
Loa was not just a good dog, but rather, the best dog. And I know that all dogs are good dogs, and all dogs are the best dogs; that’s just how dogs are. But the reality is, when I say it, I need you to understand I really mean it. Every dog is the best dog but Loa really was the best dog.
We got her when my son was very young. She was, of course, a shelter dog, because shelter dogs are the greatest dogs; we saw a bunch of dogs that day, including an excitable cannonball of a pitbull puppy that (in wanting to play) knocked our son back horizontally like, five feet, as if he were a henchman getting blown away as collateral shotgun damage in an Arnold Schwartzenegger movie. So that dog was not going to be our dog. But that day they said, “You’re also scheduled to see Peaches,” and we did not know who or what a Peaches was.
Peaches was this little red dog — a puppy, really, maybe nine months old, and she trotted out and diligently followed behind our wandering child, keeping a protective distance but staying close enough to follow. She’d follow, then sit. Follow, then sit. Super cool, super chill. I drove her home, and all the while she kept trying to leave her seat and ride with me as I drove. Which wasn’t easy, but I managed. She helped drive me home that day. Always wanting to be with her people.

I’d argue that wanting to be with her people was her fundamental trait — the thing that drove her, always. Even now, up to the end, even with cancer hanging heavy on her poor muzzle, even when she couldn’t really see anymore or hear anymore, she knew where we were and would come to the room we were in. She would panic a little if we were out of sight — so we spent a lot of extra time being there, being present, and reassuring her with pets, touches, and extra snacks.
We named her Loa. We’d been to Hawaii a couple times and knew that Loa meant something between long and a lot, and she was both of those things — here she was, this long, gangly dog when she sprawled out, and a whole lot of dog. Not in a needy, too-much-to-handle way. She just had a lot of love to give and we had the love to give back. So: Loa.
She was always so good with our son. She was our dog, but also, his dog — they are, or were, the same age, after all. Loa was our first true family dog — we’d had dogs before, obviously. I brought a dog to our relationship, a gloriously hairy black Belgian sheepdog named Yaga. And my wife and I got a taco terrier, Tai, to join Yaga, and those two were fast friends. But Loa was the first for the whole family.
Tai, the chihuahua-fox-terrier, had found her one true best-friend-forever in Yaga. They were fast buddies, and she was like his little co-pilot. When he passed, something went away in her, too, and she did not want to be bonded to anyone or anything new. She tolerated our child, but really didn’t like Loa at all. This, despite Loa loving Tai oh so very much. Loa just wanted to hang with her new little friend. Tai just wanted to plot a complicated murder. (Chihuahuas gonna chihuahua.)
(For reference, see if you can spot the aforementioned murder-plotter.)

So when Tai passed, it seemed time to get Loa a new friend. And, as it turned out, a sister — in spirit, if not literally. Enter: Snoobug.

