SAFE Now Animal Rescue & Foster

SAFE Now Animal Rescue & Foster We're an Animal Rescue & Foster group that is dedicated to Saving Animals From Euthanasia. We get dogs with no options and help them find their own family.

It has been a long time planning and some major life changes have occurred, but SAFE Now Animal Rescue and Foster is now officially licensed by the Illinois Dept. of Agriculture and is ready to start...
Saving Animals From Euthanasia Now.

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12/05/2025

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I broke a heart last Tuesday. It didn’t happen in a courtroom, or during a fight with my husband, or on a cold phone call with a bill collector.

It happened in my kitchen. And the heart I broke belonged to the only soul on this earth who has never, not once, judged me.

My name is Sarah. I’m 52 years old, living in the suburbs just outside of Chicago. Like so many of us right now, I am tired. I’m part of that "sandwich generation"—worrying about my aging parents, worrying about my kids trying to survive this economy, and trying to keep my own head above water in a corporate job that demands 24/7 availability.

My days are measured in Zoom notifications, rising gas prices, and the constant, low-level anxiety that hums in the background of American life right now. We are a culture obsessed with speed. We are addicted to "next." Next meeting, next paycheck, next weekend.

And then, there is Rusty.

Rusty is my Golden Retriever mix. He is fourteen years old. In human years, he is nearly a centenarian.

His hips are stiff. His coat, once a burning autumnal red, is now the color of sugar-dust and snow. He sleeps twenty hours a day. When he walks, his nails click rhythmically against the hardwood floors—a slow, syncopated ticking clock that reminds me time is running out.

He used to be a blur of motion. When the kids were in high school, he’d meet me at the door with a vertical leap that could clear a fence. He was chaos and joy wrapped in fur.

Now, when I turn the key in the lock, there is no jumping. There is just a slow, heavy thump from the living room rug. He lifts his heavy head. His cloudy eyes find mine. He waits for me to come to him.

Last Tuesday, it was raining. A cold, miserable Midwestern rain. I was wrestling with three bags of groceries—which, thanks to inflation, had cost me nearly $200 despite containing very little. My phone was buzzing in my pocket. My boss was asking for a file I thought I’d sent an hour ago.

I kicked the door shut behind me, water dripping down my neck, my stress levels red-lining.

I turned toward the counter, and there he was. Rusty.

He had gotten up to greet me. He was standing directly in my path, his tail giving a low, slow wag. Thump. Thump. Thump.

He just wanted to say hello. He just wanted to smell the rain on my coat.

But I almost tripped over him. The milk jug slipped in my hand. The phone buzzed again.

And I snapped.

“Rusty, move! God, get out of the way! Not now!”

The words came out sharper than a knife.

He didn't run. He didn't cower. He’s too old for that, and he trusts me too much. instead, he just... stopped.

He froze mid-step. His ears, soft as velvet, pinned back slightly. His tail stopped moving. He looked at me with those deep, brown, soulful eyes, and the confusion in them crushed me.

He wasn't scared. He was heartbroken.

It was a look that said: I just wanted to be near you. Why is that wrong?

The silence in the kitchen was louder than any scream.

In that split second, the facade of my "busy, important American life" crumbled.

I dropped the bags on the counter. I ignored the buzzing phone. I looked at this creature who has been with me through two presidencies, one divorce, three job changes, and my youngest son leaving for college.

I looked at his gray muzzle. I looked at the way his back legs trembled slightly from the effort of just standing there to greet me.

I realized something terrifying: He wasn't "in the way." I was.

I was in the way of the only thing that actually matters.

We Americans are so proud of our hustle. We wear our exhaustion like a badge of honor. But my dog? He doesn't care about my 401k. He doesn't care if the house is messy. He doesn't care about my title or how many likes I get on a photo.

He just wants me.

I sank to my knees on the cold kitchen floor, right there in my wet coat.

"I'm sorry, buddy," I whispered. "I'm so, so sorry."

Rusty didn't hold a grudge. Humans hold grudges; we stew in our anger for days. Dogs forgive before the apology is even finished.

He took one stiff step forward and leaned his entire weight against me. He rested his heavy chin on my shoulder and let out a long, warm sigh. It was a sound of pure contentment. He was absorbing my stress, taking my bad day and neutralizing it with nothing but his presence.

That night, as the rain turned to snow outside, I sat awake and made a new vow. A vow that has nothing to do with New Year's resolutions or career goals.

I realized that Rusty lives in a time zone I have forgotten. He lives in the Now.

He doesn't save his love for the weekend. He doesn't wait until his schedule clears up to be happy to see me. For him, every single second I am in the room is the best second of his life.

So, I made a list. Not a grocery list, but a Life List for the time we have left:

When he nudges my hand while I’m typing: I will stop. The email can wait 30 seconds. His need for a touch cannot.

When he sniffs the same blade of grass for five minutes: I won't tug the leash. I won't check my watch. I will stand there and let him read the news of the neighborhood. He is reading the world in a way I will never understand.

When he falls asleep on my foot: I will not move. Even if my leg falls asleep. Even if I need a refill on my coffee. I will be his anchor.

When he looks at me: I will look back. Fully. Not over the top of my smartphone. Not while glancing at the TV. I will look into those eyes that have watched me age, and I will let him know he is seen.

We often think we take care of dogs. We feed them, we pay their vet bills, we buy them beds.

But the truth is, they take care of us.

