Ponder, If You Would

I am serving as a Ring Steward for the four-day Missoula dog show. This means I basically manage — and watch — one of the conformation rings.

Oh My.

So much to say.

But for now I ask you to consider what it means when a person is concerned about a dog “getting away” with something.

Not what it means about a dog.

What it means about a human.

And what thoughts, feelings, and legitimized actions proceed from a belief that a dog is pulling a fast one.

Life with Dogs — so fascinating.

A Training Challenge/A Human Challenge

A friend sent me this quote a few months ago…

Only when a mosquito lands on your testicles do you truly learn to solve a problem without violence.png

Violence is a loaded word. Nobody wants to say their dog training involves violence. The term, however, is defined as actions that are designed to hurt.

Humans are Story Tellers. We are masterful weavers of narratives that match what we want to believe about ourselves and others. We use words to create realities that allow us to exist with dissonance, that tension between things that do not fit or match each other.

I am a nice person who is good to my dog AND I hurt my dog when training.”

How can those things all be true?

When tension exists, we rewrite the story to make it all somehow fit together. Actually, we say, those things do not hurt the dog or we create justifications about not having a choice or the nature of the dog or so on and so forth.

So many excuses. So many justifications. So much cruelty.

Hey Sparkle — does a prong collar hurt?

Isn't That the Point.jpg

Hey, Sparkle — would you mind if I just shocked you a bit when you don’t do what I want?

Shock Sparkle.jpg

Hey Sparkle — how would you feel if I choke you to tell you I did not like something? The blood will come back to your brain eventually.

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If you woke up tomorrow and were incapable of doing anything the dog found unpleasant or discouraging in training — what would be different?

If you could not yell or say harsh words or choke, pinch, shock or strike a dog — what would you do instead?

You would think creatively about how to achieve desired results in new ways. In other words, you would simply train your dog.

I challenge you to do that — to imagine you are no longer capable of training a dog in ways that are hurtful or discouraging.

Secret Sparkle and Berkeley.jpg

Never, ever mistake a forgiving nature as permission to hurt another.

Micro(wave) Training Sessions

I was pleasantly surprised by Daisy’s “stay” yesterday when I was doing photos in the arena…

That is our only relatively close neighbor’s house in the background.

That is our only relatively close neighbor’s house in the background.

Because I have been busy with the Specialty-bound dogs — and I was waiting for Spring to start on her agility training — Daisy has not been the recipient of any formal training time. But I do this kind of thing every day…

Three Dogs Down.jpg

That photo, not the best as I just grabbed my phone, shows a micro training session as I was making my coffee.

A micro training session is a tiny unit of time, usually under a minute, in which I work one or two behaviors. I have cookies on the microwave and while I am waiting for something, I train. The dogs love this.

These micro sessions are effective. Daisy has learned both “down” and “stay” in small, regular micro sessions. Further, she was able to take the skills she learned and transfer them to the arena, staying perfectly while I went considerable distance from her.

What occurred to me is that we are doing micro training sessions all the time. However, we are likely not training with intention in these little sessions and therefore, we may well be training the wrong things.

Every interaction with a dog is a micro training session, truth be told. And so the dog’s behavior is nothing more than the result of our training, intentional or not.

This is yet another reason it is grossly unfair to a dog — and bad training — to blame the dog for undesired responses/behaviors. The reality is YOU likely trained that exact behavior. Congratulations!

The solution is not to “correct” the dog or even to beat yourself up (ouch!) but rather to take a step back and deconstruct how and what you have trained. Doing this allows us to make a new plan, proceeding with clarity and purpose towards desired results.

One intentional micro session at a time.

Micro(wave) training — the secret to Sparkle’s excellent “hold.”

Micro(wave) training — the secret to Sparkle’s excellent “hold.”