Okay, Silverspring....take a big deep breath.

The first thing you need to do is to see if he is breathing. He needs hydration. Fill a small water bowl with dechlorinated water to about 1/3" deep and let him sit in it. The water needs to be luke warm. Not cold and not hot. 80 degrees is perfect if you can test it with a thermometer.

He needs calcium. If he will eat, sprinkle 2 or 3 crickets lightly with amphibian or reptile calcium with vitamin D 3 powder. If he is too weak to eat, then get some Repta-aid/Reptaboost. Put a half scoop,using the scoop provided in the kit, into the water you soak him in. Let him soak for 30 minutes. Normally a 15 minute soak is good, but your frog is severely dehydrated. The layer on him is his she'd. He is not shedding it off because the skin is too dry and he is weak.

He should have a thermometer gauge and a hygrometer (humidity gauge). These are a must. His home should be misted with dechlorinated tap water or spring water. Not bottled drinking water. This is usually done 2 times per day. The goal is to keep his home at 80% humidity.

His home should be warmed to 80 degrees F. If his home is plastic, you'll have to heat from above. I would actually recommend getting a 10 gallon fish tank with a metal screen lid. I would purchase a dome lamp with a dimmer and a 40 or 50 watt heat bulb, no higher. Get the lamp with the dimmer so you can adjust the heat as needed. If you have extra money, I would also purchase a UTH (Under The Tank) heater. It looks like a heat pad. Only use it on a side of the tank, never the bottom. Pacman frogs live to bury in their substrate and will burn themselves. Putting it on one end is best, preferably towards the back. If you can afford any tank you want, I have found the exo terra and Zilla tanks with the front doors to work best for keeping moisture in, but, of course, a cheaper 10 gallon aquarium works just fine.

Adding more in just a few minutes. Getting my daughter ready for school.