How to prevent aggression and reactivity

How Holistic Dog Training Methods Can Address, Prevent Aggression and Reactivity

90% of my clients hire me because they believe their dog is unpredictable, aggressive. 70% have hurt people or pets. 65% of dogs showed dangerous reaction towards their primary caregiver. Roughly 20% have had nipping or biting incidents that could have been avoided if caregivers were educated on the signals their dog sent them as a warning. 

Here are some dog bite facts from the AVMA:

▪Each year, more than 4.5 million people in the U.S. are bitten by dogs. Almost 1 in 5 people bitten by dogs require medical attention. 

▪Every year, more than 800,000 Americans receive medical attention for dog bites; at least half of them are children.

▪Children are, by far, the most common victims of dog bites and are far more likely to be severely injured.

▪Most dog bites affecting young children occur during everyday activities and while interacting with familiar dogs.

▪Senior citizens are the second most common dog bite victims.

At the first sign of reactive behavior, there are training methods that I use to correct it, but the best way to keep a dog from becoming one of these statistics is focusing on prevention before it’s too late. 

1 Prevention is The Best Medicine

Creating clear boundaries and limitations is the first step in curbing aggression. When a dog respects your physical and personal space, they are less likely to challenge it. 

When you respect your dog’s space, and this includes not picking them up or moving them without consent, they feel safe and understood, which decreases the likelihood of aggression. They also imitate their owner’s behavior, so “Do as I say, not as I do” never works with dogs. 

2 Earning Respect

Respect earned without force goes a long way in making your relationship with your dog a healthy one. It’s hard to be a bully when you’re happy. 

3 Spay And Neuter

Spaying or neutering your dog can help in certain situations, but it doesn’t deter reactive or aggressive behavior, contrary to popular belief. Aggressive tendencies have to already exist for the hormones to cause the dog to react. They merely exacerbate a problem. 

Finding those problems and correcting them before they surface is more productive because eventually they will appear regardless of spaying or neutering. They just might not be as severe. 

4 Proper Socializing

Socializing your dog is also a good way to prevent aggression. By letting your dog grow up around people and other dogs, you get them used to the way human society functions. 

When dealing with rescues, controlled socialization and interaction is important, but it’s also important with raising a puppy.  Dogs need to be taught at an early age about excitement, morals, and engagement control, so they can manage and control their own impulses as they age. 

5 Stress-Free Walk

Learning how to calmly walk your dog with a loose leash and no constraints like prong collars, harnesses, or soft leads can help your dog be less reactive. Quite often these types of tools are used incorrectly, or make pulling and reactivity even worse because they make the dog feel trapped in a situation that he wants to get out of. 

Many owners incorporate these products because their dog pulls with a regular collar, so education on proper leash techniques is important. 

Proper diet can also improve behavior in dogs just like it does in children. Additives, carbohydrates, and low-quality ingredients in packaged food can cause allergies, discomfort, hyperactivity, mood swings, distraction, and violent behavior. 

6 Training and Correction

While prevention is the key to minimizing the potential for aggression in your dog, there are training methods that work well to decrease or completely remove unwanted behaviors. Dog aggression is not just a dog problem, it’s a family problem as well.

 Both the dog and his caretakers need training. I always include a family systemic approach in my sessions, so everyone in the house, including the children, becomes aware that emotional energy can affect the whole family system.   

The most common reasons for dog aggression or reactivity are trauma, fear, medical issues, frustration, and miscommunication. I recommend that clients whose dogs have behavioral issues have them checked by a vet first to rule out any physical problems, if they haven’t had a recent checkup. If the dog is healthy, then I move on to finding the root of the problem. 

Almost all rescue dogs have trauma in one form or another, from abandonment, being touched or manipulated violently or without consent, being constrained, losing their home, and a number of other issues. 

Some dogs will react aggressively or have disputes because they feel like they don’t have an “out.” They are trapped by a leash or by their surroundings. Teaching them that they have other options, and giving them the opportunity to exercise those options, like walking away or going to a safe place in the yard or home, can counteract reactive tendencies. Most dogs don’t want to hurt anyone; they just want to make a scary situation go away.

7 Dogs with Human Problems

Many human behaviors may factor into bite situations. Here are a few examples:

Challenging food, water, or favorite object. Removing food from a dog, or appearing to intervene between a dog and its food or water, even inadvertently, may trigger reactive behavior in some dogs. The reaction can stem from a fear of starvation or lack of resources, and is a common reason for food aggression and crate reactivity.

