The cat you remember —
without the prescription.
A four-ingredient nightly dropper for the indoor cat whose nervous system never quite gets to switch off. Melatonin, ashwagandha, L-theanine, and valerian — calibrated for cats, dosed in food, gentle enough for a senior.
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Indoor Nervous-System Overload.
Your cat is not broken. She's not anxious because of a personality flaw, and you didn't cause this by moving, or by getting another cat, or by going back to the office.
She's responding to her environment — and her environment, biologically, is harder on her than most people realize. Cats evolved for low-density, low-light, low-noise, predator-aware open space. Their nervous systems are calibrated for a rustle in tall grass, not for an apartment with a vacuum, a doorbell, a notification chime, a baby, another cat, and overhead light that doesn't dim with the sun.
What it looks like in your house.
She over-grooms.
Sometimes to bald patches. The same spot on her side, her belly, her back legs — licked thin from chronic, unconscious stress.
She hides.
Under the couch, behind the bed, in the closet. For hours. For days. The friendly cat you adopted has become a cat who watches you from a corner.
She doesn't sleep.
Yowling at 3am. Pacing the bedroom. Restless against the windowsill. And neither do you, because she keeps waking you up.
She vomits.
Not hairballs. Not bad food. Mid-day, mid-meal, sometimes mid-purr. The vet rules out everything medical, and the vomiting still keeps happening.
She sprays.
Outside the box. On the couch. On the rug she's been sleeping on for three years. Furniture you've already thrown away once or twice.
She fights.
With the other cat she used to nap with. Hissing in the hallway. The household tension that's been quietly building since the kitten, or the move, or the new schedule.
These aren't personality flaws. They're not bad behavior. They are a nervous system asking for an off-switch it doesn't have.
Kitly Calm is that off-switch.
See how it works →
"I built this because nothing on the shelf worked for Cleo and Cora."
My two cats were vomiting daily. The vet ran every test, prescribed every diet, and finally told me: "This is stress." Then she wrote me a script for fluoxetine.
One week on it and Cleo wasn't herself anymore — pupils dilated, hiding deeper, not coming when I called. I pulled her off it that Sunday night and started reading.
Five months later, after dozens of journals and a long collaboration with Dr. Patricia Demitro — a Fort Collins DVM with twelve years in feline health — we had the formula. Four ingredients, in a dropper, dosed in food. Cleo and Cora were the trial.
Three weeks in, they were back. The cats I remembered. That's the only reason Kitly exists.
Start with one bottle.
See a different cat in 30 days.
Two drops, twice a day, in her food. That's the whole protocol. If by the end of week four you don't see a different cat in your house, we refund every dollar.