Unlock Your Dog's Potential: How to Achieve a Calm and Happy Canine
By Sarah Fisher
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About this ebook
The renowned animal trainer shares her unique behavior management techniques to get your dog happier, healthier, less stressed, and more obedient.
Animal trainer Sarah Fisher is known for transforming the behavior of dogs who are beyond ordinary rehabilitation techniques. She also helps dog owners go beyond passive dog ownership to become observant, understanding, and pro-active dog guardians. In Unlock Your Dog’s Potential, Fisher offers step-by step instructions to using her methods at home.
With simple exercises and invaluable training advice, you can safely and effectively reduce unwanted behaviors such as leash pulling, barking, and chewing, You will also learn to recognize symptoms of stress or concern in your dog, and how you can alleviate these tensions to improve your dog’s well-being and strengthen your bond.
Unlock Your Dog’s Potential covers a wide range of unique dog management techniques, including handling and bodywork exercises to improve movement and trainability. Case studies of dogs Fisher has worked with appear throughout the book to show how her techniques relate to real-life situations.
Sarah Fisher
Sarah Fisher lives west of Brisbane, Australia. When she’s not corralling her collection of unruly fictional characters, she teaches real characters at local schools. She is living proof that while growing older is compulsory, growing up is not.
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Unlock Your Dog's Potential - Sarah Fisher
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
I wish every dog owner could meet Sarah Fisher. As this is, unfortunately, never going to happen, she’s done the next best thing and written a book about dogs as she sees them. I’ve been on at her for years to do it, and she’s finally documented her ideas, which are readable, radical and compassionate in the extreme. I particularly love reading her case reports, which reveal how she has transformed animals that are beyond ordinary rehabilitation techniques.
Assessing behaviour, body tension and pain patterns is difficult. Doing something creative about them can be daunting. In almost imperceptible steps, Sarah’s work bridges the gap between being just a passive dog owner to becoming an observant, understanding, pro-active dog guardian. By reading this book you could take this journey with your dog.
In a hundred years from now, I’m convinced that people will look back on this sort of book as we do now on the work of early social reformers. They had compassion where previously there was none. They sought to understand the downtrodden. They spoke up for the disenfranchised, urging more fortunate people to honour and respect them as fellow beings. Sarah does this for our animal companions.
Sarah is pioneering a new awareness of our dogs’ subtle intelligence, both of mind and body. By opening the eyes of dog owners she is rekindling a dialogue that dogs began with us thousands of years ago, when they first cautiously stepped out of the forest to take their place by the prehistoric human fire. As she says in the book – ‘A mind that has been expanded by new experiences cannot go back to its old dimensions.’
This book will save lives – human and canine. It is an incredible distillation of Sarah’s unique ability to perceive and understand dogs. If you can glean even a morsel of what she is saying, you and your dog will be greatly enriched.
Nick Thompson BSc (Hons), BVMBS, VetMFHom, MRCVS
IMPROVE YOUR DOG’S LIFE
Sharing our lives with a dog should be an enriching and rewarding experience. For the majority of trainers and owners, the harmonious relationship they have with their canine companions is based on co-operation, appreciation, trust and loyalty. If you already enjoy this sort of bond, you can further enhance the partnership by working through this book, which will give you a greater awareness and a deeper understanding of your dog. You can use the information provided to help him lead a longer, happier and healthier life by improving his sense of wellbeing and by reducing unwanted behaviours such as leash pulling, spinning, hyperactivity, excessive barking, chewing and so on, while also deepening the rapport between you.
The book guides you through kind, gentle and effective techniques to enable your dog to overcome any specific concerns he may have, such as fear of the vet, timidity, noise sensitivity, noise phobias, including fear of thunder and fireworks, separation anxiety, or issues around grooming or toe nail trimming. Using these techniques in conjunction with appropriate veterinary care can help your dog cope more easily with niggling health concerns such as arthritis, hip displasia or spondylosis or enable him to recover more quickly from injury, disease or surgery. You can also reduce the effects that old age has upon his body. The book explains how, by studying your dog’s coat pattern and posture, you can spot physical and emotional changes more quickly and take the necessary steps to prevent them from becoming a problem in the future.