We got Snoobug at the same shelter. And again we saw a number of dogs that day and had Loa with us to take the temperature — and she had a blast with all the dogs because that was Loa. Loa got along with everybody. She had infinite love to give. Any of the dogs could’ve been a match for her, really.
But when we got in the room with Snoobug, the two sniffed each other, gave some licks, and then both just laid down together. Like they’d always known each other. So Snoobug came home with us, and they were bonded after that. They went out together, slept in the same bed together, ate together. It’s why we call them sisters — it’s like they grew up in the same litter.
(That photo of the two of them above is, of all the dog photos I’ve taken, the one I love the most. Sometimes a photo really captures a spirit and sometimes it doesn’t, but that one does so well it feels almost supernatural to me. I note too in that photo that Loa was definitely the dominant dog in the pairing, but played like she wasn’t. She was a gentle beast.)
I’m sobbing like a fool as I write this. Funny I guess how we sometimes cry more over our pets than we do some people. Maybe that’s not strange. Our pets are with us so much, so often, and they’re these like… little perfect pure beings. They don’t mean us any harm. They’re an unalloyed good. They want to love and be loved. And be fed. Hot dogs, ideally.
Loa’s eaten a lot of hot dogs in the last couple weeks. Like, an unreasonable amount. They weren’t something she was supposed to eat because of — well, I’ll get to that in a minute. But when you’re terminal with cancer, you get all the hot dogs you goddamn jolly well want. Hot dogs and turkey breast lunchmeat and even today she shared a peanut butter and jelly sandwich with me. It’s one of the things I’m glad about — she was still eating, drinking, sleeping well. And I know that wouldn’t last forever.
Loa almost died once before, big-time. She’d had bladder stones — and as it turns out, was prone to making them, a mobile canine bladder stone factory. She also loved to get on her back and have you rub her tummy, and our vet posited that this position was also perfectly optimal for working bladder stones into bad positions.
So we gave her meds and food to break them up, but one got lodged in her urethra and, stoic dog as she was, she failed to let us know this until one day we found her standing in the kitchen, shaking violently and going to the bathroom on herself. Which she didn’t do! She never, ever, ever went to the bathroom in the house. (Not even now, with all her systems shutting down — she dutifully made her way outside.)
So that day, we rushed her to the vet and she stayed there, in emergency care, for a week. But she pulled through. She had cancer, too, later on, but our groomer — thank your groomer! — caught it and we got it removed before it could do worse damage.
Though in the end, a new cancer, or maybe that cancer, still caught up to her. I guess that’s how it always goes with cancer. Still, fuck cancer. Dogs should be immune to it. Cancer shouldn’t be allowed anywhere near them.
Dogs are proof we live in a good and loving universe.
Dogs getting cancer is the proof that we don’t.
I hate this. I don’t want her to go. To be gone. It’s enough to make you never want to get another dog again. We will, of course. George Carlin was right — life is just a series of dogs. But the pain of this is so hard, so deep. This one fucking hurt, man. I feel like I’m dying inside. And yet it’s what we owe them at the end. It’s part of the price at the start. You make that deal the first day you take them into your house. Whatever it costs you then, it’ll cost you this at the end, and pay this price because it’s a mercy they can’t do for themselves — and ironically, often enough a mercy we can’t do for ourselves for each other, either, as people. But for them we can do it. And we have to do it. Even though it feels like the worst thing it is the best, most necessary thing. They give us so much. So this is the thing we owe.
She was ready to go. We weren’t ready for her to go. We would’ve kept her here forever if we could’ve. What a great dog.
Here’s why she was a great dog. The best dog.
She was calm. She was loyal. She was sweet. She was a complete goofusy doofus. She was fun. She was easy. She was a good guard dog. She was great on a leash and great off one, too. And she was smart, holy crap. Took almost no training and yet she never went in the house, knew how to knock at the door (or ring sleigh bells we put there) when she wanted to go out or come back in, she knew that if you said widdle paws at her she’d get down on her side and bring her two little paw-hands up to her muzzle and simulate petting, and that meant she was going to get petted so good, until you stopped, which meant she’d do it again, and you’d pet her, and she’d literally do this forever if you let her.

The cancer stole her in small pieces, though she didn’t suffer long with it. We had options to diagnose and treat, but none of them were really real — she was fourteen years old and any treatment would’ve been both costly in money but also costly to her, in pain. Her quality of life would’ve cratered and all just so we could’ve maybe, maybe had her around for a few months.
It was really only in the last two weeks that you could see the pieces of her going away — her eyesight, her hearing, her ability to smell stuff. The way the cancer in her mouth grew bigger. She’d sometimes appear lost in the room she was in. A kind of walking ghost phase. I tell myself now and told myself then that putting her to rest is literally that: letting her rest. The dog she is and was, well, went away. We were just giving her the peace she needed.
But god that fucking sucks. All the high-minded talk of what we owe them and the peace they need, it still fucking sucks that they get to come into our lives like this and be such perfect companions and friends and furry family members and then the universe gets to take them away again long, long before we are ready. It’s fucking stupid and it’s not fair, and cancer fucking sucks, and fuck all of this.

