be ready for adoption.
I sent them a photo of these two—snoring, upside down, completely safe—and replied:
“Never. They’re home.”
Happy Gotcha Day to my two “too much” pitbulls. 💙🐾