Tuesday - The Quiet Cries: Chronic GI Inflammation
Simcha Hub of Pet Physiology
The Quiet Cry Almost Every Dog Parent Misses
And it usually happens after dark.
There’s a dog behavior almost everyone has seen, but almost no one has ever been taught to interpret.
It’s small. It’s rhythmic. It’s easy to ignore. And it usually shows up after midnight.
A dog quietly licking their paws.
Not obsessively. Not dramatically. Just enough.
Most people shrug it off.
“Just allergies.”
“Just a habit.”
“Just being a dog.”
But here’s the part no one tells you:
They do it at night for a reason.
Something in the body changes after dark.
Something rises. Something whispers.
And the paws are simply where the whisper escapes.
If you’ve ever wondered why your dog seems “itchier” at night,
or why the licking starts after dinner, or why the paws become the outlet,
there’s a story behind it. A quiet one. A biological one.
And once you learn to read it, you’ll never unsee it.
This is the kind of thing I decode inside my community
the signals your dog’s body has been trying to tell you long before anything becomes “a problem.”
Because sometimes the body tells a story we can’t see, yet.
There’s a moment in every field where the tools finally catch up to the questions.
For years, we've been watching behaviors, mood, skin, digestion, and even “quirks” of our pets and asking: “Is there a way to actually see what’s happening inside the gut?”
Until recently, the answer was: Not in a way that gives us meaningful, actionable physiology.
But that’s changed.
And today, I get to share something exciting:
I’ve partnered with one of the companies that produces high‑quality gut microbiome tests for pets.
I partnered with them because:
  • the technology has finally matured
  • the data now reveals patterns we’ve been talking about for years
  • the results help us understand the "why" behind behaviors, inflammation, and chronic issues
  • and it gives pet parents a way to see the “quiet cries” long before they become loud ones
This partnership is about education. . It’s about clarity, not fear. It’s about giving people a window into the physiology beneath the surface, the part that’s been whispering all along.
If you’ve ever wondered what your pet is trying to tell you, we finally have a way to listen.
More coming soon.
If you want to learn the reason of these quiet cries, you’re invited.
Click the link. The full class will be posted this evening.
Come share pictures of your pets. Dog, cat, horse, pig, cow, goat, donkey, exotic animals. I love them all.
Come share pictures on the Memorial Wall of your pets/animals that you have lost and share their story.
IT'S FREE TO JOIN
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Dr. Peninah Wood Ph.D
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Tuesday - The Quiet Cries: Chronic GI Inflammation
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