For
most of my thirty years as a dog trainer, I thought dog training, and in
particular working with problem dogs, meant first and foremost changing
the dog's behaviour; a "fix-the- dog-to-make-things-better" approach. But
the more I became aware of the inner emotional dynamic that was running
a dog's behaviour, and how this was also the basis of a dog's relationship
with his owner, I began to see the underlying emotional interplay going
on between dog and human. I began to realize that the dog, particularly
through problem or idiosyncratic behaviour, was in truth only expressing
the deepest feelings of his owner, and which his owner was generally unaware
he or she was carrying. I've learned that before remedial training can
take hold, an owner must first acknowledge the message that his dog is
bringing him. Up until the last ten years I was looking at the problem
inside out. Truly, there is nothing wrong with the dog. He's doing what
dogs are supposed to do - fetching. The emotional parts of us that we long
ago cut off and think are long gone, the dog retrieves. It never ceases
to amaze me how a dog's behaviour precisely dovetails into the deepest
emotional recesses and the most subtle emotional nuances of his human owner's
very being.
One
can try to make sense of dog behaviour through other ways; the ethological
"many-drive" theory, or the pack model of dominance and submission, socio-biology’s
"selfish-gene" theory, or through an analysis of behaviour through the
learning theories of Classical and Operant Conditioning, but once you get
down to emotional bedrock, none of these add up. The real deal is that
dogs are emotional geiger counters, emotional truth detectors, and emotional
seismic-fault sensors. Dogs reveal our deepest truths.
Once
an owner sees the emotional logic in their dog's behaviour, this understanding
lifts a great weight off their dog rendering him free to learn how to align
with his owner instead of having to act out what stands between them. Even
more importantly, the owner can heal what's churning deep within their
own emotional makeup. Dogs bring deep emotion to the surface so that we
become aware. It's not a problem, it's an opportunity.
How
the process works. All we have to do is talk. First, I ask for a detailed
description of your dog's background and his behaviour. NO DETAIL IS INSIGNIFICANT,
and any idiosyncratic behaviours merit special attention. Slowly through
the course of our conversation, an emotional impression forms for me about
your dog and for lack of a better word; I "tap in" to what's going on inside
the dog as a reflection of its owner. I've been told that what I do is
a form of "empathic communication". At any rate, it's based on what I've
learned about the emotional logic that runs animals. One will know when
we're on the right track when one feels a deep resonance.
Sometimes
this triggers a painful feeling, sometimes an uplifting one. But either
way the feeling is always a release and once out in the open, it then takes
its rightful form as a guidance mechanism, homing in, helping to clarify
what we're supposed to be doing with our lives. What dogs feel is our deepest
part, that part we've long ago forgotten and yet is at the heart of our
creative being.