It began with a simple desire, "I want a dog."
This was several years ago, but due to my and my husband's work schedules, small cramped apartments and life in general, I never got my wish. Eventually I began working from home, and while I now had the time for a dog, our landlord said no. I have sorely missed the company of a dog since my childhood, and I started thinking of some way to be with dogs again. One day it hit me - I can learn to work with them! I began a quest to find out all I could.
I had been watching all sorts of dog-related television -- everything I could set my remote to. I looked for educational programs that could teach me to be a dog trainer, but I decided that most of them used methods that seemed harsh and unnecessarily cruel. I even visited one local school where I was horrified to see a dog being led around a tiny room by each student, with its tail between its legs and each student, in turn, yanking on a choke chain to get the dog to sit/heel/stay, etc. It was then that I began looking for a program that wasn't physically cruel or harsh. I hated choke collars, so-called "training collars," shock collars and anything else that caused dogs to flinch in fear. Many programs
included "clicker training," but all of them seemed to focus on traditional aversive methods. Using "clicker training" as a search term, I was rewarded with a whole new world of positive, fun ways to work, train, and "be" with dogs.
It is now almost a year later, and I have been learning, reading, volunteering with and walking dogs. I am so excited to be launching my training business as I work towards my certification as a Certified Professional Dog Trainer. One of the most influential books I read was
The Power of Positive Dog Training by Pat Miller. In just a week or so I will be attending a positive training program run by Pat at
Peaceable Paws. I couldn't be more excited to have the opportunity to work with someone so experienced and knowledgeable, and I will be even more excited to return with just a small piece of that knowledge.
In the end, what matters is that we and our dogs can live in harmony. We love them! We bring them into our lives for a reason. What that reason is is different for each person, but nobody brings a dog into their home in order to add stress, complications, or frustration. I believe that by helping people to understand their dogs, and helping their dogs to understand their people, everyone benefits and builds a strong, life-long bond of trust, love and happiness together. Isn't that what we want from our dogs - and isn't that what our dogs deserve from us?