Pawsitive Motion Dog Training

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Pawsitive Motion Dog Training Effective training for an inclusive dog-family life. Methods are tailored to your dog's needs & personality. There is no "one size fits all" training method!

I enjoy doing things differently than most other trainers. A big part of that is by spending more time with you, without breaking the bank. A longer session helps to ensure you have a full understanding of the learning process. I do not just train your dog then hand you the leash on my way out. Teaching you the specifics of how to train your dog will give you a much higher level of success. What m

ethod do I use? Whatever works for *your* dog. I'm not locked in to one method or follow "trends". Dogs are all individuals, like us. The only "fluff" you get, is from your dog. You get truth. You get answers & you get results!

This is why I stress the importance of everyone being on the same page & only one person at a time giving commands. http...
08/01/2025

This is why I stress the importance of everyone being on the same page & only one person at a time giving commands.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1BBSGRPfku/

Your dog's behavior is a reflection of YOU.

The young couple sat side-by-side in the training studio; their adolescent, mid-sized dog dithered between the legs of one owner while the other owner reached down to stroke the dog intermittently. As the dog’s movements became more agitated, the owner would stroke the dog faster, occasionally snatching at the leash in an attempt to get the dog to ‘settle’.

The owner actually holding the leash would alternately gather leash to inhibit the dogs movements, or allow leash as the dog weaved its way between their legs and the chair legs, or when the other person started tugging on it, which caused them to loosen their grip. Frustrated, that owner would also occasionally jerk the leash in an attempt to settle the dog down.

Four hands on one dog. None of them in helpful ways.

My husband’s sudden appearance from the doorway behind us set off a barrage of barking and hysteria, and both owners simultaneously tried unsuccessfully to console, reprimand, or redirect the dog’s behavior.

On multiple occasions, I gently suggested not petting the dog at all, and to control the leash length so the dog couldn’t continue to oscillate between each owner.

Predictably, the dog started to wind up like a kid’s toy. His behavior amplified by the realization that his owners were no longer paying him any mind. What was initially just simple movement between the two people became a bizarre carnival of clawing and jumping to seek that affirmation which had come without effort just moments before.

The dog would alternate jumping on each owner, causing the other to try and discourage the dog by grabbing at it, or by pulling on the leash. The victim would start with admonishing the dog, offering it treats, then eventually petting it because that was the only thing that seemed to calm the dog down.

After several re-enactments of the same scene, I took the dog from them, and retreated back to my seat.

As the dog tried to scrabble back towards the owners, it didn’t take too long for the dog to figure out that comfort was no longer available from them, so the dog started on me. Nosing my hand, pawing my lap, trying to weave between my legs as I sat, crawling under the chair I was sitting in, etc.

Every attempt to elicit attention was met with emotional neutrality and leash management to keep the dog off of me and out of my personal space. I was not going to reinforce this dog’s emotional vampirism.

That nervous arousal is a feedback loop that creates an endless re-direct and affirms the dog’s behavior is a reflection of you and your responses to its actions.

What you allow *does* continue.

After about 25 minutes, the dog resigned himself to his fate, laid down at my feet and remained there quietly.

I cannot count the times this behavior reveals itself during most of the evaluations I conduct. The proclivity of owners to micromanage their dogs’ behavior is only matched by their desire to do it in stereo.

When I finally started to move with the dog, immediately the same behaviors resurfaced, alternating between escape and appeasement. Each of the owners alternated with a constant litany of “suggestions” until I had to remind them that they had come to me for help, not the other way around.

As I coached each owner on appropriate leash management, the other owner would offer an invocation of suggestions that were couched as support until I was sufficiently motivated to silence them.

Within the category of “Your Dog Is A Reflection Of You”, is the subtext of “Your Dog Is Conflicted Because Of You."

I do not understand why there is a lot of variance in “parenting” styles between human parents with human children, as this is something I believe parents should have come to a consensus on, long before that kid ever entered the picture.

With dogs, it should be the same. Not that one ‘parents’ a dog, but the ways we interact with that dog should be universally agreed upon, accepted and applied.

