disabled dogs

Meet the Newest Dog to Get a Wheelchair Courtesy of The Frankie Wheelchair Fund

buckshot

Meet this handsome fellow named, Buckshot. He is the 35th lucky dog to receive a wheelchair through The Frankie Wheelchair Fund.

He is about 5 years old and went down last March. He is doing well walking on his own sometimes, but needs the aid of the wheelchair for other not so good times.  His owners hope that in time, he will gain all his strength back so he can walk completely on his own.

We hope so too, Buckshot!

Learn more about The Frankie Wheelchair Fund

You can learn more on our website, National Walk ‘N Roll Dog Day where you can apply for funds or donate.

We rely on the kindness and generosity of others to help disabled dogs in need of a wheelchair. This season of giving, if you are looking for a wonderful way in which to give back, perhaps you would consider a donation to our fund?  We’d be so grateful.  Wheelchairs cost anywhere from $385 for small carts up to $1,500 for large carts — so every little bit helps!

***Wheelchair I recommend and work with for The Frankie Wheelchair Fund is Eddie’s Wheels.

Letting Go of What Was. Ready to Explore New Territory. Thank You, Frankie.

soulcollage card

Frankie crossed my mind this morning. She often does. I welcome it. I cherish it. I find much joy in it. I no longer mourn her being gone, but am grateful she was part of my life.

To mourn her forever would mean, to me, that I wouldn’t be honoring her life and all the blessings she brought me.

She has been on my mind also as I’ve been working through a personal challenge. I’m happy to say I feel so much better after four weeks of guidance that I sought to help me through this.

While I don’t want to share the specific challenge, I will share that I discovered something that was buried. I was surprised this came up as I didn’t realize it was even there, nor did it particularly feel connected to the challenge I was going through.

But what I’ve realized is that I never fully mourned the loss of the work I did with Frankie. While I moved through the grieving process of losing Frankie herself, the work we did together visiting schools and doing therapy dog work, is something I was still hanging onto.

In part, because I didn’t know what the next leg in my journey looked like. I’m still not quite sure “what is next,” but after journaling through an exercise called transitional grieving, I literally felt this shift of energy in myself.

I now find myself celebrating all that it was – all those glorious years of work with Frankie – instead of wishing it never ended.

Celebrating all that I learned from Frankie which has made me who I am today. Celebrating how I grew through challenges of fear, talking in front of crowds, learning to write a book, sharing my voice and how I feel about dogs in wheelchairs and dogs with disc disease, worrying less about what others think of me, and letting that inner light of who I am shine through.

So as I get ready to embark on a new learning adventure, I smile because of her.

Friday I leave for a weekend training in Madison, WI to learn more about SoulCollage. A technique that has captured my fascination the last few months.

A process of listening deeper to our wise selves and capturing those whispers on 5 x 8 cards that you create individual collages from using images from magazines. The card above is one I created yesterday.

If not for Frankie, I don’t know if I would have been brave enough to do this training. For one thing, I’m going alone. I don’t know one single soul that will be there. The woman I knew ten years ago would have never done this.

Frankie is a big reason why I’m stronger today than years ago. More willing to take steps out into the world then before.

But it is all part of my souls plan — I see this — I see it in my recent challenge that I feel I’ve made great progress on also.

Frankie was, and continues to be my guide, as I step forward into new territory to be explored.

I think back fondly to the first day she took off in her wheelchair after not walking for three months from a diagnoses of disc disease which left her paralyzed.

How she encouraged me to be who I am by her example. To follow what makes my heart happy. To live fully.

So I carry her with me in my heart as I head to the training this weekend. Her life lessons still with me, and I have no doubt will always be with me until eternity.

Come Meet Sadie. 34th Recipient of a Dog Wheelchair from The Frankie Wheelchair Fund.

sadieThis past summer at a fundraiser for a local horse sanctuary, I met this beautiful dog named Sadie.

I would learn that she came from Kentucky two years earlier where she had given birth to puppies and was then shot in the head and the back, and left for dead.

It’s a gut wrenching story and pulled hard at my heart strings. My mind not able to wrap itself around why someone would do this.

The shot to her back is what paralyzed her and the bullet is still lodged in her spine. To remove it is too dangerous. But the bullet from her head was successfully removed.

She can hobble around, but also is pulled around in a wagon type device when she tires.

I wanted to see if I could help and asked if the owner, Joal, had tried a wheelchair for her and I told her about Eddie’s Wheels. She shared with me that a wheelchair had been donated from another company, but Sadie wouldn’t even stand up in it.

Because it wasn’t a custom-fitted wheelchair that was donated at the time, I felt perhaps a custom wheelchair may help Sadie. I told Joal about The Frankie Wheelchair Fund and said I thought it was worth a try. She agreed and was grateful for the help.

Joal has given all the best care to Sadie and Sadie has a great vet and physical therapist that is helping her. She is taking slow to the wheelchair, but I hope in time, it will become second nature for her.

While most dogs that need a wheelchair take to it almost immediately, some need more time and help. Such is the case with Sadie. But we aren’t giving up hope.

As long as she is willing to try, and that seems to be the case, then I’m so glad she has a wonderful team of people doing all they can to hopefully get her rolling soon.

To learn more about Sadie and follow along with her story, you can visit her on her Facebook page.

***Wheelchair I recommend and work with for The Frankie Wheelchair Fund is Eddie’s Wheels.

Learn more about The Frankie Wheelchair Fund

You can learn more on our website, National Walk ‘N Roll Dog Day where you can apply for funds or donate.