logo
Senior Rescue Dog Who 'Lived Outside For 15 years' Making Up For Lost Time

Senior Rescue Dog Who 'Lived Outside For 15 years' Making Up For Lost Time

Newsweek06-06-2025

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
A rescue dog who has spent almost all of her life living outdoors is finally getting to experience some much-deserved home comforts.
Veronica Pflueger, a development director at Hope Animal Rescue, a non-profit in North Carolina, shared footage to her Instagram, @wethreepitties, showing the moment she found 17-year-old rescue dog Sheba enjoying a nap on her bed.
It's well-earned to say the least. "Sheba was surrendered to a local county animal in May of 2023 after her previous owner unfortunately lost his housing and couldn't take her with him," Pflueger told Newsweek.
"She was 15 at the time and had spent her entire life living outside prior to being surrendered. The first half of her life was spent on a chain. Then another local non-profit provided and built a metal run and enclosure for her outside so she would at least be unchained."
Sheba has fully converted to becoming an inside dog who loves nothing more than napping.
Sheba has fully converted to becoming an inside dog who loves nothing more than napping.
wetheepitties/instagram
Pflueger first met Sheba after the local shelter reached out to Hope Animal Rescue for help. "Given Sheba's age at the time she was surrendered and the condition she was in—she had skin issues, oral issues, and was heartworm positive—she was an urgent placement need for the shelter so they reached out to see if we had a foster home available," she said.
Pflueger has been fostering dogs for a decade but had never taken on a senior dog before. She found herself drawn to helping Sheba though.
"For whatever reason I couldn't get her out of my head and no one else or any other rescues were willing to take her so we said yes," Pflueger said. Having initially agreed to foster Sheba, within months Pflueger had decided to adopt. They recently celebrated two happy years together with Sheba, now 17, transformed from a struggling senior shelter dog to an "indoor couch queen that enjoys the finer things in life."
Those finer things include frequent naps, regular snuggles with one of Pflueger's other dogs and being petted by her husband. "I think she might be in love with him," Pflueger said. Sheba also helps look after any of the new fosters that arrive in the house.
Read more
Most popular dog breeds with Gen Z, X, millennials and baby boomers
Most popular dog breeds with Gen Z, X, millennials and baby boomers
"Sheba is in retirement," Pflueger said. "She had never had a comfy dog bed before, let alone a couch or human bed to sleep on. Once we introduced her to these comfy spots, she decided that's where she was always meant to be and we'd often find her jumping up on the couch or choosing to wander down to our bedroom for an afternoon nap in our bed."
Pflueger shared heartwarming footage to her @wethreepitties Instagram showing Sheba making up for lost time with a nap on his mom's bed. On the clip, which has been viewed 2 million times since being shared in February, Pflueger can be seen going over to pet her pooch companion and, for a brief moment, it looks as if Sheba is smiling.
"There is honestly nothing better than seeing a dog who lived outside for 15 years sleep peacefully on a comfy, cozy bed," she said. "It may seem like an insignificant thing for lots of other dogs, but for her those moments are everything because she quite literally never had that before."
Sheba might have lived much of her life as an "outdoor dog" but most experts agree there is no such thing. As Rob Halpin from Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals explained to The Dodo: "Keeping pet dogs outside consigns them to a life of loneliness and frustration.
"Dogs are highly social animals whose ancestors and cousins—the wolves—live in packs. Wolves hunt together, sleep together and play together," he said. "Dogs don't have packs. They only have us. Depriving dogs of human companionship by forcing them to live outside blunts their natural desires and is its own form of animal cruelty."
The thought of Sheba spending all that time outside is difficult for Pflueger to contemplate. "It honestly breaks my heart to think that she spent 15 whole years sleeping on the ground or in a plastic igloo... especially given how much she LOVES all of the comfiest spots in our home," she said.
Thankfully, that's all in the past now. "When we took her in, we vowed to make sure she was comfy and cozy and in a peaceful and warm environment for the rest of her life," she said.
It's a promise Pflueger has certainly delivered on.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Therapist Mom Shares Simple Phrases She Teaches Her Kids to Stay Safe
Therapist Mom Shares Simple Phrases She Teaches Her Kids to Stay Safe

Newsweek

time2 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Therapist Mom Shares Simple Phrases She Teaches Her Kids to Stay Safe