Humans have the gift of a common language, opposable thumbs and other attributes that we do not share with dogs. Although culturally, humans may share a common language, our individuality and mannerisms are sufficiently unique that even common signals can be muddied and rendered incoherent by the dog.

It doesn’t matter how clear you think you are being, the dog is the ultimate judge. His response becomes the litmus test for your consistency and clarity.

I cannot help but sympathize for the dog that begs for clarity and is denied every time. Compound that by adding two voices, two sets of hands and two sets of expectations and it’s easy to understand where things go south.

I cannot help but sympathize for the handler working the dog while their partner barks out suggestions for work that they, themselves have yet to master.

A dog’s behavior is a reflection of you. Multitasking is beyond them (with the exception of the retrieve, where they are capable of not only maintaining multiple thoughts, but manage to accomplish sequential tasks). Add the frustrating distraction of two externally competing entities and it devolves into an emotionally laden, confusing s**t show.

As a human instructor it is annoying to have to remind people that dogs do not practice a verbal language, and if their constant soliloquies haven’t worked so far, what expectations do they really have for that to change? The conflicting signals being broadcast all over my training floor in this scenario is the problem.

Silence is the solution.

I tell this story often, because most folks have either done it or experienced it from their own children, significant others, employees, employers, etc.

You’re on the phone. Someone enters your periphery and just stands there. Soon they start to fidget. Maybe shifting weight from one foot to the other, or re-enacting the James Dean Lean in the doorway of the room you both occupy. Just enough to distract you. Just enough to break your concentration. Just enough to disorganize your thoughts to the point where you are easily confused and slightly disoriented.

Now have someone else, a spouse, boss, whatever, come in and start rapid-firing demands at you as you try to gather your thoughts to complete the one task you started out with.

Not easy, is it.

Now imagine you are a dog.

We specialize in interspecies communication. We make your life easier by teaching you how to make your dog’s life better. If you want to learn how to eliminate conflict in your relationship with your dog, we are only an email away.

22/11/2024
Everything you wanted to know, but we're afraid to ask 🤔😁 The *only* thing I could add to this my theory of EVERY dog is...
06/09/2024

Everything you wanted to know, but we're afraid to ask 🤔😁

The *only* thing I could add to this my theory of EVERY dog is capable of a bite with the right (wrong) trigger....regardless of the level of training. The only dogs that can do damage with a bite are the ones with teeth.

https://www.facebook.com/share/2NoCu223vam6j7pA/?mibextid=oEMz7o

Why do dogs bite?

One of the most frequent statements I hear from owners of biting dogs is “My dog bites for no reason!”

Hate to break it to ya, but I guarantee your dog had a reason. You just don’t recognize the cause of it. The urban myth that dogs just turn on people is so steeped in our collective conscience that we cannot imagine a time without it. The reason dogs bite continues to be interpreted as an irrational act, as opposed to in defense of a potential threat.

Since well before the pandemic, dog bites have been on the rise. Daily, our news reports horrify us with dog attacks where the outcomes for the humans are often fatal. There were 46 confirmed dog attack fatalities in 2020. There were 51 confirmed fatalities in 2021. The statistics compiled by the CDC in the US is 4.5 to 4.7 million reported dog bites per year.

Dogs aren’t moral creatures. Their days are not filled with calculating their actions or understanding how those acts will impact the lives around them, nor do they blindly act without reason. They respond to the information their environment has supplied them with, and make decisions based on their perceived safety.

What most folks consider to be aggressive behavior, I consider to be defensive. As I have written many times throughout my career, aggression isn’t a disease, it’s a symptom. Aggression is the least understood behavior observed in dogs as a result.

Dogs have no difficulty communicating with their own species, and have demonstrated the same predictable behaviors for millions of years. It has also helped them adapt to life with humans. It is the human that is unpredictable, not the dog.

Wild canids arrived in their present form through the rigid and unforgiving process known as evolution. We began interfering obliquely at first, and then directly, probably much longer ago than the conservative 15 to 30-thousand-year estimates favored among popular archaeological timelines.

