Is Your Dog Losing Vision? Nutrition That Supports Eye Health

Is Your Dog Losing Vision? Nutrition That Supports Eye Health

During the show “1000 Why – 4 Therefore,” a question was raised about a dog with spots on its pupils. The veterinarian explained that cataracts can develop in later years. The owner wanted to try a treatment with cold-pressed castor oil, one drop each evening. Many owners have reported the same issue: their dogs suddenly lost sight or experienced a gradual decline in vision. Such problems are often not purely ophthalmological but also immunological and metabolic. Understanding the human dog relationship and its impact on health is the first step toward healing.

The Eyes Reflect Inner Health

Just as the eyes can be affected by diabetes, visual degeneration in dogs indicates a deeper imbalance in the body. The eye is difficult to regenerate, but it’s not impossible to stop degeneration. The goal is not to “fix the eye” but to stop the process that breaks it down.

We return to the relationship with the dog, reducing stress, and applying the principles of holistic care. Stress is one of the main triggers of diabetes and autoimmune diseases. It disrupts mineral balance and weakens the microbiome, which is the foundation of immunity. Poor nutrition—too many carbohydrates and sugars, and too few proteins—further worsens the condition. In this process, the adrenal, thyroid, and parathyroid glands are often affected, leading to increased acidity in the body and a range of symptoms, including eye problems.

Castor Oil and Alternative Approaches

Experiences with castor oil vary, and there is no universal solution. Before treating the symptom (the eyes), it is important to understand the cause, because loss of vision is only a signal of a deeper problem within the dog’s body.

The eyes are part of a complex system, and if your dog has vision problems, ask yourself:

  • What is my dog trying to show me through this symptom?

  • Why does my dog not “see”? What in our human dog relationship or environment remains unseen?

By working on nutrition, reducing stress, and restoring emotional balance, you help the body stop losing function and begin the process of healing.

 

Homemade Dog Kibble: My Recipe and Experience

 

A dog and owner making deep eye contact, representing the human dog relationship and emotional balance

Trust and closeness — the foundation of a dog’s health and emotional balance.

 

Eye Health Diet for Dogs

This diet is designed to strengthen the immune system, support eye health, and balance the dog’s body through natural ingredients.

Ingredients

  • 450 g lean ground beef

  • 85 g beef liver, chopped or ground

  • 115 g beef heart, chopped or ground

  • 170 g spinach

  • 85 g carrot, chopped or ground

  • 3 eggs (without shells)

  • 55 g mussels (well rinsed; canned is acceptable)

  • 1 pear

  • 3 teaspoons finely ground almonds

  • 3 teaspoons finely chopped mint

  • 55 g sardines in water (added at mealtime)

  • 1 flat teaspoon kelp powder (added at the end)

Note: Give eggshells only to puppies, not to adult dogs.

Preparation

Grind and mix all ingredients into a uniform mixture.

Cooking methods:

  1. In the oven at 160°C for 30–45 minutes.

  2. In a slow cooker on low for 4–6 hours.

After cooking, let it cool completely. Add powdered supplements (like kelp) only after the mixture has cooled. If using capsule supplements, open them and mix the contents evenly into the food. Grind nuts and seeds before adding them. Freeze portions you won’t use within 72 hours. Frozen food retains nutritional value for up to 3 months.

Daily feeding amount: about 3% of your dog’s ideal body weight.

Important Note

Avoid fish oils as a source of omega-3 fatty acids because toxins from polluted waters remain in the fatty tissues of fish. Instead, use flaxseed oil or pumpkin seed oil, added just before serving.

In Conclusion

Eye health does not depend solely on local treatments but on the overall balance of the body. Proper nutrition, stress reduction, and emotional stability can help slow down or stop the degenerative process. When your dog begins to see clearly again, it’s a sign that there is more light and balance in your human dog relationship too.


At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we believe that precision in nutrition is a reflection of our care. When we measure with love, we feed the soul. Explore our philosophy: Linktree Sasha Riess

 

Natural Remedy for Giardia in Dogs: A Simple Home Recipe for Gut Health

Natural Remedy for Giardia in Dogs: A Simple Home Recipe for Gut Health

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Giardia (Giardia lamblia) can seriously impact a dog’s gut health and immune system. While it is a persistent parasite, a supportive natural remedy for giardia in dogs can help strengthen the microbiome and aid the body in fighting the infection. This recipe is simple to prepare at home and completely safe for your companion.

How to Make the Natural Giardia Remedy

The base of this remedy is fresh buttermilk, which provides essential probiotics.

  1. Prepare the Buttermilk: Pour 1 liter (about 4 cups) of unsweetened cooking cream into a blender and blend until it turns into a buttery consistency.

  2. Separate: Transfer the butter into a strainer, drain the excess liquid into a bowl, and rinse the butter under cold water.

