Slice of Life is inspired by the desire and challenge of living our lives in the moment. Days go by, weeks go by, years... but we can still choose over and over again to look at our own lives in small installments. These installments (or slices of life) can be walks taken in the hills, naps or a glass of Rioja. For me, what makes my slices super meaningful is being able to share with others the moments of my day with dogs in play, training or napping where we're all piled up on the bed.

My slices of life are full of events and experiences that are meaningful to me. As a former professional photographer, I still “see” so many pictures (or vignettes) as I interact with my dogs and the world around me on a daily basis. Most of the time I am not capturing these moments with a camera anymore. Instead, I am just showing up... I must say, that I do miss having a register of events outside of my head so that at my leisure I can relish a past moment as I am transported by a visual or written recollection of days gone by.

With the immediacy of all things digital, perhaps I can have my cake and eat it too. I can continue to do my work as a dog trainer and also register here and there moments of living a life in the company of dogs. I hope you will occasionally take a peek, and that my slices of life transport you in a glee of YOUR own!

Monday, September 21, 2015

Feedback Loop

I am reading an article in Outside magazine “The Metric System”, October 2015 (pg. 50) about exercise gadgets and studies as to why most people abandoned the gadget all together. I won’t spoil it for you, but one of the reasons why this happens according to John Bartholomew, professor of Health Education at the University of Texas at Austin, who specializes in exercise psychology, is because what is needed in order to change behavior is: action, measurement, learning and modifying. In other words, there must be some sort of feedback loop.

As I am reading the article I am smiling because I can very well relate this to how dogs learn. Their feedback must come in a form of a consequence delivered immediately after the behavior. If there is one aspect that most dog owners fail to realize as they struggle to teach their dog anything is this. If instead of agonizing over the possible reasons why their dog is not following through (dog is stubborn, not smart, lazy, dominant, etc.) and instead they give their dog concrete feedback (a consequence) they would begin to get the results that they want.



Consequences are a part of life: Dog comes when called and he gets a treat or an opportunity for another ball toss. Fails to come and the fun ends when the leash appears. Dog waits politely for its meal; the food bowl is lowered, etc. Consequences must follow a few rules in order to be effective:

1. Must be delivered timely - not minutes after or worse hours after the behavior has taken place. This is meaningless to the dog when it comes to linking desired behavior to consequence and in some cases plain cruel. Think of the dog that for whatever reason eliminates inside and hours later he is admonished for this. In the eyes of the dog the owner is turning nasty over him coming to say hello, etc. Nope, they are not feeling guilty, that guilty look is an appeasement gesture since the dog is feeling threatened and wants to diffuse the situation.

2. We must deliver them consistently in order for the dog to continue to act in the manner we want him to and not deliver the consequence when it is convenient, etc.

3. They must not harm the dog, scare the dog or intimidate him. The best way to ensure that we can still exercise a consequence in order to teach the dog what we want him to do without resorting to pain or fear is to remove something that the dog wants such as: the ball that I toss for him to retrieve, opportunity for moving forward when pulling on leash, door closes when I see the dog trying to dash out, etc.

This morning I am playing with my dogs and I asked Rio to stop playing with the ball by herself – which she loves to do, and instead bring it back so that we can all play, but she refused. I walked towards her and in spite of her cute expression I gave my game over cue. I picked up the ball and walked away. Learning to give the dog feedback is at the crux of communicating appropriately with them. It is like a conversation we have with a good pal. We don’t abandon the dog to try and figure out what the heck we want. No, they don’t read our minds. Instead, we are well advised to exercise a little courtesy to the dogs in our lives as we addressed their behavior and our expectations with clarity. Exercising consequences for behavior offered does just that.

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