Okay, sure, she had a few less desirable traits. Did she eat poop in the yard? Sure. Who doesn’t? Would she, while on a walk or in the yard, be able to take a split-second’s worth of time to dart her head into the brush and come back with a baby rabbit or groundhog? Fine, guilty — she loved all creatures but preferred loving baby woodland critters with her teeth. (And seriously, she did this very very fast.) Did she, just the other day, in the throes of this cancer, somehow poop on a garter snake? Fact check: true. She pooped on a snake. I don’t know that this gets you any points over the rainbow bridge in the doggy heaven side of things, but she did it, and the snake was fine, if absolutely perturbed by it. Honestly, if you ask me, it was the snake’s fault. Loa was perfect. Shut up, snake. Get pooped on.
We don’t know what kind of dog she was, by the way. We never did any genetic testing. I always assumed she was somewhere in the middle of a hound slash retriever slash Rhodesian ridgeback DNA party. We just said she was a “red dog,” because she was a sweet red dog. Like Clifford if he was just a regular-size dog and not a gargantuan mutant.

I don’t really know how Snoobug is going to handle this. They were sisters, really, through and through.

But also, Snoobug is an absolute dipshit. And please understand I say that with full love in my heart. She’s the sweetest dipshit. But Loa had the brains. All the brains. Snoobug is like a dice cup — her brain is a random encounter chart in D&D. You shake it up and some days she doesn’t know how stairs work, or what side of a door to be on when it opens. She will literally change her habits every few months. So I don’t know what this will do to her. I hope, I guess, her brain just kind of forges ahead. Blissful ignorance. I know her heart won’t forget but her brain is definitely moth-eaten underwear and maybe that’s a nice protective way to be for yourself. We should all be so lucky.

I could talk about my dog all day and if you never met her I feel like that’s sad for you but maybe reading this you know her a teeny-tiny bit better. I can’t stand that she’s gone and I will miss her forever. She was the best dog we ever had — and no shade to out other dogs, they were the best too in their ways — and we’ll never see the like of her again.
We drove her home 14 years ago, and we drove her home again today.
I miss her.
I can’t stop crying at missing her.
I hate this, this fucking sucks.
Loa died today under an old, tall crabapple tree on a blanket set amidst a carpet of blooming violets. She was surrounded by her people. She is at rest.
She was a beautiful dog, so I feel it essential to show you with more photos.











And this is the last photo I took of her, from a good moment today:


