When I got laid off, I thought the worst part would be telling my family.
Turns out, it was telling my dog, Henry.
Okay โ obviously, Henry didnโt understand the economics of it all. But he did understand that something was off. That I wasnโt putting on my work shoes. That I was drinking coffee slower. That I sighed a lot more before noon.
And instead of moping in solidarity like a good boy, Henry decided this was the beginning of our new life.
Day One, 8:07 AM: he dropped his leash in my lap.
Heโd never done that before. Not on a weekday.
It was like heโd memorized my work schedule and decided we were done with it.
So I gave in. We walked.
That became our thing.
Every morning โ no matter what I had (or didnโt have) going on โ we went out.
He took me on new routes. Through parks weโd never explored. Around lakes with slippery edges and benches just wide enough for the two of us. Heโd sniff bushes like they were ancient relics, wagging with the kind of joy that made strangers smile.
At home, I swapped out his old leash for a hands-free dog leash โ something I bought on a whim but grew to love. It clipped around my waist so I could sip coffee and carry a notebook, letting Henry guide our steps while I thought, planned, and eventuallyโฆ dreamed again.
Three weeks in, I got a freelance offer.
Five weeks in, I had three clients.
But the routine? That stayed.
Even now, when Iโm โback to work,โ Henry still gets his walk at 8:07. On the dot.
And I still let him lead.
Because it wasnโt the career shift or the freedom that changed me.
It was the dog who reminded me how to show up for life.
One leash loop at a time.
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