This week on ‘What goes on in the dog trainer’s head’:
What is the best formula to create a really, really, REALLY bad dog?
What a strange question!
Why would any dog owner want to create a really,
really, REALLY bad dog?
I’m being sarcastic, of course. No owner wants a bad dog...but so many of you out there have absolutely perfected
the formula to create one.
And when a dog trainer gives you the counter-formula to undo the damage you’ve done, you push back - sputtering excuses, professing hurt feelings, saying you don't have time to put in the work, or questioning the very advice & answers that would help you and your dog…
...All because you don’t like what we're telling you.
Sound harsh?
Well, let’s take a look at reality.
Here are some actual quotes from Dog Trainers’ notes, after their first training session/evaluation with real owners - owners who report desperately wanting to improve their dogs' behavior:
“…this dog has not been given any boundaries, and walks all over his people - demanding attention, jumping up, counter surfing, etc.”
“This dog NEEDS more training, firm boundaries, and leadership… “
“This dog has WAY too much freedom.”
“Very little boundaries or expectations for this pup.”
“This dog does not seem to have a whole lot of boundaries at home and owner seems to be very inconsistent.”
“[Dog] is very pushy and aggressive towards other dogs, especially on leash; has little to no boundaries right now…”
“He is a very smart cookie, but needs firm boundaries.”
“She needs some very clear boundaries…”
“…this dog needs clear leadership and boundaries…”
“It is clear this boy has had no boundaries/rules for his 2 years of life.”
I could go on
and on, but you get the picture. And I’m
sure you notice the pattern.
The Perfect Formula
for creating a neurotic, or reactive, or aggressive, or generally pushy,
unruly & unbalanced (or all of the above) dog is…
Dear dog owners – you can’t have it both ways.
You can’t have a dog with no boundaries or rules, who is ALSO well behaved.
You can’t
have a dog who bolts through doors, steals food from the counters, snacks
out of the litterbox, jumps on you and your guests, guards his bedding (or
yours!), pulls on the leash, steals your socks, destroys your
couches, or rugs, or other valuables, and completely ignores you and everything you
say - and then expect that same dog to behave beautifully out in public, or when visitors arrive.
Dogs NEED rules and boundaries to be mentally sound and stable. Even more, they need rules to fully enjoy their lives with us.
"I don't actually care if he's perfect on the leash. I just want him to stop lunging at other dogs.""I can't live with my dog the way you trainers live with yours. It seems so strict. I actually like that he barks at people. It means he'll protect me. I just don't want him to bark at everyone.""But [biting dog's name] is our baby. We can't kick him off the bed!" <~~~ from an owner whose husband is now sleeping on the couch because the dog won't allow him in the bed with her. I can't make this stuff up.
These are the same owners who don't see the connection between the dog who who jumps up on them, demanding attention whenever it wants (attention the owners then unfailingly deliver), and the dog who has such extreme separation anxiety it has to be heavily medicated when they leave the house for even a few minutes."I don't see how teaching him to behave in the house is going to help him out on walks."
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