Research

Domestic Violence and the effects on dog’s psyche

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Arguments in a home cause the whole family to split into two factions: aggressors and victims. Dogs are forced to take sides because they have a polarity mindset. Dogs see things as either/or, yes/no, safe/danger. 

Dogs and young children have this concrete thinking. In an instance of domestic violence between partners, dogs will immediately assume that if love is not being shown, the victim may be at risk of death. This manifests as insecurities, nervousness, helplessness and even aggression.

Domestic violence causes the dog stress and teaches him that emotions are either aggressive, or feelings of victimization.

This can cause the dog to become sensitive or reactive to humans’ everyday emotional interactions, body language and facial expressions.

If your dog is adopted and reacts aggressively to stress or excitement between family members, that may be an indication the dog is holding trauma from being exposed to traumatic experiences or domestic violence.  

This video is about Tbone, a victim of domestic violence.  He gets very stressed if you approach him with something in your hands 

T-bone has multiple and severe traumas. Physical abuse by first owner ( dog was removed from his home by AC) Lost his second home and owner ( owner surrender...

Dogs and children are always the victims, even if they are only witnessing the abuse.  They should not be medicated, corrected, or trained out of it. They need healing first. Then, they need to learn new associations for highly-emotional physical interactions between family members. 

If you feel your dog is reacting strangely or aggressively to loud voices, gestures, and/or physical interactions between humans, your dog may need help.

Visit www.holistidogtraining.org/onlinetraining to schedule a training consultation.

#seespotheal, #holisticdogtraining, #holisticdogparenting, #domesticviolence

27 Reasons Why to NEVER Use Shock Collars

For those who are pro-e-collar,
Here is my challenge:
Use it on your spouse.
Explain to them what you're up to,
and instead of asking them to do something, use the "tool.”
At the end of the day, ask them how "free" they felt, how much trust they had in their decisions, and what they felt during the stimulus control.

If you don't like my association and comparison between humans and dogs, it's ok.
Just a heads up that all mammals are emotionally intelligent.