The shelter paperwork said "Hospice Foster." That is code for: He is dying, and nobody wants him to pass away in a cage. He was a 13-year-old Golden with a massive mass on his spleen. The vet gave him two weeks. Maybe three. They asked if I was sure. "It’s going to be hard," they warned. "Don't get attached." I signed the papers anyway. I decided we weren't going to spend the next two weeks waiting for him to die. We were going to live. His name is Charlie. And we made a "Bucket List." Day 1: Steak dinner. (He inhaled it in 4 seconds). Day 3: He slept in the "big bed" right in the middle of the pillows. Day 7: We went to the beach. I put a party hat on him and bought him his first vanilla soft serve. I took this picture, thinking it was the last one. But looking at his face covered in ice cream... he didn't look like a dog who was ready to go. He looked like he was just getting started. I took a gamble. I drove him to a specialist the next morning. I maxed out my credit card. "We can try to remove it," the vet said, looking at his muzzle. "But at his age? And with his heart? It's a coin flip. He might not wake up on the table." I kissed his head and let them wheel him away. I sat in the parking lot for five hours, staring at my phone, terrified I had made the wrong choice. The phone rang. He made it. The mass was benign. It was heavy, but it wasn't cancer. He came home three days later. That was six months ago. He put on five pounds. His coat got shiny. He’s currently snoring on my feet. He greets me at the door every day with a stuffed bear in his mouth. He wasn't dying. He was just heavy. He just needed someone to take the weight off so he could run again. #doglover #saveanimals #shelterdog #dogrecovery #saveanimals