@the_jay_young: Kat #idaho #viral #trending

⚡️🎱jay_young🎱⚡️
⚡️🎱jay_young🎱⚡️
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Monday 09 June 2025 22:06:07 GMT
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usernameisiv
usernameisiv :
Do you have a instagram?
2025-06-11 17:05:16
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duane.morris4
duanemorris57 :
hey
2026-03-09 07:36:08
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landoncullens37
🛻LANDON CULLENS🇺🇸 :
fire nails
2025-06-27 03:33:19
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dantepena222
Dante Pena G :
🥰
2025-06-10 03:50:23
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bchino7
🦎 :
🥰🥰
2025-06-09 22:34:40
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duhhhwitt02gb
Ole Dewitt :
✅ W 🐱 🔪
2025-06-09 23:43:18
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I named her Annie. She was estimated to be in her early twenties, and according to the veterinarian, the fracture in her leg likely happened when she was very young. Somehow, she survived with it for years.  Looking at her, you could see it. The pain wasn’t just in her leg. It was written across her face, in the way she carried herself, in the exhaustion that only comes from enduring something for far too long. When Annie entered the auction ring on Sunday, there was no happy ending waiting for her. There was no future where she became a riding horse again. There was no miracle treatment that was going to erase decades of suffering. There was only one thing left to give her: dignity. When the bidding was missed and she was sold elsewhere, I stopped the auction. Not because I needed to save her for myself, but because I wasn’t willing to let her final chapter be written by indifference. Annie deserved someone to see her. To advocate for her. To make sure her pain ended with kindness instead of fear. People often think rescue is only about saving horses from one destination or another.  The truth is that rescue is much bigger than that.  Rescue is showing up for the horse standing in front of you and doing what is right, even when it is hard. Rescue is putting the horse first. Every single time. I wasn’t going to put Annie on a trailer and ask her to endure another two-hour ride when a veterinarian was already there. She had carried enough. She had suffered enough. She had waited long enough. This video was taken during our final walk together as we headed down to meet the veterinarian.  Annie left this world knowing that someone cared. That someone saw her. That someone chose her.
I named her Annie. She was estimated to be in her early twenties, and according to the veterinarian, the fracture in her leg likely happened when she was very young. Somehow, she survived with it for years. Looking at her, you could see it. The pain wasn’t just in her leg. It was written across her face, in the way she carried herself, in the exhaustion that only comes from enduring something for far too long. When Annie entered the auction ring on Sunday, there was no happy ending waiting for her. There was no future where she became a riding horse again. There was no miracle treatment that was going to erase decades of suffering. There was only one thing left to give her: dignity. When the bidding was missed and she was sold elsewhere, I stopped the auction. Not because I needed to save her for myself, but because I wasn’t willing to let her final chapter be written by indifference. Annie deserved someone to see her. To advocate for her. To make sure her pain ended with kindness instead of fear. People often think rescue is only about saving horses from one destination or another. The truth is that rescue is much bigger than that. Rescue is showing up for the horse standing in front of you and doing what is right, even when it is hard. Rescue is putting the horse first. Every single time. I wasn’t going to put Annie on a trailer and ask her to endure another two-hour ride when a veterinarian was already there. She had carried enough. She had suffered enough. She had waited long enough. This video was taken during our final walk together as we headed down to meet the veterinarian. Annie left this world knowing that someone cared. That someone saw her. That someone chose her.

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