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A mom of two has shared the five phrases she's taught her kids to keep them safe. Colorado-based Andrea Brambila (@brambila_bits) posted a carousel on Instagram outlining the key language tools she's learned counseling kids as a therapist who's "seen too much." "Are these ground-breaking, earth-shattering phrases? No!" Brambila wrote in her caption. "But they have helped both of my children feel confident advocating for themselves." Mom Andrea Brambila and her 3-year-old daughter in the kitchen with their backs to the camera. Mom Andrea Brambila and her 3-year-old daughter in the kitchen with their backs to the camera. @brambila_bits "I need some space" is the first phrase her 3-year-old daughter learned to say when she's feeling overwhelmed or frustrated, particularly if she's playing with another child. It's become a healthy outlet that helps her avoid lashing out physically and instead set boundaries clearly and calmly. "Clearly asserting her need for space to feel safe and comfortable is a lifelong skill," Brambila wrote on the text overlay. "I don't keep secrets from mommy and daddy." This phrase, Brambila said, is especially crucial in protecting children from potential grooming by predators who often create secrecy and a false sense of specialness as a way to manipulate their victims. "Teaching my kids to say out loud that they will not keep secrets in and of itself makes them a less desirable target because it signals that they won't likely keep anything inappropriate to themselves," she explained. According to Brambila, many children she's worked with have expressed that something felt "off" in how an abuser interacted with them, but they didn't have the language—or confidence—to say so. Giving kids permission and power to decline uncomfortable interactions by saying: "I don't want to play like that" can be a protective factor. "I've encouraged my kids from day one to express when they aren't comfortable with someone's behaviors, and my husband and I have shown that we will help them protect their boundaries when needed," Brambila wrote. Respecting boundaries is also key for her children's safety. "You need to respect my boundaries" is a phrase Brambila often hears from her daughter. Whether it's another child ignoring her requests for space or a situation where she feels pushed, the mom sees this phrase as a verbal shield her kids can carry into adolescence and beyond. "Hearing her advocate for herself in this manner will immediately take note, and I hope she'll carry this language with her when she begins dating," she said. Brambila's post has received over 82,000 likes, and she was praised for her advice in the comments by hundreds of other Instagram users. "It's so sad we have to do this but all so true. Thank you for these tips. I have two young girls and teaching them the power of their voice is so important in this world," a fellow mom wrote. "Love this, will be using these for my kids," another user added. Brambila is clear with her followers and explained that she doesn't live in fear as a parent. "But when it comes to safety, teaching how to be proactive is always a priority for me," she concluded.

My kid didn't get invited to a party. It triggered my own childhood memories and we learned to deal with disappointment together.
My kid didn't get invited to a party. It triggered my own childhood memories and we learned to deal with disappointment together.

Business Insider

time4 hours ago

  • Business Insider

My kid didn't get invited to a party. It triggered my own childhood memories and we learned to deal with disappointment together.

It started with a whisper. "Everyone else got one," my daughter said to me, her eyes locked on the floor. "I was the only one who didn't." The birthday party was shaping up to be one to remember. The one everyone was buzzing about during recess, in the lunch line, on the walk home. The one that she heard would have an inflatable obstacle course, unlimited cupcakes, and glitter tattoos. The one she didn't get an invitation to. My heart ached for her There's a particular kind of heartbreak that happens when your child feels excluded. It sneaks up on you — not like a sharp jab, but a slow implosion. You don't just witness their disappointment; you absorb it. I watched her try to act like she didn't care, her voice a little too steady, her face a little too still. I knew that look. I've worn that look. At first, I tried to do the responsible parent thing. "I'm sure it wasn't personal," I offered. "Sometimes kids are only allowed to invite a few people." But the words felt flimsy, like duct tape over a cracked dam. I knew how she felt What I didn't say was that her hurt was waking something up in me — something old. I remembered the birthday party I missed in third grade because no one told me about it. The group photo I saw later, full of faces I thought were my friends, still sticks in my mind. The sick swirl in my stomach, is the same one I felt now as I watched my daughter blink back tears with her own experience of being left out. I learned something new about parenting This experience could have easily been about how to handle exclusion as a parent — how to build resilience, encourage empathy, or plan a better party of your own. But what I've learned is less clean than that. I learned that part of parenting is being powerless. You can't smooth every rough edge or rewrite every social dynamic. Sometimes, your job is just to sit beside your kid in the muck of it. To let them cry, to let yourself feel angry, and to know that fixing it isn't always the assignment. I also learned how quickly my own insecurities rush in through the back door. Was it something we did? Something she said? Something I said? I caught myself scanning through Instagram posts, wondering which mom made the guest list, who drew the invisible circle we now stood outside of. That impulse, to decode the rejection, to find logic in something inherently unfair, was as much about me as it was about her. What surprised me most was what happened the next day. She packed a little note in her backpack for the birthday kid. "Happy birthday," it read. "Hope you have fun." No bitterness. No spite. Just kindness. My daughter, in all her smallness, did what I hadn't even figured out how to do yet: move forward without letting the hurt define her. And maybe that's the only real takeaway I have. That sometimes, our kids teach us the grace we're still trying to learn. That their pain, while gutting, can also be a portal for connection, for healing, for re-parenting ourselves through them. She never got that invitation. But what we gained, quietly and without fanfare, was something else: the chance to walk through disappointment together, hand in hand. And that, to me, feels like something worth celebrating.