They anchor us to the earth when the modern world tries to blow us away. They remind us that loyalty isn't a contract; it's a heartbeat.

One day, probably sooner than I want to admit, the clicking of those nails on the floor will stop. One day, the rug by the door will be flat and clean. One day, I will come home with groceries, and the house will be perfectly, devastatingly quiet.

And I know, with absolute certainty, that I would give every dollar in my bank account just to trip over him one more time.

The Lesson:

If you are lucky enough to have a dog waiting for you at home tonight, or a cat purring on the sofa, please listen to me.

Put down the phone. Forget the news cycle for an hour. Ignore the mess in the kitchen.

Get down on the floor with them.

In a world that is constantly screaming at us to be faster, richer, and better—our dogs are quietly whispering the only truth that matters:

You are here. I am here. And that is enough.

Their time is short. But their love? It’s the only thing in this life that is truly forever.

Don't wait until they're gone to realize they were the best part of your day.

10/04/2025

RIP Jane Goodall ❤️
The world has lost an amazing woman and animal advocate this past week. She was probably most well known for her work with primates. However, she loved and advocated for all animals. But do you know Jane Goodall’s favorite animal?

Spring is here and so are mosquitos! 🦟 If you do not keep your dog on preventative all year, it is time for bloodwork an...
04/29/2025

Spring is here and so are mosquitos! 🦟
If you do not keep your dog on preventative all year, it is time for bloodwork and filling the heartworm prescription.
I know the cost of bloodwork and the prescription for preventatives is not cheap but trust me when I tell you treating your dog for this deadly disease is much more expensive and the treatment is hard on your dog.

It isn’t always just how you train them.   Breeds bred for specific purposes play a role in the Nature vs. Nuture debate...
12/02/2024

It isn’t always just how you train them. Breeds bred for specific purposes play a role in the Nature vs. Nuture debate. A dog’s breed will usually impact its personality, energy level, behavior, etc. Please be realistic when deciding what dog to add to your family. Consider your experience, lifestyle and the time you have available to spend training, working with and exercising your new dog. If you can’t meet its needs you could end up with a dog who has behavioral problems.

The problem with gatekeeping breeds

Anyone who has spent more than a minute online in dog world will have seen the rhetoric of how it takes someone very special to own a power breed such as a Belgian Malinois or a Cane Corso or an APBT or the like. Social media platforms are filled with posts either showing these breeds doing incredible things, or posts about how you should never get a breed like this unless you are going to work them and unless you are able to fulfil their needs. These posts are spot on and I couldn’t agree more. But they are creating a problem.

Everyone thinks they are special.

It’s a bitter pill to swallow.

As humans we have an ego and our ego often leads us to believe we are more capable than we are. The problem with gatekeeping breeds is that it makes them more desirable. People want to say ‘yes I can handle my Belgian Malinois because I am special’. We desperately need approval and admiration from others, especially in a world that is chronically online.

We saw it happen real time with the XL Bully. People saw this incredibly powerful breed and said ‘I’m special enough to handle one of them’ and then promptly bred them in the hundreds of thousands leading to many ill equipped homes owning a dog they absolutely could not handle.

The truth is, that to own a truly intense, working bred dog, you actually need to have an incredibly small life. You need your entire being to be obsessive about training, handling and working with the dog. It’s a full time career in itself to truly meet the needs of these dogs. You need to be absolutely addicted to it. That level of obsession however isn’t ‘cool’ or ‘sexy’. It doesn’t make for great online content either. That level of obsession however is what makes the dog easy to live with.

Even as I’m writing this, I know someone out there will read it and go ‘yes I can do that’. If you’re that person, please really look inward and be truly honest with yourself. Confront your ego.

I work at a rescue centre and years ago all we had was bull breeds, terriers and lurchers. Now all we have is fad colour Frenchies, Cane Corsos, Shepherds and Malinois/Dutch Shepherds. It speaks volumes.

I don’t know what the solution is. The more we say ‘not everyone can handle this breed!’ The more that is perceived as a challenge to the ego, and the more the ego grabs at a chance to prove itself.

We are heading down a very dark road of breed bans and dog legislation and those of us in the industry can see the patterns unfolding. We don’t know how to stop it, or even if stopping it is the right answer.

The issue is that our human egos and our desperation to be seen as ‘worthy’ is ruining our dogs and creating real danger for the general public.

Look inward. Really question why you want a certain breed. Take pause from the online rhetoric on both sides. Choose a dog that you and those around you need, not just one that you want.

- Kahla

📸 Alison Bowkett

Keep your pets SAFE inside your home when the fire works start.  A startled, scared dog may bolt, and once a scared dog ...
06/11/2024

Keep your pets SAFE inside your home when the fire works start. A startled, scared dog may bolt, and once a scared dog starts running they can go far and end up lost.

This may be true, partially true or maybe it isn’t.  I know Binti is afraid of many things and an ‘abrupt change in ligh...
04/05/2024

This may be true, partially true or maybe it isn’t. I know Binti is afraid of many things and an ‘abrupt change in light’ probably would scare her. Maybe it’s best to err on the side of caution?

Monday April 8th is a solar eclipse in IL and a few other states
Please be mindful of the eclipse for you & your pets. 🌕🌔🌓🌒🌑☀️
Check your location for the time frame and keep your pets indoors

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Wilton Center, IL
60442

Telephone

(815) 592-4140

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