leslieartist333 says:
There was a dog named Lola who lived next door to me and she was terrific, like a white twin to your canine American pal. Death so often sucks. When our fur roommates pass, it sucks worse. I feel your pain. I’ve had 3 cats that lived longer than 18 years each, and other pets longer than 10 and I can still think of them and cry. I don’t know why I can’t muster the same over people.
April 30, 2026 — 8:09 AM
Angelique Jean Fancher says:
Oh god, now I am crying as I look at my crabby old guy. We are facing the same issue with our crabby 80 year old man trapped in a Rottweilers’ body since he was born. I feel so selfish for wanting him to stay around longer. Our family and his pupper brother will be heartbroken when it is time. Here is to the fur babies that our the salve of our souls, we just don’t deserve them.
April 30, 2026 — 8:27 AM
River West says:
I’m so sorry, Chuck. What a gorgeous girl, and what a happy life we can see her living in those pics.
April 30, 2026 — 8:35 AM
Mike Cook says:
Damn man, now I’m crying too. I wish you and your family peace.
April 30, 2026 — 9:19 AM
mcmattie says:
What an incredible dog. I’m truly sorry for your loss.
April 30, 2026 — 9:32 AM
Ted Hobgood says:
I don’t think you could come up with a more conclusive scientific proof than this post. Loa clearly was the bestest doggo ever.
April 30, 2026 — 9:36 AM
ozzie says:
Beautiful.
April 30, 2026 — 9:49 AM
cmw says:
That’s what dogs do. Keep us company. Make us laugh. Love us when no one else will. And then they break our hearts.
April 30, 2026 — 10:28 AM
Ellen M. Gregg says:
Oh, Chuck… My heart is broken for you and your family. Bless your best dog, Loa, who you undoubtedly supported to that position by being her best dog dad. And bless you and your family for doing what was best for her, no matter how hard it was for you.
April 30, 2026 — 10:47 AM
Eva Porter says:
Well, now I’m crying with you. Our Cody had to leave us a couple of years ago and I still cry thinking about it.
Thank you for sharing your heart and your pictures. She was indeed a beautiful creation.
April 30, 2026 — 11:18 AM
Cathy says:
I’m so very sorry, and relate, as my little Buddy, the biggest pain in the ass in the tiniest body passed from a ruptured tumor about 10 days ago. Sleeping without him grumbling under my arm or farting in my face is difficult.
April 30, 2026 — 11:25 AM
csteeksma@gmail.com says:
Exactly how I felt when my best dog ever passed. I still can’t think about her too much and that was over 10 years ago. Can’t bring myself to get another dog, either.
Thanks for writing everything I felt and feel.
April 30, 2026 — 11:34 AM
marybeth griffin says:
I’m here sobbing my heart out because you have described her so well and I know that pain, I have lost my cats over and over again and they are all such good caretakers of our hearts, and they leave such a big hole when they have to go. I’m so glad you had time with Loa and I am sorry she was taken from you.
April 30, 2026 — 11:58 AM
Janet Smith says:
I’m so sorry for your loss, Chuck. I know how you feel, and my heart goes out to you.
Janet
April 30, 2026 — 12:09 PM
Nancy Forde says:
The sweetest face in the world. I’m gonna play Fred Eaglesmith’s “Good Dog” in her honour and memory. Dogs really are the best. Our hearts with yours and your family’s tonight.
April 30, 2026 — 12:33 PM
Susan says:
Glad you got to love her! Her memory is a blessing.
April 30, 2026 — 1:49 PM
Laura says:
My heart is filled with your sorrow. I also know what it’s like to have been graced with a one-in-a-million dog. We lost ours to cancer as well. It’s been seven years, and we’ve never healed.
April 30, 2026 — 2:31 PM
Sean says:
Loa sounds like a pretty damn good one, but I’ll fight you on the *best*. Because my Sarah was the best girlie… ❤️ https://titbisi.pika.page/posts/sarah-jane-smith-2014-2026
My sympathies to you and yours. And damn you for dusting up my place again.
April 30, 2026 — 2:53 PM
Bryon says:
A beautiful dog and a beautiful life. As our Vulcan friends say, “I grieve with thee.”
April 30, 2026 — 3:16 PM
Carly says:
Had to find a minute to read this when I could have a proper cry. I’m so, so sorry, Chuck. Thank you for writing this beautiful tribute and giving us a chance to get to know her (along with all the other wonderful photos and snippets you’ve shared over the years). Fuck cancer indeed.
April 30, 2026 — 5:44 PM
Widdershins says:
You fall in love with them … they die and break your heart … every fucking time … Bon Voyage Loa – best dog ever. 🙁
April 30, 2026 — 5:53 PM
Cynthia Loveland says:
Thank you for sharing Loa with us. I also only have rescue dogs (always and forever). They really are the best dogs. I’m so sorry for your loss. (I’m not crying. You’re crying.)
April 30, 2026 — 6:01 PM
Karen says:
I’m not even a dog person and I now love Loa. I’m so sorry for your loss. May she lean on your leg in your dreams.
April 30, 2026 — 6:01 PM
acflory says:
People who love furkids are the ones who make the whole of humanity worthwhile. Hugs.
April 30, 2026 — 6:22 PM
M.A. Kropp says:
Oh, I am so sorry. I just saw this and my heart is breaking for you. I remember when you got Loa. And I do know your pain. We lost my heart dog to fucking cancer in July and I still cry when I think about him. Like you, I will miss him forever. Again, I am so, so very sorry.
April 30, 2026 — 8:05 PM
Morgan says:
What a beautiful dog, Chuck! Loa and your family were blessed to have each other. Loved pets are harder to lose sometimes that some humans we may not have been as close to. Hang in there.
May 1, 2026 — 8:19 AM
angeliquejamail says:
This was an incredible, wonderful tribute to Loa, and the pictures really show what a delight she was and an important addition to your family. I’m so sorry for your very keen loss.
May 1, 2026 — 11:22 AM
rhumpelthreadz says:
I’m crying too. So sorry you lost her. So glad you got to love her.
May 1, 2026 — 11:13 PM