Attacking (or perceived attacking) a dog or its companions, or encroaching on its territory. Dogs are family-oriented; they often have an instinct to defend themselves and anyone they consider family. They will often defend their territory, which may include areas they consider "theirs" or belonging to their family.

Aggressive behaviour is a typical feature of dogs and is important in nature for survival of individuals, their integration into pack, defence of territory, food or the young. Aggression and the related manifestations in humans and animals is an important philosophical, psychosocial, ethological and ethical issue on both human and subhuman level. - Folia veterinaria. , 2008, Vol.52, p.73

Attacks may be triggered by behaviors that are perceived as a threat, like a sudden unexpected approach or touch by a stranger, or inadvertently stepping on any portion of the dog's anatomy, like a paw or tail, or startling a sleeping dog. 

In particular, the territory that a dog recognizes as its own may not coincide with the property lines that its owner and the legal authorities recognize, such as a portion of a neighbor's backyard.

Gaining a dog’s trust as an authority and helping them to understand that you are taking care of the situation will “take them off the job” and remove their need to protect. 

8 Recognizing discomfort.

A sick, injured, or older dog may get cranky or over-reactive and develop a tendency to nip or bite. Communication can suffer when a dog doesn’t feel well. Have you ever been sick and snapped at a loved one because explaining something to them takes up too much energy? Dogs do the same thing. 

9 Recognizing insecurity or fear.

Like humans, dogs that feel insecure may ultimately turn and defend themselves against something they think is a threat. It’s common for people to not recognize a dog’s clear signs of fear or insecurity. 

Many bites happen because a person approaches and touches a dog who is signaling to them that they’re uncomfortable and don’t want to be petted.  The dog feels that when his warning signs aren’t respected, his only other option is to bite. 

10 proper Intervention when dogs fight.

When a human gets in the middle of a dog fight they can get a serious bite. There are a few methods that can be used to break up a dog fight that decrease the risks.

11 Avoiding Threatening body language or movement.

Directly staring into a dog’s eyes can sometimes make a dog feel threatened or can be perceived as an act of aggression, especially when a stranger does it. Moving too close to them or too quickly can also seem aggressive. 

Balanced dogs usually approach each other from the side to greet, rarely from the front, so making a beeline toward a dog can make them nervous. 

Dogs react when fearful, and may feel driven to attack out of self-defense, even when not, in fact, being "attacked". Speed of movement, noises, objects, or specific gestures like raising an arm or standing up may cause a reaction.

Many rescued dogs have been abused, and in some dogs, specific fears of men, women, skin coloring, and other features that recall past abusers are not uncommon. A dog that feels cornered or without recourse may attack the human that triggers their trauma. 

A dog may also perceive a hand reached out toward its head as an attempt to gain control of the dog's neck via the collar, which if done to by a stranger can easily provoke a defensive reaction, lIke growling, snapping, or biting. Dogs always go for the neck during a dogfight to control their opponent. 

12 Avoid inadvertently causing the dog to go into prey drive.

Dogs retain many of their predatory instincts, including hunting and chasing prey. Running away from a dog or behaving in a manner suggesting weakness may trigger predatory behaviors such as chasing or over-excitement, which can lead to an attack or bite. For example, the instinct to jerk one's hands upwards away from an inquisitive dog may cause a strong impulse to grab and hold.

13 Troubleshooting Frustration.

A dog that is already excited or aroused by an aggressive instinct from one source may use an available target to release its energy. An example would be a dog who is fence fighting and turns to attack one of its family members out of frustration. 


Sources:

www.avma.org/public/Pages/Dog-Bite-Prevention.aspx


Roman Gottfried is an internationally renowned Holistic Dog Training, Intuitive Healer and Dog/Human Relationship Coach. He works with dog parents worldwide to help their dogs reach their full potential, by teaching them the holistic philosophy of creating a healthy relationship with their dog. He sees clients both online and in-person in Phoenix, Arizona. Visit www.romansk9training.com for more information or to schedule an appointment.

Dogs Don't Have Logic, They Remember

Why do dogs have a hard time understanding what we want them to do?

