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For dog mums who knew

You weren't overreacting.

You noticed something was off. You brought her in. The vet said not to worry. Months later, you're still seeing the signs.

Your instinct was right. The professional was wrong.

"I knew."— the two words every dog mum eventually says.

The conversation you remember

What you saw. What they said.

What you saw

Title

· a subtle dip in her energy

· stool that just wasn't right

· she started scooting on the rug

· eating like normal, losing weight

· that look like something was off

What the vet said

Title

"it's probably nothing."

"dogs just do that sometimes."

"you might be overreacting a little."

"let's monitor it and see."

"come back if it gets worse."

It did get worse. And it turned out you were right all along.

The slow unraveling

Twelve weeks from "you're fine" to "it was parasites."

Week 1

You notice something's off

Quieter than usual. Softer stool. A small voice in you says: this isn't right.

Week 2

The vet says you're overreacting

Days 15–30: Coat begins to soften. The greasy texture disappears. Energy continues to climb. Digestion stabilizes.

Month 6

The symptoms get worse

Still scooting. Still off. Now there's intermittent diarrhea. You start Googling at midnight.

Month 12

Visible worms. Weight loss. Anemia.

The thing you suspected and were talked out of is now impossible to ignore.

TODAY

You were right.

It was parasites all along. You knew. You just needed someone to listen.

A quiet word, between us

You know her better than anyone in that room.

Vets are trained to triage. To rule out emergencies. To send you home unless something is actively breaking. They're not wrong for that it's the job.

But you live with her. You watch her every day. You notice the shift in her tail, the change in the bowl, the look in her eyes that no fifteen-minute appointment will ever catch.

You are not paranoid. You are paying attention.

Most supplements cover 1

Your dog needs all 4 pillars.

"My vet said it was nothing. Three months later, we were pulling worms out of her bedding. I'll never doubt myself again."

Marianne, 58 · Border collie mum

"He told me I was an anxious owner. I'm not anxious I'm observant. Turns out there's a difference."

Joanne, 62 · Two rescue mutts

"I felt silly bringing her back in. Then the test came back positive. The only person who took me seriously was me."

Helen, 54 · Cavalier mum

What comes next

Stop waiting for permission to help your dog.

Get the quiet, no-nonsense guide written for dog mums who already know something's off and are done being talked out of it. What to look for, what to do at home, and when to push back.

1. The seven subtle signs vets routinely miss
2. What to ask for at your next appointment (so you can't be dismissed)
3. Gentle, owner-led steps you can start this week

You are not paranoid. You are paying attention.

Try Para Klens

Disclaimer: I’m not a veterinarian—just a dog mom sharing what worked for me. This is my personal experience, and results may vary.