Lasting Change Comes From Looking Beyond Unwanted Behaviour - Greenwood Boundary Creek Times
Trainers say barking, lunging and other unwanted actions often reflect fear, frustration or overstimulation, and 1 behavior expert says lasting change starts by addressing those causes.
- Most people naturally ask, "How do I stop this?" but dog trainers say lasting change begins by asking, "What is fuelling this behaviour?" This shift moves trainers from chasing symptoms to addressing root causes of canine behavior.
- Because behavior never occurs in isolation, canine behavior results from genetics, early development, learning history, physical health, environment, and emotional state influencing the dog in that moment.
- Trainers evaluate whether dogs are overstimulated, lacking natural engagement, or struggling with anxiety around unfamiliar people. Assessing if physical, emotional, and social canine needs are truly being met provides vital information about internal experience.
- Correcting unwanted actions like barking does not change how a dog feels. Instead, responding appropriately involves creating positive experiences and managing the environment to help the animal develop better coping mechanisms.
- Success means fostering an animal that feels safe, confident, and capable of making better choices because underlying drivers of behavior have been addressed, not simply producing a quieter or more obedient dog.
8 Articles
8 Articles
Lasting change comes from looking beyond unwanted behaviour - Northern Sentinel
One of the biggest shifts we make when working with dogs is changing the questions we ask. Most people naturally ask, “How do I stop this behaviour?” Whether it’s barking, lunging, growling, jumping, or pulling on the leash, the behaviour is what we notice first. It’s disruptive, frustrating, and often the reason people seek professional help. But lasting behaviour change rarely begins by trying to stop the behaviour itself. Instead, we ask a di…
Lasting change comes from looking beyond unwanted behaviour
One of the biggest shifts we make when working with dogs is changing the questions we ask. Most people naturally ask, “How do I stop this behaviour?” Whether it’s barking, lunging, growling, jumping, or pulling on the leash, the behaviour is what we notice first. It’s disruptive, frustrating, and often the reason people seek professional help. But lasting behaviour change rarely begins by trying to stop the behaviour itself. Instead, we ask a di…
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