Different challenges
If you are struggling to cope with a dog that is in your care you can reduce unwanted behaviours and establish a unique relationship with him using these proven methods. They will also help you to teach him how to respond to situations instead of simply reacting to them.
If you work with a variety of dogs, such as in a shelter or in any training capacity including service dogs, you can use the observations to assess the temperament and suitability of the dog for a particular lifestyle. By learning some of the simple TTouches and groundwork exercises you can improve a dog’s focus and therefore his ability to be trained. You can help a dog realize his full potential whatever the goal, and increase a shelter dog’s chances of being re-homed.
Whatever your reasons for reading this book – one thing is certain. You will never look at a dog in the same way again.
Battersea Dogs and Cats Home
The employees and canine residents of Battersea Dogs and Cats Home feature regularly in this book. Battersea is one of the most famous animal shelters in the UK. It was founded in 1860 by Mrs Mary Tealby to care for London’s lost and abandoned dogs, and in 1883 opened its doors to cats in need of help. The home continues to care for stray and unwanted animals at its three centres in Battersea (South London), Brands Hatch and Old Windsor. Since it opened, Battersea has taken in over three million cats and dogs.
Battersea’s aims are to Rescue, Reunite, Rehabilitate, Rehome. Many of the dogs that find their way to Battersea are true strays and are successfully reunited with their owners. Others have been abandoned or are handed in to the home because their owners are unable (or unwilling) to care for them any more. In 2004 alone Battersea found new homes for 5,814 animals. As well as providing full-time care, including on-site veterinary support, Battersea also runs a dedicated rehabilitation unit for dogs with behavioural issues, to increase their chances of finding a new home.
The Tellington TTouch
It was my partner Tony Head who first came across the work of Linda Tellington Jones while he was in Los Angeles. When he called me to tell me about an extraordinary technique that helped dogs overcome health and behavioural issues using gentle exercises, which he had seen on the television, I laughed. In fact, I teased him for being suckered into a well-made infomercial. However, what I didn’t realize was that this one demonstrated how Linda’s approach could illicit profound changes in even the most difficult dogs.
A couple of months later I picked up a book entitled The Tellington Touch at an animal health seminar. I flipped through the pages and I was hooked. Coming from a human health background and with a passion for Traditional Chinese medicine, Linda’s explanation of her work made total sense to me. I didn’t realize at the time that this was the same technique I had dismissed only a few weeks earlier. I met Linda when she visited the UK and within four days had flown out to Wyoming to attend a Tellington TTouch horse course at the beautiful Bitteroot Ranch. Now it was Tony who was laughing.
Although I initially qualified as an Equine Practitioner in America, it wasn’t long before I was travelling between home and the US again to work with Linda and Robyn Hood on the companion courses.
Training in Tellington TTouch techniques has transformed my life. For over a decade I have had the privilege and pleasure of working with some extraordinary people, and I travel around the UK and abroad giving seminars and teaching private clients, shelter staff and members of the public everything that I have had the great fortune to learn.
Working with a wide variety of animals, in different cultures and in particular with a diverse mix of dog breeds has been invaluable. Though the presenting problems may vary in each situation, their origins are usually the same – stress, tension, confusion, and/or fear. Every animal that I have worked with has also been linked by the aspirations of their owners and carers. All share a mutual desire to help each being become the most successful they can be by using kind, effective methods.
