About two weeks ago, 71-year-old Gary Van Horn was an emotional wreck.
His income — based almost solely on commission from his sales job and Social Security checks — had plummeted, like so many other things, due to the recession. A former pastor in Northern California, Van Horn worried daily about how he and his wife would pay the rent for their Costa Mesa home that month. They had to scrape by so much that they routinely had to set aside money just for rent, guaranteeing that if they could afford nothing else, they’d at least have a roof over their heads.
To top it off, one of the Van Horns’ last objects of joy and happiness, their 12-year-old Jack Russell Terrier, Knick Knack, was slowly dying because of a tumor on the side of her stomach.