Iāve been sitting here for days trying to write an editorial, and all I can think about is a dog. My dog, Trip. The paper goes to print soon, and the words Iām supposed to write about the world beyond my front door keep circling back to the space he used to fill.
Trip wasnāt just company. He was the soundtrack of daily life: the quiet thud of paws across the floor, the sigh when I stayed up too late, the soft insistence that it was time to walk, to move, to be outside. When you lose that rhythm, the silence feels enormous.
Itās strange how grief rearranges the familiar. The places we go every day, the trail, the kitchen, the passenger seat, all change shape. Thereās a ghost weight in the leash that isnāt hanging by the door anymore, a shadow that flickers in the corner of your eye.
And yet, this isnāt just about a dog. Itās about how intertwined our lives become with the beings who remind us to slow down, to notice, to live in the present tense. Thatās what Trip did best. No plans, no deadlines, no overthinking. Just curiosity, joy and loyalty.
We like to tell ourselves that newsrooms are about facts and deadlines. But theyāre also about the people and moments behind the stories. Every issue of Haida Gwaii News is stitched together by the lives we live in between: by the dogs that sit at our feet while we type, the coffee that goes cold beside the keyboard, the interruptions that remind us that life doesnāt wait for layout day.
I think thatās worth saying out loud.
Tripās passing reminded me that our communityās stories, even the small ones, come from that same place of connection. When someone writes about a lost pet, a rescued one, or a bear that wandered through the yard, those stories matter because they speak to something universal: how deeply we belong to this place and to each other.
On Haida Gwaii, life moves with a different kind of heartbeat. We notice the tides, the storms, the ravens, the driftwood that washes up in new patterns after a night of wind. We live close to everything, and that means we also feel loss close. When a dog goes missing, the whole island looks. When someone loses theirs for good, people reach out without hesitation.
Trip grew up on these beaches. He swam in the surf, rolled in the kelp, and followed me down muddy roads where no car should go. He had that easy island confidence, tail up, eyes bright, ready for whatever the day brought. He didnāt know stress or screens or inboxes. He knew smell, sound and instinct. Maybe thatās what I miss most: the simplicity of his joy.
Thereās a kind of wisdom animals carry that we donāt recognize until itās gone. They remind us that most of what we chase, perfection, control, productivity, isnāt the point. They measure their days by sunlight and company. By whether youāre there beside them.
In a newsroom thatās always pushing toward the next edition, thatās a lesson worth keeping.
This week, instead of an editorial about politics or infrastructure or ferry schedules, this is about gratitude. Gratitude for the beings who make us better without ever saying a word. For the walks that pulled me away from the desk. For the quiet companionship that filled the corners of this house.
Trip may be gone, but heās still here, in the rhythm of this place and in the calm between sentences. If youāve lost a pet, you know that feeling, the love that lingers long after the fur is gone from the floor.
Maybe thatās what an editorial is supposed to do: find meaning in the mess of ordinary life. Today, that meaning is simple. Hug your dog. Take the long walk. Sit outside for a while. The paper can wait a few minutes.
Stacey