Thursday 27 June 2013

Leukemia untrainable - Here are some tips

Dogs really hard, which I call "untrainable" are a challenge to their villages. Over time, even the most dedicated owner loses patience with the dog's behavior. As the feelings of frustration and anger grow, they become more desperate to change things for the better.

This is what you can do:

First step:

Write down exactly how your dog behaves and in any situation.

Define the weight of behavior, the model you really want to change.

Ask yourself, when did this behavior. Is there ever a time when your dog is behaving in a "no problem"?

If yes, what happened? Can you recall an incident that took everything away? Or is that the unwanted behavior as "creep" and get worse over time?
Second step:
Take care over a period of a week and document their own behavior. How do you react when your dog shows behavior? Allow you to move on because he has lost all hope? Or do you yell and scream with him? Maybe even put it somewhere on your own?

In other words, your feelings take over anyway?

Angry feelings are normal when your dog does not behave well, but that hinder their ability to find good solutions.

Leave your dog "work", ie does not mean stop reinforce desired behavior, screaming, yelling and punishing your dog scared and hurt the relationship between the two.

Both tendencies must be overcome if you really want to make a change for the better.

Third step:

Now that you have identified what else bothers your dog and supervised carefully his own reactions, it is time to implement the first change.

Make an effort to behave differently.

Do not let this happen to work more - stop the behavior at a time. Depending on the problem that this may involve setting lead even inside the house or keep it with you at all times what is under their control.

Do not yell or scream at him whatsoever. Just walk up to him in silence, talk to him and tell him that things will improve for both soon.

In short:

Just do not let one of them behave in an unnecessary way, and at least for a week. During this week to monitor the extent of the problem.

Appears so often yet "
Is it still as bad as it was?
It bothers you as much as usual?
It also aims to improve the relationship with your dog and their general behavior. What has changed for the better? This must be linked to the original problem.

Remember:

Models of behavior problems dog grow over time and develop because the dog and the man interacts encourage problem.

If and when you change your habits your dog will most likely follow suit.