DogRelations

DogRelations

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Common Sense Counseling for Dogs and their Humans. Thoughtful, Individualized, Effective.

06/21/2026

Life of a service dog in crowded elevator to blocking/ protecting for unknown spaces/riding on floor of car/ restaurant manners/ walking on loose leash going to play ball🤩🐾

06/03/2026

A reactive dog is not an aggressive dog.

"Reactive" is a catch-all for behavior that looks inappropriate or exaggerated but makes complete sense once you understand what's driving it. Reactivity = a big emotional response. It can look like barking, lunging, freezing, hiding, spinning, or shutting down. (Cringing in fear counts too.)
Underneath almost every reactive moment is one of three feelings: fear, frustration, or over-arousal. Not malice. Not dominance. Not "a bad dog."

Here's what often happens on leash: a dog passes another dog too closely for their comfort. They're already uneasy and physically stuck. Barking and lunging? It works. The other dog moves away. The behavior gets reinforced. Konrad Lorenz noted decades ago that aggressive behaviors increase with lack of space. It's not a character flaw. It's information.

When arousal crosses a certain threshold, neither dogs nor humans have meaningful control over their actions. You cannot learn anything new in that state ask anyone to memorize a poem while jumping out of a plane.

The practical move: stop trying to correct the reaction. Start managing the distance. Under threshold, learning begins.
That's where the real work happens, movement maneuvers, desensitization, counter-conditioning. Teaching dogs and their humans that triggers are survivable, and eventually ignorable.

https://dogrelations.eu

06/01/2026

Some people describe their dog with a long list of grievances, he barks, he jumps, runs away when I want to take him out. And then: Nothing I do works.
Here's where I start: the goal isn't to fight the behavior. It's to understand it.

The more you know about how behavior actually works, the more you can arrange the environment and act with purpose. That shift - from frustration to informed action, changes everything. You start to see progress. You become an active part of your dog's learning process. And your whole experience of your dog changes too.
Science sounds clinical. But applied with intent and purpose, it works.

https://dogrelationsnewyorkcity.com

05/28/2026

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