While the number one killer of wolves is other wolves, in the 21st century, the domestic dogs’ biggest enemy is homo sapiens.

Humans endured a lot of trial and error even after we discovered fire and how to forge metal, because we were prey before we were predators.

Our close companion, the dog, wild as he may have been, shadowed our movements across the globe for thousands of years, following in our footsteps as we followed him. We shared the same tastes in prey, we both hunted cooperatively, we collectively found safety in numbers, we each surrounded ourselves with family. Both species adhered to a fluid form of social hierarchy that is still observed today.

Humans quickly learned how animals behaved, and what precipitated those behaviors. Especially when it came to acts of violence. It was important to recognize the postures and expressions the animals engaged in when certain things occurred, because that knowledge helped early humans stay alive.

We learned not to approach animals when they were eating, and if we did, it was with enough numbers and enough force to successfully drive them off without becoming a meal ourselves. Our predator companions learned not to venture off too far, because we were not only predictable, but occasionally, we were careless.

This mutual symbiosis struggled to remain essential past the industrial age.

Once the need for dogs diminished, our ability to understand them diminished with it. Our caution became carelessness and dogs became an afterthought to our survival.

Our relationship with our oldest friend and helpmate deteriorated rapidly past the automation of our world, and only a few pockets of the dog as a functional utility to humans still exists. Instead they have been replaced by caricatures of themselves; ornaments to an unfitting lifestyle as a feature of social currency, virtue signaling or as our emotional foil.

Although our beliefs have changed, our canine companions have changed very little. They may come in a variety of sizes, colors and coat types, but behaviorally, they are the same animal they were thousands of years ago. They still adhere to the same behavioral constructs that have governed dog actions since they evolved from ancestor Mesocyon, over 20 million years ago..

We just lost the ability to understand their behavior, or what motivates it.

And that’s why dogs bite.

It is an evolutionary advantage to be able to acquire and control resources. The collaborative hunting that wolves are famous for? Cooperation ends once that prey animal hits the ground. Barring caring for the very young, it’s every dog for itself.

Cooperative hunting may help to assure survival for the larger group as a whole, but the members of that group are not so assured. Weaker members are driven off and left to scavenge the remnants. The term “survival of the fittest” is simply a long and painful process of sharpening efficient, healthy, durable predators.

People call that resource guarding. Nature calls it survival.

What does that have to do with the biting dog? Just about everything.

It is the rare dog that attacks offensively without a reason. The first anti-social behavior observable in a litter of puppies as their ears and eyes open is resource guarding behavior. In fact, it is evident much sooner, as they scrabble around in the darkness, rooting for the warmest, most productive teats.

In the animal kingdom, fratricide occurs in many species, including among wild canids. They may not kill the sibling directly, but their intentions are to squeeze them out of access to the same resources. Survival of the fittest starts early in nature.

At the beginning of this post, I shared a few statistics about the ramifications of biting dogs. What they don’t reveal are breeds, ages of victims, or any other circumstances surrounding the event. Without making this a dispute over dog breeds and breed specific legislation, be assured that the selection criterion used to create the breed of dog that could turn and drive a 2000 pound bull is the same criterion used to develop a breed capable of a 500 yard outrun to look for livestock it cannot see, and the dog that willingly dives into frigid water to retrieve a bird it will never consume.

All of these behaviors are related, and all of them have been teased out and exploited through the careful selection of traits that are native to all dogs; the predatory motor pattern sequence:

Orient

Eye

Stalk

Chase

Kill

Consume

African Wild Dogs are successful roughly 85% of the attempts to bring down game, where wolves are successful roughly 14% of the time. Both are cooperative hunters that hunt in family groups. It's a numbers game. The solitary hunter has less chance of survival than a community of hunters. The more, the merrier!

