Natural Pets
Natural Pets
How to Reset Your Dog or Cat After the Holidays
"When the decorations come down, the cortisol levels should too. A pet's health reset starts with a quiet room and a predictable rhythm."
The post-holiday period is one of the most common times veterinarians and holistic practitioners see flare-ups in digestive issues, weight gain, sleep disruption, and anxiety in pets. These changes are often the result of short-term lifestyle stressors rather than long-term disease. Understanding how the holidays affect your dog or cat’s nervous system, gut, and metabolism allows you to reset their health in a way that supports healing, rather than masking symptoms.
1. Reset Sleep: Restoring the Circadian Anchor
The holidays often force pets into a state of "hyper-vigilance", staying awake to monitor guests or reacting to late-night noise. This disrupts their circadian rhythm, the internal clock that regulates hormones and cellular repair.
The Strategy: Rebuild predictability. Your goal is to signal to their nervous system that the "threat" of chaos is over.
The Reset:
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The 30-Minute Window: Choose a fixed time block each day, and make sure feeding and walking happen around the same time every day, within a 30-minute range.
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The "Sunset Ritual": Dim the lights and lower the TV volume an hour before bed.
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The Cat’s "Hunt-Eat-Sleep" Cycle: Cats are biologically wired to sleep after a "kill." Use a feather wand for 15 minutes of intense play, followed by their evening meal. They will likely sleep through the night.
Success Marker: Your pet stops "pacing" at night and settles into a deep, REM-heavy sleep without needing to check on you.
Based on a NC State University study, a healthy sleep routine for dogs looks less like “sleeping all night uninterrupted” and more like a predictable rhythm of activity and rest that mirrors human household patterns.
2. Reset Digestion: Healing the Microbiome
Rich holiday fats and sugary snacks are not good for the gut microbiome, often leading to low-grade inflammation or "leaky gut" symptoms.
The Strategy: Eliminate variables. We want to give the pancreas and intestines a period of "digestive rest."
The Reset:
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The Treat Fast: Pause all new or processed treats for 7–10 days. Stick to one single-ingredient snack if necessary.
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The Power of Fiber: Add a tablespoon of plain, canned pumpkin (not pie filling) to meals. The soluble fiber helps regulate both constipation and diarrhea.
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Probiotics: Add Probiotics or fermented foods (pet-safe) into their breakfast.
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Hydration Boost: For cats, add a splash of warm water to their wet food to help flush out excess sodium from holiday ham or turkey scraps.
Success Marker: Stools are firm, dark, and consistent, and that post-holiday "room-clearing" gas disappears.
3. Reset Weight: The "Metabolic Nudge"
A few extra ounces on a cat or small dog is the equivalent of a human gaining 10–15 pounds. This extra weight puts immediate pressure on the joints and can lead to lethargic behavior.
The Strategy: Focus on caloric precision rather than starvation.
The Reset:
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Ditch the Scoop: Use a gram scale. Volumetric "scoops" are notoriously inaccurate. Measuring by weight ensures you aren't accidentally overfeeding by 10%.
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Passive Exercise: Use puzzle feeders or snuffle mats. This forces the pet to move and think while they eat, burning calories through "NEAT" (Non-Exercise Activity Thermogenesis).
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Quality over Quantity: Focus on protein-rich, low-carb food to help maintain muscle mass while shedding holiday fat.
Success Marker: You can once again feel your pet's ribs without pressing hard, and they show a renewed "spring" in their step during walks.
4. Reset Stress: Decompressing the Nervous System
When the "high energy" of the holidays disappears, it leaves a vacuum that can manifest as separation anxiety or depression.
The Strategy: Transition from over-stimulation to meaningful connection.
The Reset:
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Licking vs. Chewing: Licking releases endorphins in dogs. A frozen lick mat with a bit of plain yogurt can lower their heart rate after you leave for work.
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Vertical Space for Cats: If your cat is still hiding under the bed, give them a "high" retreat, like a cat tree or a cleared-off shelf. Height equals safety in the feline world.
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The "Quiet Presence" Method: Spend 15 minutes a day just sitting on the floor with your pet--no phones, no training, just calm physical touch.
Success Marker: A reduction in "shadowing" (following you from room to room) and a return to confident, independent lounging.
The 7-Day Pet Reset Checklist
Check these off daily to help your pet transition back to a balanced state.

Final Thought
A healthy post-holiday reset isn’t about quick fixes or strict diets. It’s about helping your pet feel steady and safe again. When meals, sleep, and daily movement happen on a regular schedule, your pet’s body understands that the busy, stressful time is over and it’s okay to settle down.
These small, intentional changes don’t just ease things like gas or a little holiday weight. They help reset your pet’s overall health for the year ahead. Your pet doesn’t need a total overhaul, just a calm return to balance--with you as their guide.
REFERENCES
https://news.ncsu.edu/2020/12/study-adult-dogs-sleep/
https://drruthroberts.com/blogs/video/leaky-gut-immunity-inflammation-in-pets-with-dr-desmond?utm_s…{campaign}&utm_content=&utm_term=&gclid=CjwKCAiAzZ_NBhAEEiwAMtqKy5c2SpduqnVpRJw0ncwBqy4-mhky7oBCGO-0kvzbMskkpW---tL07hoC7CUQAvD_BwE&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23381850186&gbraid=0AAAAADmyS8NLOpvfwHxGf35XDWzzaIgxd&gclid=CjwKCAiAzZ_NBhAEEiwAMtqKy5c2SpduqnVpRJw0ncwBqy4-mhky7oBCGO-0kvzbMskkpW---tL07hoC7CUQAvD_BwE

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