Is your dog constantly pacing at night? Staring at walls? Panting even when the house is cool? Or maybe they just curl into a tight, tiny ball and refuse to relax? Then the issue has gone beyond simple restlessness.
It’s easy to feel helpless when your dog is miserable from non-stop anxiety. Even a subtle change in behavior, like following you from room to room or whining when the lights go out, can be a sign that something’s wrong. But it all leads back to the same thing. Their vision.
And where does the majority of your dog’s anxiety come from? That’s right—uncertainty. When a dog cannot clearly define their environment, it triggers a primal "fight or flight" response, which leads to those pacing and panting symptoms.
If ignored, these "silent" symptoms progress rapidly into chronic separation anxiety, until your dog is a complete nervous wreck. That’s why it’s so crucial to tackle anxiety at the source. A visually defined environment means a calm, confident dog.
You just need to recognize the signs.