US Bombs Iran: A Closer Look at the B-2 Bomber Used in Strikes
US Bombs Iran: A Closer Look at the B-2 Bomber Used in Strikes

Newsweek

time7 hours ago

  • Newsweek

US Bombs Iran: A Closer Look at the B-2 Bomber Used in Strikes

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. As U.S. B-2 stealth bombers launched from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri on Saturday and later struck Iran's Fordow nuclear site in the largest B-2 operation in U.S. history, Newsweek spoke with Naveed Jamali, the only journalist to fly and film inside all three U.S. bombers, for insight into one of America's most secretive weapons. Stealth Characteristics The U.S. fleet of 19 B-2 Spirit bombers forms part of the airborne leg of America's nuclear triad—a trio of land-, sea-, and air-based deterrence and attack capabilities. The bombers, designed for low observability, are inherently "stealth" aircraft capable of delivering both conventional and nuclear payloads. Each bomber can carry a payload of up to 40,000 pounds. A B-2 Spirit stealth bomber flies overhead as part of a flyover from nearby Whiteman Air Force base on April 28, 2020, in Kansas City, Missouri. A B-2 Spirit stealth bomber flies overhead as part of a flyover from nearby Whiteman Air Force base on April 28, 2020, in Kansas City, Missouri. AP Photo/Charlie Riedel One of the B-2's defining stealth features is its ability to minimize radar detection, with the U.S. Air Force noting it's due to a "combination of reduced infrared, acoustic, electromagnetic, visual and radar signatures. These signatures make it difficult for the sophisticated defensive systems to detect, track and engage the B-2." While some aspects of its ability to maintain "stealth" are classified, the Air Force has noted that its "composite materials, special coatings and flying-wing design," all contribute. On Sunday morning, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman General Dan Caine said during a press conference that a "large B-2 strike package comprised of bombers" launched from the U.S. on Saturday as part of "Operation Midnight Hammer." "Part of the package proceeded to the west and into the Pacific as a decoy, a deception effort," he added. A defense official told Newsweek two B-2s were used in Saturday night's bombing. Jamali, who filmed and flew aboard one in 2023, told Newsweek, "If the B-2 wanted to leave Whiteman with no one knowing, they could do it," noting that it was intentional messaging by the U.S. Air Force that the bombers were reportedly en route to Guam. Following Saturday's bombing and Sunday's military reports, Jamali told Newsweek on Sunday, that the two waves of B-2s further underlines the "stealth" nature of them, as "one wave—that everyone was tracking—went to Guam, and a second, completely unknown wave went to bomb Iran." He noted that "these weapons are primarily about deterrence," given their lethality. When Jamali flew in one, the call signal was "death—there's no mistaking what that call sign means." The B-2 bombers involved in the U.S. military mission that dropped more than a dozen Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP) bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities departed Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri early June 21. The strikes occurred between 6:40 p.m. and 7 p.m. ET, with the bombers exiting Iranian airspace by 7:30 p.m., according to the Department of Defense (DOD). The aircrafts returned to the base Sunday. "We are unaware of any shots fired at the Package on the way out. Iran's fighters did not fly, and it appears that Iran's surface to air missile systems did not see us throughout the mission, we retained the element of surprise," Caine said. The mission was "the largest B-2 operational strike in US history, and the second longest B-2 mission ever flown," Caine said. A defense official told Newsweek via email on Sunday, "I cannot give you the flight time, but we routinely do 30+ hour sorties when needed." The B-2 bomber is built for long-range missions. In 2001, two B-2s flew a non-stop 44-hour mission from the U.S. to strike targets in Afghanistan before returning home, with several in-air fuelings. The stealth bomber's unrefueled range is approximately 6,000 nautical miles. Midair refueling is always a precise and skilled maneuver, but possibly even more so for B-2 pilots, Jamali said, as the refueling receptacle is located considerably behind the cockpit, limiting the pilots' visibility. "With most aircraft, you can see where the probe is going, but in B-2s you basically have to fly under the tanker," he said. "You can't see the receptacle because it is all the way behind the cockpit." Inside the B-2 Unlike the B-1, which has a crew of four, or the B-52, with a crew of six, the B-2 is operated by two pilots, a setup that makes its cockpit "much more spacious than other bombers," Jamali said, adding that there's even room for sleeping bags, as "it's not uncommon for one pilot to sleep while the other flies and to take shifts." The cockpit, while roomier than those of other bombers, still remains tight, with Jamali describing it as an "industrial setting" that is "by no means built for comfort for the pilots." The pilots, who are fitted with flight suits, oxygen masks, and helmets, sit in "incredibly uncomfortable ejection seats," Jamali said. He noted that pilots have to train extensively for long-duration missions, telling Newsweek that "in order for them to be operational, they have to fly a 24-hour, like a full day, in the simulator." A defense official told Newsweek that the planes are equipped with a toilet, but not a full bathroom. The aircraft, which Jamali described as "deceivingly big," stands 17 feet tall, requiring a ladder to get into it. The bomber stretches 69 feet long, with a wingspan of 172 feet. The aircraft weighs around 160,000 pounds. Although B-2 stealth bombers have been operational for 30 years, much about the jet and its operations, remains classified. Jamali noted that, unlike some of the other bombers, B-2s are stored in specialized hangars designed to protect their secrecy and shield them from both satellites and espionage efforts. Following the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear sites, Jamali said, "The B-2, a 30-year-old jet, just demonstrated how relevant and lethal America's long-range stealth bomber force is."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store