@use74037: 💙🕋💙🕋💙🕋💙🕋💙🕋💙🕋💙

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Saturday 04 December 2021 16:38:40 GMT
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mustakimsekh04
⚔🇮🇳السَــــــلاَم علیکم🇧🇷⚔ :
💪🖤💪🖤💪🖤 🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋🙋 تم اكسبلور تم اكسبلور
2021-12-04 16:50:37
3
norhikmah30
Nor Hikmah :
good night
2021-12-04 16:53:50
3
harunorrashid6430
Harun🎤🎧🎤টাংগাইল সদর :
আমিন
2021-12-04 18:09:12
2
ranayamin97
ranayamin97 :
@ranayamin97:::⊱𝐒𝐨 𝐍𝐢𝐂𝐞⊰❁💐 ══🍧➤─🔴
2021-12-04 18:21:18
2
baccumiah539
MD BACCHU MIAH 539 :
আমিন
2021-12-04 19:02:46
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This kind of healing breaks my heart. Coming into a new home is, in itself, a trauma—and being immobilized in wraps is another. I’m doing everything I can to give him a human standard of care. Before I place him in the wraps and again before I take him out, I warm him on a heating pad (level two, nothing too hot) with a blanket over him. It’s not just for comfort—it’s to prepare his muscles. Because just like when we realign teeth, or reposition a tilted pelvis, or adjust a winged scapula, you can’t move the body without some degree of stiffness and pain. That discomfort doesn’t mean the process is harmful—it means the body is responding, changing. The heating pad helps reduce that discomfort by softening the tissues before manipulation. My hope is that over time, his limbs will begin to stiffen into the corrected position, even outside the wrap. But while we’re getting there, I want to make this process as gentle as I can. I play classical music for him to keep his nervous system calm. I’m also exploring the idea of hydrotherapy—but not yet. Once he’s standing straighter, swimming might help get all four limbs moving in a gentle, supported way. It’s something we offer to dogs, and I think it could help not only with mobility but also with hygiene challenges like poopy butt that sometimes come with wraps. But right now, his limbs need more structure before we consider that. We’re taking him to the vet on Monday. All of his joints still fold into proper positions without much resistance, which is promising. But I want a full palpation and to know if the vet recommends imaging. It seems like a straightforward presentation, but I want to be sure.
This kind of healing breaks my heart. Coming into a new home is, in itself, a trauma—and being immobilized in wraps is another. I’m doing everything I can to give him a human standard of care. Before I place him in the wraps and again before I take him out, I warm him on a heating pad (level two, nothing too hot) with a blanket over him. It’s not just for comfort—it’s to prepare his muscles. Because just like when we realign teeth, or reposition a tilted pelvis, or adjust a winged scapula, you can’t move the body without some degree of stiffness and pain. That discomfort doesn’t mean the process is harmful—it means the body is responding, changing. The heating pad helps reduce that discomfort by softening the tissues before manipulation. My hope is that over time, his limbs will begin to stiffen into the corrected position, even outside the wrap. But while we’re getting there, I want to make this process as gentle as I can. I play classical music for him to keep his nervous system calm. I’m also exploring the idea of hydrotherapy—but not yet. Once he’s standing straighter, swimming might help get all four limbs moving in a gentle, supported way. It’s something we offer to dogs, and I think it could help not only with mobility but also with hygiene challenges like poopy butt that sometimes come with wraps. But right now, his limbs need more structure before we consider that. We’re taking him to the vet on Monday. All of his joints still fold into proper positions without much resistance, which is promising. But I want a full palpation and to know if the vet recommends imaging. It seems like a straightforward presentation, but I want to be sure.

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