  3. The Result: The remaining liquid is your fresh buttermilk. If you don’t have enough, you can substitute it with high-quality kefir.

Preparing the Herbal Ingredients

Herbs like marjoram and oregano are nature’s answer to parasites. In a mortar, place 4 tablespoons each of the following:

  • Marjoram

  • Thyme

  • Oregano (fresh if possible)

  • Dill

Gently crush them to release their natural aroma and potent nutrients.

Combining and Storing the Mixture

Add all the crushed herbs into a glass jar with half a liter (2 cups) of your homemade buttermilk or kefir. Mix well, close the lid, and store it in the refrigerator for 24 hours. This allows the herbal properties to fully infuse into the liquid

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Sasha Riess preparing a natural remedy for giardia in dogs using fresh buttermilk and herbs

Sasha Riess demonstrates how to prepare a natural supportive remedy for giardia in dogs.

 

Dosage and Use

To get the most out of this natural remedy for giardia in dogs, follow this specific protocol:

  • Days 1 & 2: The dog should fast. Only bone broth is given to rest the digestive system.

  • Day 3: Give 1 tablespoon of the mixture per 22 lbs (10 kg) of body weight, four times a day.

  • Days 4–7: Feed a light diet (like the carrot soup and rice mentioned in our previous guides).

  • The Follow-up: Continue providing buttermilk or kefir for another 6 to 8 weeks to fully restore gut flora.

This preparation helps reduce the number of parasites, supports gut flora, and improves digestion during recovery and detoxification.


At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we believe that precision in nutrition is a reflection of our care. When we measure with love, we feed the soul. Explore our philosophy: Linktree Sasha Riess

 

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Janissary Dogs: The Betrayal of Instinct and the Price of Our Emptiness

Janissary Dogs: The Betrayal of Instinct and the Price of Our Emptiness

The Janissary Dog: Sorrow and the Absence of Instinct in the Modern Human Dog Relationship

There is a phenomenon rarely spoken about, something we have done slowly, quietly, and almost imperceptibly across generations, as if it were a natural process. Dogs as a mirror of society. We speak about dogs, our most loyal companions, but not in the romantic sense we are used to. We speak about how we turned one of humanity’s oldest allies into our own janissaries. Not in the historical military sense, but in a symbolic, psychological, and systemic one.

Deformation of the Human Dog Relationship: The Loss of Role and Original Nature

We created beings separated from their origin, from their inner order, from their primal nature, and reshaped them to serve our needs, our projections, and our wounds. We did this under the disguise of care, safety, love, and modern civilization. The result was not harmony, but a deep deformation of the relationship between human and dog.

Loss of Role, Loss of Health

When I observe a dog in the modern urban environment, I often ask myself how much of it is still a dog, and how much has become a product of our neuroses, fears, inner emptiness, and unfulfilled needs. Historically, janissaries were children taken from their families, torn from their origin, religion, and culture, then reeducated to completely forget who they were before becoming instruments of another will. When applied to dogs, the same pattern emerges.

We took away their instinct. We took away their right to movement. We took away the role that defined them for millennia as beings maintaining balance in nature. Their original purpose was clear. To guard territory. To inform the pack. To maintain the rhythm of village life. To hunt. To herd. To accompany humans as partners in the real world, not in a simulation of life.

In the modern human dog relationship, the dog has lost its purpose. Not because nature demanded it, but because we assigned a new purpose that serves our emotional deficits. Today, the dog exists to fill what we fail to fill in human relationships. To be therapy. To be an emotional prosthesis. To be a living cushion for comfort, a living charger for belonging, a living neutralizer of loneliness, frustration, and inadequacy. In this process, the dog disappears and only a function remains. The original identity is lost, and what emerges is what we metaphorically call a janissary.

The Price Paid: The Janissary as a Psychological Pattern

The most painful part is that most people believe they are helping the dog. The truth is far darker. A dog that is no longer allowed to move freely and be a dog will not develop emotional or physical stability. It becomes frustrated, tense, energetically overloaded, and neurologically imbalanced. This is a dog no longer living from the inner order of nature, but reacting impulsively to the environment imposed upon it.

It is a dog born and raised without understanding its own role. A dog that spends most of its life waiting for a human to explain what is allowed and what is forbidden. A dog that does not govern its body, but oscillates between shutdown and explosion. A dog that no longer knows how to be a dog, but knows how to react to human emotional disturbances. A dog that guards the human instead of guarding space. A dog that reacts to trauma instead of choosing function.