We teach obedience, tell them “no,” “eh eh", and “good,” but they still counter-surf, disrespect us, don't listen to commands, and want to kill the mailman.

 While humans think in ideas, dogs think in impressions. When an impression comes into their minds, they remember many other similar impressions of past experiences before forming their judgments.

For example, if the dog sees the shape or a picture of a dog on a TV screen the dog cannot understand the TV is an appliance. He sees a window and through that window, he sees a dog. 

What’s the difference between humans and dogs when it comes to conditioning and learning?

A child under the age of five and a dog perceive their environments in the same way. 

A simple definition of learning is a change in behavior resulting from experience.  In evolutionary terms, learning is an adaptive change in behavior that results from experience. Some behavioral changes (walking, communication, sexual behavior) require biological development (maturation) as well as experience, 

There are both simple and complex learning behaviors.  Habitation, classical conditioning, and operant conditioning are all considered simple learning. More complex learning includes the ability to communicate, learn social rules, and abiding by family codes of conduct, to name just a few. 

Dogs can remember complex events in a fraction of a second, but don’t have the capacity to predict an event.  Therefore, if we want to educate a dog, we need to change the way we offer them information. 

Dogs don’t parent their puppies with lectures or punishment, but with a series of emotional consequences associated with impressions perceived from the environment. Their lives are presented with comprehensive impressions, so they can remember as much as possible when dealing with any situation.

When a dog grows up and reaches maturity, he can remember, no matter what he has to do, that something similar has been imprinted on him in the past from his authority/guardian/instructor. He "sees in memory imprints" (like emotionally-charged pictures) how to act when the new event resembles something already experienced. When new conditions arise, the dog finds himself compelled to experiment and learn from impressions and new consequences. 

For this reason, dogs are compelled to be in didactic and secure attachment relationships. They learn by observing how their mentor solves his problems and deals with their environment. 

This emotional and impressionistic system of education gives a dog a strong uniformity to his entire life. Things are done repeatedly in exactly the same way over very long periods of time. They become emotional rituals. In that process, there is no anxiety about the future, as the next event depends on the last event.  A dog does what he had always seen done before; he does not think, he remembers. 

He remembers that you took a sip of coffee, grabbed your phone, and fixed your hair the day after the long snuggle-day on the couch.  The last sip of coffee, a push into the crate, a quick look back.  Now he knows you will be gone all day and come back empty-handed! 

How do dogs perceive their leader?

In a canine social hierarchy, authority is not based on who has more power or strength but rather, who has the most experience in his life and therefore, remember the most. 

A dog that has not reached a certain maturity will never be seen as an authority figure or leader, nor be able to decide on anything important. Confidence is placed only in the pack member that can remember many instances of surviving and thriving. However, if a dog has experience in a specific field, this takes precedence over the older-and-wiser dog. The canine social model allows the most experienced in any particular situation to take the lead and the entire group learns from the consequences. 

How does a dog see you in this?

48,000 years or more ago, dogs entered emotional relationships with humans.  This establishes a historical understanding of their relationship dynamics.   In the present day, humans have the advantage over dogs by possessing a logical understanding and an aptitude for combination.  On the other hand, humans have lost their total recall abilities. We now think in ideas while dogs think in pictures.  The gift of intellectual memory is influential on the relationship only in its earliest beginnings, and even so much does not appear to be true until a critical mass of "thinking dogs" might shift the species into a Canis-Familiaris-Intelectus.

From my observation and looking into studies, I recognized that since the 1980s some dogs have shown a shift in the way they process information in order to be able to communicate with humans. They have had to start remembering words and time which causes a lot of stress and discomfort in a human/dog relationship.  

How do dogs perceive our social environment?

The way we perceive dog-socialization is based on logical reasoning, which is fundamentally incorrect. 

Your dog cannot understand why you ask him to sit in a fearful situation when he’s instinctively driven to fight or escape. 

We still wonder why the dog sees us leaving and knowing that we are at work, if we return empty-handed, we seem not successful in our hunt. 

Dogs don't understand why he has to be friends with a relative if the person does not live in our home and does not know the rituals? For the dog that relative is a stranger, regardless of your family relationship status.

Why is the mailman who has his own ritual and disrespectfully enters our property, violates social rules and gets away with it? And don't get me started with the delivery guys! 

We have so many things to remember from our old relationship with dogs. 

What Do You Remember? ( I mean think about this?)