Evolution endowed wild dogs with the temerity to keep trying. Natural selection is sort of a law of averages. In a certain ecosystem, there are going to be features that benefit few and test many. As resources begin to fade, evolution favors the adaptation of physiology that can overcome the new ‘odds’. Sensitive noses to locate game over longer distances, sharper teeth and more powerful jaws to tear flesh and crush bone, longer legs to run greater distances, heavier coats that are designed to insulate in the winter and shed in the summer.

Domestic dogs have been altered physiologically to accommodate the tiniest of toy breeds and the largest of giant breeds. They all have the same number of chromosomes, but they are markedly different in body type, size, coat color, texture, length, and head shape.

But they all share the same latent drives as their wild ancestors.

So, how do you ‘fix’ a biting dog?

First, you recognize that you can’t fix what isn’t broken. You can certainly mitigate the risk by appropriate assessment, management, and remediation.

Dogs bite for two reasons and two reasons only; they are either acquiring resources, or defending them.

If you are looking for help understanding how to handle your biting dog, I am here!

My PSA for the day! This dog toy is readily available at various places. My dog was able to rip into it within about 15 ...
27/08/2024

My PSA for the day!

This dog toy is readily available at various places. My dog was able to rip into it within about 15 mins. Rather than swearing about the cost for a 15min toy, I took some time & finished ripping it apart. Look at what was inside...all that cheap feeling fluff, the squeaker we all know & love (or not) &..... pieces of *plastic sheeting* to make that crinkly noise! Nothing short of a massive choke hazard with this! I threw the insides away & gave her the ball. She's happy. I'm disgusted at what I found!

Cool concept ♥️Grammy Rose Dog Rescue and Sanctuary(844) 364-5433
21/08/2024

Cool concept ♥️

Grammy Rose Dog Rescue and Sanctuary
(844) 364-5433

4.9 ★ · Animal shelter

What a cool concept!Grammy Rose Dog Rescue and Sanctuary(844) 364-5433
21/08/2024

What a cool concept!

Grammy Rose Dog Rescue and Sanctuary
(844) 364-5433

4.9 ★ · Animal shelter

10/08/2024

Just a friendly reminder that you have the right to protect yourself & your dog from another dog charging you. I just had it happen again. There are several defense options, so think through carefully for the right option that will not also harm you or your dog. I just made my choice, since this was the 4th time my dog as been charged.

It's really too bad that I need to take measures going forward, because of off leash dogs.

Another good choice is any dog outside of the house or a fenced yard, should be leashed & under the owner's control!

14/06/2024

When your dog is trained, it opens up their world to more fun & freedoms. Some Northwest fun this week for Shelby!

28/03/2024

Business related Q&A (questions from clients):
Q-Why aren't there many working videos on your page?
A-My primary focus is on the dog & the owner. Also, I'm self-concious & hate being in front of a camera.
Q-Why don't you have many client reviews on your page. Wouldn't it help your business?
A-Yes, I'm sure it would help. However, I usually forget to ask & back to that self-concious thing, I feel too awkward asking. I do love word-of-mouth referrals, though!
Q-Don't you think you should step up your Facebook presence?
A-Yes, I could, but I don't want to be locked into being "social-media" worthy. My primary focus is helping people with their dogs, not spending all my time on Facebook.
Q-Why aren't you on other media platforms?
A-Not interested.
Q-Don't you want to be successful?
A-Everytime I see a dog make a break-through, a client have that ah-ha moment about their dogs' behavior, a dog *not* get surrendered because of behavior & everytime time I get a hug, a thank you so much, a referral, a comment of "that's the dog I wanted", etc....that IS being successful.

I'm pretty basic, realistic, low maintenance & matter-of-fact about my training. No fluff, false expectations & definitely no bs. My paid promotion materials consist of business cards & pens. That's it.

So there you have it.

By the way, this post took much longer than it should have because I'm very particular with some things (wording, grammer, clarity, etc), not to mention an over-thinker! 🙄

Thank you to all my past & present clients who may or may not be on Facebook & who may or may not see this. I've learned from all of you, which has helped me, both personally & professionally. Looking forward to all my clients in the future ❤️

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