A Mirror of Human Nature

In Chinese medicine it is said that whoever loses their role loses their health. This applies to humans and animals alike. When we take away a dog’s role, we remove part of the inner order from which vitality flows. The result is a dog in constant energetic conflict. A dog that ignites easily, collapses easily, withdraws easily, and becomes reactive. A dog that is simultaneously too much and too little. Too much energy without structure and too little safety without stability. This is the psychological pattern of the janissary. A being removed from its source and placed into an unnatural relational matrix, where it learns to live for another’s will and stability.

 

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Extreme control: A dog in an urban setting, restricted by a tight leash and rules

In trying to protect dogs from the world, we protect them from themselves. We have normalized extreme control.

 

Fear of Instinct: Sterilization as Systemic Control

As a society, we have normalized extreme control. Collars. Leashes. Restricted movement. Prohibited socialization. Banned instinctive behavior. Banned barking. Banned courting. Banned territorial marking. All justified as being for the dog’s own good. It seems we fear allowing the dog to be what it is. Like a parent too afraid to let a child fall, holding them so tightly they never learn to walk.

In trying to protect dogs from the world, we protect them from themselves. We create generations of dogs who never learn stability because they never experience their own motor intelligence, territoriality, and energetic boundaries.

These processes are not accidental. They reflect our relationship with our own instincts. As we treat dogs, so we treat our own nature. People afraid of their inner strength fear the dog’s strength. People afraid of emotional freedom fear canine freedom. Those who have not integrated their inner wolf cannot allow their dog to remain a descendant of wolves.

Such a human reshapes the dog into a pleasant, obedient, functional janissary who emits what the human cannot feel. The dog becomes an emotional filter and absorber, carrying tensions, sorrows, fears, and guilt that are not its own.

Another form of systemic manipulation appears in the idea of sterilization as a universal solution. Behind the mask of humane population control lies a deeper dynamic. When we say the only solution is removing a dog’s sexuality, we prefer a dog weakened along its vital axis. A dog without hormones is a dog without part of its life force. Like a janissary severed from origin, the dog is cut from biological wholeness. There are situations where sterilization is responsible, but what we live today is a mass practice driven by comfort rather than necessity. We prefer dogs without passion, without drive, without instinctual energy. Dogs that do not initiate, demand, or claim space. Dogs that fit our mold. That is the janissary. A living being whose strength is adjusted to the needs of its owner.

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A dog returned to itself: An autonomous and stable being choosing its relationship in nature

A dog returned to itself becomes stronger and more stable. Order comes before obedience.

 

Returning to Ourselves: How to Break the Janissary Cycle

The Return of Natural Order

As long as we believe harmony means the dog ceasing to be a dog, we live in an ideological relationship, not a natural one. We have placed dogs into a system that suits us, not them. We hold them hostage to our ideas of order, cleanliness, peace, and emotional relief. Then we are surprised by explosions of reactivity, fear, neurosis, aggression, excessive attachment, or total apathy. This is not canine pathology. It is the consequence of an imposed system.

A janissary was never aggressive by nature, but by growing within a distorted identity space. The same applies to dogs and humans who lose touch with their nature.

There is a way out. We do not return dogs to themselves through more control, but by allowing them to feel their place again. Not as humans define place, but as nature defines it. This is the return of order. Not the order of obedience, but the order that existed before human rules. An order where every being has a role. Where every being has the right to be what it is. Where humans are not masters of canine destiny, but partners in a shared field of life.

When a human truly sees the dog before seeing the role they need it to play, the transformation stops. The dog is no longer shaped into a janissary, but returned to itself. A dog returned to itself becomes stronger, calmer, more stable, more present, and more fulfilled. It is no longer an extension of human emotional deficiency, but an autonomous being choosing relationship rather than merely reacting to it. The human no longer gains an obedient subordinate, but a living partner.

If we want healthy dogs, we must become humans who live with healthy instincts. If we want free dogs, we must become humans capable of freedom without fear of our own strength. If we want to stop creating janissary dogs, we must stop living as people who turned their wounds into identity.

A dog living beside a stable human will never become a janissary. A dog living beside a wounded and lost human will always carry that burden. The question is not about dogs. It is about us. The dog is only the mirror. And in that mirror, we see everything we are running from. As long as we run from ourselves, we will create janissaries. When we stop running, we begin returning dogs what belongs to them. And in doing so, we return to ourselves what we lost long ago.


At Sasha Riess Wellness, we strive to restore the natural order of the human dog relationship. We move beyond emotional projections to find true partnership. Explore our philosophy: Linktree Sasha Riess

 

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My Dog Ate Something: How to React and Prevent Poisoning

My Dog Ate Something: How to React and Prevent Poisoning

Dogs are naturally curious creatures — and sometimes that curiosity gets them into trouble. From foods that can harm them, like chocolate, to everyday objects that can cause digestive issues, every owner should know how to react when their dog eats something they shouldn’t. Understanding dog poisoning prevention is the first step in keeping your companion safe.