TTouch cannot save every dog. It cannot remove every possible trace of worry from an animal’s life, nor offer a guarantee that the destructive, reactive, ‘please-let-me slaughter-that-cat’ hooligan who has graced your life will become a permanently laidback, couch potato whose new goal is to raise orphaned kittens. What it can do, however, is reduce stress all round, improve the dog’s levels of self-confidence and self-control, and offer him an alternative way of
In addition to the bodywork, TTouch uses a unique system of groundwork
t was my partner Tony Head who first discovered the work developed by Linda Tellington Jones
showing his concern when in a worrying situation. Most importantly it shows the owner or handler an exciting, unique, rewarding and highly successful way of helping their dog and enables them to develop a greater understanding and deeper appreciation of their canine companion and his anxieties.
UNDERSTAND THE BASICS
The aim of this section is to give you some basic and simplified information on the nervous system, balance, proprioception, and a dog’s responses, sensory integration and pain memory. It is not vital to know any of this in order to work with your dog but it will help you to understand why groundwork and bodywork are so effective in improving posture, performance and behaviour.
The relationship between physical and behavioural problems
There is usually a reason for unwanted behaviour, and even extreme patterns of behaviour in dogs can often be attributed to underlying physical causes or are accompanied by areas of tension held in the dog’s body. For example, a dog that has tension through the hindquarters and that habitually holds his tail between his legs is likely to be noise-sensitive, nervous of new situations and wary of strangers. He may also be concerned about travelling in a car. When tension in the hindquarters is reduced, the associated behaviours diminish.
While breed type, genetics, lack of training, inappropriate management, poor diet, lack of socialization, and so on can be contributory factors to some unwanted behaviours, the influence that posture has on the way a dog thinks, feels and learns cannot be overlooked. Many of the anti-social behaviours that develop in dogs may also stem from frustration and stress, but these too have an adverse effect on the posture of the dog. A dog that is under duress because his need to perform instinctive behaviours, such as herding for example, is not being satisfied is likely to carry tension through his neck, shoulders and back. This posture in turn triggers higher arousal and more reactive behaviours.
The exercises described in this book (see ‘Taking steps to help your dog’, p.74) can play an invaluable role in rehabilitating even the most challenging of dogs. In humans, slow movement and touch can help
Physical balance and…
…emotional balance are linked
Sally carries tension around her tail and hindquarters…
…She is noise-sensitive and worried about travelling in a car
to increase the neurotransmitters responsible for the feel-good factor, which include dopamine and serotonin. It is, therefore, likely that the TTouch bodywork and groundwork exercises bring the same benefits to dogs. When these techniques are used with dogs that are over the top or nervous, they settle and become more relaxed in a surprisingly short space of time. They become more considered and less automatic in their responses. This approach also has the added bonus of promoting a sense of calm in the person using the techniques, which is important when working with any dog.
Behaviour and emotional and mental wellbeing are, therefore, closely linked to a dog’s physical state, and each can affect the other for better or worse. Changing an undesirable posture to a more functional one not only relieves physical discomfort and reduces stress but also encourages more efficient body and brain use. A dog that is moving in a considered and balanced way is generally less reactive than a dog that is stiff and rigid. A dog that is calm, contented and supple through his body is less prone to injury and is more likely to stay healthy as stress undermines the immune system. He can process new information faster, is easier to train, and is generally more reliable in his behaviour and performance. In addition, a dog that is happy to be handled in every part of his body will be less concerned by visits to the vet (see also p.35) and the groomer and will be able to adapt more readily to new situations. He will be more social, more confident and will recover more quickly if something does upset or concern him.
Gemma is extremely nervous about hand contact and bites if touched
Fake hands (see p.31) and different tools, such as a paintbrush, change a dog’s expectation of human contact and give them a new experience, enabling them to move beyond their habitual responses
What are bodywork and groundwork?
• Bodywork consists of specific, passive movements of the skin, legs, tail and ears to increase circulation and release tension.
• Groundwork consists of slow, considered exercises on the leash over patterns of poles, through cones and over different surfaces to improve co-ordination and balance.
The nervous system
The nervous system detects and interprets changes in conditions both