Having realistic expectations, going at your dog's pace, and using science-based methods are all necessary in modifying fearful and reactive behavior.
Losing Heart
Why do so many clients with fearful or reactive dogs, who often have started off so well, lose heart? The reason is that they just don’t fully accept the time and work that changing fear-based or guarding behaviors, in particular, can take.
Realistic Expectations
We live in an age of devices and gimmicks which make things work quickly or instantly; extra fast broadband, instant online ordering of goods, instant communication, and so on. Changing behavior is to do with having realistic expectations.
- I can say ‘it will probably take many months’ but somehow my words evaporate.
- I can say ‘it needs to be broken down into small increments – tiny baby steps.’
- I can say ‘follow steps 1, 2, 3 and so on. Don’t attempt step 4 until step 3 is solid. If Step 4 is a disaster, take it back to step two for a couple of days’…..and so on.
But somehow, after a couple of weeks of carefully following instructions and perhaps dramatic improvement, they then may think what the hell, and jump from step 2 to step 10. Now everything has gone pear-shaped.
Things can actually get worse
Another fact to face is that when work that starts off in the right direction is then abandoned or interrupted, things can actually go DOWNhill – even becoming worse than before they started.
Imagine if that you were in constant fear, of attack for instance. Then things start to look safer to you and you dare relax a little. Then, suddenly you discover it was all a con – a sense of false security. You won’t be so easily ‘fooled’ the next time. You will be on extra guard in the future. It will take more to convince you another time.
Boy Afraid of the Dark
A friend’s adolescent son was terrified of the dark. His ‘course’ under the advice of a child psychiatrist was for nine months, with daily assignments for the family to work on. Nobody questioned the length of time. I don’t know exactly what the assignments were, but nobody thought it was unreasonable for it to take that long and for everyone in the family to take part and to support him.
Of course, if it ‘doesn’t work’ quickly with a child, we can’t then take him to a shelter for re-homing.
Systematic Desensitization
Systematic desensitization can take a long time, and as it says – is systematic.
If we want success, we simply have to put in the time and effort.
Desire to Achieve a Goal
Another question is – just how much do we actually want the end goal? How much are we prepared to sacrifice and how much effort are we prepared to make? None of it is something we can pay a trainer or anybody else to do for us. Rich people’s dogs are no less fearful than the dogs of poor people, are they?
We have to do it ourselves. Whatever our work commitments or other constraints, anything is possible if we want it badly enough.
That Threshold
Dealing with anxiety and fear is about identifying constantly shifting thresholds. One day the dog may be okay within 10 ft. of a particular dog and the next will start to react at 50 ft. Ignoring things that cause fear altogether will get us nowhere, but nor will pushing over threshold – flooding.
That line, where the dog is aware but still able to cope – to sniff, eat or play – is the threshold. There are so many variables dependent upon the dog’s own particular combination of anxieties, location, objects of fear, and so on.
A Simple Example of Working at a Threshold
An easy example, because it doesn’t move about, is taking a dog that is spooked by noisy young children and walking towards a distant school playground while the children are running about and making a noise, watching the dog carefully. His body language will show the moment he starts to become just a little bit anxious. This is the point at which to STOP and to work on making good associations with children.
Gradually, bit by bit, day by day, week by week, the threshold will get nearer to the playground. This also will be variable upon how many times you do it, on the ‘handlers’ demeanor, just how reactive to other external stimuli the dog is, how calm or stressed he is before setting out, and so on.
Something Sometimes Has to Give
Some dogs, for instance, find everything outside the house terrifying. Then it is a case of desensitizing a dog to the world just outside the front door, or even just inside with the door open. Now, this is a tricky one. How can someone go no further than the front doorstep whilst exercising their dog properly?
Something has to give.
Have they a garden for ball and chase games? Have they a quiet area they can get to by car? Again, there has to be a way if you want it badly enough.
You can’t successfully systematically desensitize just outside the front door whilst later walking the dog down a noisy street full of the very things that scare him. Which is the lesser of two evils? Lack of exercise or exceeding his threshold?
Lack of exercise can be addressed through mental stimulation and other creative ideas, whilst exceeding threshold will throw all previous desensitizing work out of the window.
Quick Fixes
Punishment or gadgets may look like quick solutions – they sure do on TV – but they can cause far worse problems further down the line, with shut-down or erupting elsewhere, very likely by way of increased aggression.
I have been to countless dogs where new owners are trying to make good the sometimes unintentional cruelty of past owners.
I went to a whippet who, in his previous life, had been punished with a shock collar (which beeps a warning first). In his new home, every time that he heard a beep of any sort he would run around the house screaming, trying to escape from what he thought was about to happen to him.
Would anyone imagine giving an electric shock to that friend of mine’s child for screaming when the lights were turned out (punishment), or forcing him to be in total darkness for a while (flooding)?
Modern Behavioral Science
Despite modern behavioral science proving that the use of punishment and aversives is the least efficient way to correct behavior, many people would not question doing to their fearful dog something they wouldn’t dream of doing to a child.
This is especially the case if the fear is manifesting itself in embarrassing aggressive and anti-social responses like barking, lunging, growling, or even biting, and people are watching for them to ‘control their dog’.
Certain TV personalities still – unfortunately – promote the out-of-date notion that the use of force solves problems quickly and permanently (good TV) when the opposite is actually true.
So it's good news actually!
What all this means is that, given the right approach, all issues have the potential to be dramatically improved, and many can be totally resolved.
Keeping the ultimate goal held constantly in mind will keep us motivated; holding that image of the life we will achieve for our dogs, in time, should help us through the inevitable tough times.