What If Your Dog Eats Chocolate?

Chocolate is one of the most common — and most dangerous — foods for dogs. It contains theobromine, a compound their bodies cannot break down. Even a small amount can cause diarrhea and vomiting, while larger amounts may lead to serious poisoning.

If this happens, owners can give activated charcoal as first aid — ideally by syringe directly into the dog’s mouth. Activated charcoal isn’t absorbed by the digestive system; it binds toxins and prevents them from spreading further through the body.

Recognizing the Signs of Poisoning

After your dog eats something suspicious, watch carefully for the following symptoms:

  • Frequent vomiting

  • Diarrhea

  • Weakness or drowsiness

  • Tremors or restlessness

If you notice any of these signs, contact your veterinarian immediately. Activated charcoal can help as an emergency measure, but a professional exam is essential for effective dog poisoning prevention and treatment.

Should You Induce Vomiting?

Many owners try to make their dogs vomit at home — but that can be dangerous. Never do this without your vet’s guidance, as it can worsen the situation depending on what was ingested (especially if the substance was corrosive or sharp). Each case must be handled according to professional assessment.

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A veterinarian examines a dog in a clinic, stressing professional care for dog poisoning prevention

If your dog shows any signs of poisoning, seek immediate professional veterinary care.

 

Prevention Is the Best Cure

Keep all food and objects out of your dog’s reach. Teach clear commands like “leave it” or “drop it” to reduce the risk of swallowing harmful items.

And if an accident happens — stay calm, give activated charcoal, and seek veterinary help right away. Remember: the goal is not just to react, but to prevent. A moment of caution can save your dog’s life.


At Sasha Riess Wellness, we empower owners with the knowledge to act swiftly in emergencies. True dog poisoning prevention starts with a safe environment and a prepared mind. Discover more safety tips: Linktree Sasha Riess

 

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Natural Remedy for Dog Diarrhea: Carrot Soup – A Simple and Effective Home Remedy

Natural Remedy for Dog Diarrhea: Carrot Soup – A Simple and Effective Home Remedy

If your dog has diarrhea, a natural remedy can often be both gentle and effective. Sasha Riess shares a trusted traditional recipe — carrot soup (purée) and rice with lean white meat — that helps dogs recover quickly and naturally.

When Your Dog Has Diarrhea — What Owners Should Know

As someone who has worked with dogs and their health for many years, I often receive worried messages: “What should I do if my dog has diarrhea?”

It’s a common issue — dogs have short digestive tracts and are very sensitive to dietary changes. But it’s important to understand that diarrhea in dogs doesn’t always require medication. In many cases, a natural approach is the best first aid.

 

A Traditional Recipe That Works

There’s one simple, time-tested home remedy I always recommend — carrot soup, or potage de carottes. This humble recipe doesn’t just stop diarrhea — it soothes the stomach, restores strength, and helps bring balance back to the digestive system.

Why Carrots Help

Carrots are rich in natural fibers, vitamins, and nutrients that calm and heal the stomach and intestines. That’s why this traditional recipe remains one of the most effective and gentle natural remedy for dog diarrhea options available today.

 

How to Prepare Carrot Soup for Dogs

Ingredients and Preparation

  • 500 g (about 1 lb) of carrots

  • Water (just enough to cover the carrots in a pot)

     

Cut the carrots into larger pieces and boil them until soft. Then blend them with the water they were cooked in until you get a smooth, creamy soup.

Tip: Don’t open the lid too often during cooking — it helps preserve vitamins and minerals in the water, keeping the soup as nutritious and effective as possible.

Supportive Diet for Dogs with Diarrhea

In addition to carrot soup, a second daily meal can include cooked white rice mixed with boiled chicken or turkey breast, with just a pinch of salt. This combination is gentle on the stomach and intestines, helping the dog regain energy while calming digestive discomfort.

 

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A smooth carrot soup in a white bowl, a traditional natural remedy for dog diarrhea

Carrot soup, or potage de carottes, is a gentle and effective traditional home remedy for diarrhea in dogs.

 

 

How Fast Does It Work?

From my experience, results can be seen within a couple of days. The stool becomes firmer, the dog’s energy returns, and overall mood improves. Owners are often surprised at how quickly this simple homemade recipe helps.

The Simplest Solutions Are Often the Best

Over the years, I’ve learned that traditional recipes hold timeless wisdom. Carrot soup is a perfect example — natural, inexpensive, safe, and effective. If your dog develops diarrhea, try this gentle method before turning to medication. Sometimes, the simplest remedies bring the greatest relief.


At Sasha Riess Wellness, we believe in the power of nature to restore balance. When you choose a natural remedy for dog diarrhea, you are supporting your dog’s innate ability to heal. Explore more tips: Linktree Sasha Riess

 

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