Senior Dog Left With Heartbreaking Note After Owner Loses Home | The Animal Rescue Site
When staff arrived at Polk County Bully Project in Florida, they found a senior dog waiting quietly.
A note was pinned to her collar.
Her name is Diva.

Facebook/ Polk County Bully Project
Left in a Safe Place
According to Newsweek, staff said Diva had been “placed gently in our safe space.” She was around eight or nine years old and had once been named Pet of the Month at SPCA Florida before being adopted.
This was not a stray left in panic.
It was a careful goodbye.
Workers at the shelter later wrote on Facebook that “nothing makes your heart drop faster than that moment — realising someone had to make an impossible choice,” as reported by the Mirror.
A Note That Told Her Story
The handwritten message offered a portrait of a beloved companion.
“Fat but happy. Hips hurt when she wakes up. Amazing family dog,” the note read, according to the Daily Record.
It described a calm dog with “zero aggression” and “zero barking.” She knew her commands — sit, lay down, roll over, paw, and “be nice” when taking treats. She lived on a grain-free diet due to allergies and sometimes struggled with sore hips in the morning.
She was, in her owner’s words, “all the love.”
The final line explained everything: “Dad is homeless and unable to provide stable accommodation that she deserves,” the note stated, as reported by Newsweek.
Not Abandoned, But Loved
helter staff were clear about one thing.
Diva was not discarded.
“Her note… broke us. Not because she wasn’t loved… but because she clearly was,” the organization shared, according to the Daily Record.
They emphasized that her owner’s homelessness forced the separation. Loving her meant choosing safety.
“She lost her home, not her worth,” the group wrote, as cited by the Mirror.
A Call for a Soft Landing
Diva has since been taken in by a neighboring SPCA, staff confirmed in updates shared with Newsweek. Advocates are urging fosters and adopters to consider a senior dog who “knows what it means to belong.”
They do not want her final years spent in a kennel.
They want her on a couch again.
Somewhere stable.
Somewhere warm.