Dog Training - Simplified
Dog training is both frustrating and rewarding. It kills
you to torment your poor puppy for months on end,
trying to get them to understand commands that to them probably
seem irrelevant and arbitrary. However, when they finally
learn it is best for all. You are happy because they no
longer eat your furniture or run away from you in the park. I
am also convinced the puppy is now happier because he has learned
how to manipulate you. He has learned that when you are happy
you give him treats and he has also learned the things that are
most likely to make you happy.
This is of course a beneficial relationship for all
concerned. You get what you want and the dog gets what he
wants, making everyone more pleased. Some people say that the
dog is actually happier because it craves rules and
boundaries. Dogs will test you to see how far they can push
you because they want you to define their limitations, to give them
their place in the household. I am not sure how convincing I
find this argument but it makes some sense, in the way it makes
sense that children with rules and boundaries tend to be better
adjusted as well.
For this reason among others dog training is an important part
of any household that has a dog. I have seen the houses where
the poor dog is locked outside all day and night with no affection
and love because he is “out of control”. However in my
experience this is normally because no one tried to control the dog
and he was allowed to push his boundaries to the max until there
ceased to be any. Dog training needs to be done, and to be
done well in order for the dog to truly flourish.
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