Underestimating How Much the Right Products Matter

This post is part of Pomeranian Care, Simplified: a journal series about the small, foundational choices that quietly make life with a Pom easier over time.


A relaxed Pomeranian with a full double coat resting on a cushioned woven chair indoors, showing a calm, well-supported environment.

Early on, it’s easy to assume that most pet products are interchangeable.

A brush is a brush.

A bed is a bed.

Something inexpensive feels “good enough,” especially when everything still seems temporary.

Most people don’t realize how much these choices shape daily life until something starts to feel harder than it should.

Why the right products matter

Every product your Pom interacts with becomes part of their daily experience.

When something is poorly designed, that friction shows up in small ways:

  • a brush that pulls or catches

  • a bed that doesn’t provide joint support

  • stairs that wobble or feel unstable

  • a crate that feels confining instead of secure

Over time, those small moments add up. Not because a dog is sensitive or difficult, but because the experience itself isn’t working for them.

How to choose the right products

Across animal behavior and product design research, one idea shows up consistently: well-designed environments reduce stress by removing friction.

In practical terms, the right products tend to:

  • move smoothly instead of catching

  • support the body instead of working against it

  • feel stable, predictable, and neutral

When products do their job quietly, care becomes easier without requiring more effort from you—or more tolerance from your dog.

Beignet’s experience

For Beignet, the first “right” product we bought was a slicker brush.

We already had at least three dog brushes from our older, short-coated dog, so we thought: do we really need another one?

Yes. Yes, we did.

Brushing was always a hassle. We could tell he was uncomfortable, and his usually mellow self started trying to bite the brush just to make it stop.

After finally doing some research (embarrassingly late), we learned that Pomeranians have double coats, and that they need a very specific type of brush to avoid pain and pulling. That’s when we decided to splurge on a professional slicker: the Chris Christensen Big G.

The difference was immediate.

Beignet stayed relaxed. We could brush longer. He looked calmer.

Nothing else changed, just the tool. And it changed the entire experience.

Other ways this can look

For walking, that might mean a rolled leather harness that is trachea-safe and doesn’t mat the fur.

For rest, it can look like a bed that actually supports joints and encourages deeper sleep.

For movement, it might be stairs or ramps that feel solid enough to trust.

Different dogs notice different things. What matters is paying attention to where friction shows up—and choosing products that reduce it instead of adding to it.

The overall takeaway

Good products don’t replace calm handling or thoughtful routines.

But once those foundations are in place, the right pieces can make daily life feel noticeably smoother—because nothing is fighting back.

Care works best when it fades into the background.

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Best Brush for a Pomeranian Double Coat (Tested & Recommended)

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When Grooming Problems Start Long Before the Groomer