
On December 17, 2025, we rescued a small pitbull who could not stop walking in circles.
Endlessly. Relentlessly. As if his body was trapped in a pattern his mind could not turn off.
We named him Walker, not knowing yet how much weight that name would carry.
When Walker first came to us, hope led the way. We prayed it was something simple. Something treatable. Something temporary. We told ourselves it might be an ear infection, inflammation, vertigo. Anything that medicine could fix quickly.
The first tests gave us cautious optimism.
Blood work came back normal.
Biochemistry was clean.
Inflammation markers showed nothing alarming.
For a moment, we exhaled.
Then came the scans.
A CT scan ruled out inner ear disease. But it revealed something far more disturbing: two broken ribs. Injuries that did not match a fall. Did not match an accident. Did not match a car strike.
The veterinarian was careful with their words, but the truth was unmistakable.
This was not an accident.
Walker was beaten.
By a human.
That realization changes everything. It sinks into your chest differently. Because accidents are tragic, but violence is intentional. Someone raised their hand. Someone used force. Someone chose to hurt a defenseless animal and walked away afterward.
And yet, Walker did not walk away from humans.
That is what makes this so hard to comprehend.
Despite the pain, despite the trauma, despite a body that no longer fully obeys him, Walker is still here. He is present. He is aware. His eyes track movement. His tail wags when we enter the room. He comes when we call his name.
He lifts his paw gently for treats, like he has done it his whole life.
For brief moments, you could almost believe everything is normal.
Then the treats are gone.
The stimulation fades.
And the circling begins again.
Uncontrollable. Automatic. Heartbreaking.
A neurological loop his body cannot escape.
Sitting with him in the cold exam room, holding his small body close, one question echoed louder than the machines around us.
Where is the person who did this to him?
Are they living comfortably somewhere?
Sleeping peacefully?
Raising their hand again against another innocent life?
On December 20, 2025, the MRI gave us more answers.
No brain tumors.
No encephalitis.
No structural brain damage.
This was not disease.
This was trauma.
Neurological trauma caused by violence.
That distinction matters. Because it tells us something important. Walker’s condition is not something he was born with. It is not bad luck. It is not nature being cruel.
It is the aftermath of cruelty.
And that is where our responsibility begins.
We will not give up on Walker.
His care will not be defined by quick fixes or easy answers. It will be a combination of medical support and patience. Of treatment and time. Of managing pain while surrounding him with love, safety, and dignity.
Because Walker still knows how to love.
Because Walker still trusts humans.
And any dog who can endure abuse and still wag his tail deserves more than survival. He deserves a chance at a life where fear no longer dictates his every step.
Walker’s body may circle.
But his heart is moving forward.
And we will move forward with him.


