♥ Love My Tibbe! ♥ Donating Member
Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: D/FW, Texas
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| Some further help for her will be socialization with other dogs and people when she's more confident, assured and settled from a few weeks of the above program. Take her with you to places where dogs and people are for very short trips into a store and right back out again if she acts nervous, longer if she seems to enjoy it but keep the visits under 3 -5 mins at first, even if she is acting okay, so that she never feels she's got to endure a long stay at first. Unless she goes into a state of abject panic, these trips in your arms into a pet store where other dogs might be will desensitize her further to new situations and they will be so short - in and out - that she won't have time to go into a full fear mode and your calm bearing will show her she's still safe in your arms. Don't soothe her with your voice - just allow her to feel and deal with the short time of sensations she experiences and then back out. Repeat repeat repeat every chance you get - one day she will begin to accept being around new friends as second nature. In time, she'll come to realize that though she may be scared at first, it never lasts long and she'll come to learn that strange noises, energy and new things are not something she needs to fear as they never hurt her. She'll have your arms keeping her safe but she'll learn to deal and accept the whole experience in her own way - a little at a time. If she's absolutely terrified during her first few visits, I'd wait until she's very hungry and take a warm, freshly boiled piece of chicken meat with me, to produce the moment you two go into the petstore - held in one of your fists. The wonderful smell of fresh meat to any hungry dog will fight with her fear of the unknown for focus of her brain and keep it from absolutely honing in on just her worries - a kind distraction to help her learn not to intently focus on just her fear for the 30 seconds you are in the store and out again. Once she's calm enough when back outside, and she needs to be calm when she gets her reward, let her have her lovely chicken, together with a big smile. She'll come to understand that her calm state has pleased you and warrants positive reinforcement of that state of mind.
Take one of those pens that scare her when they drop and set her beside you on the couch. Drop the pen in your lap and instantly treat her. Repeat 10 times - drop, treat, drop, treat, etc. Once she's accepted that as a fun game she's playing, watching the pen drop for food reward, drop the pen on the couch, treat. Repeat 10 times each session and a nice treat every time the pen hits the soft surface.
When she's thoroughly enjoying that game, with the white noise turned up, TV on, bait her with the pen - fly it around her with your hand, saying "Get the pen - get it!" and keep in up and moving so that she tries to get it and up and down and around - make her really want it - a game of trying to get it and then, drop the pen from an inch above the floor and shove a treat in her mouth as it drops and makes a noise. Repeat - really gin her up into wanting to get that pen so that she's jumping around for it and then again, drop it just from above the floor, instantly treat. Repeat that 8 more times that session.
Increasing the height of dropping the pen and causing a sharp noise while a game is being played and her sense of competition aroused and a treat dispensed after the fall of it, your pleasure in her showing when she doesn't get scared, will begin to slowly desensitize her to something that previously scared her. Use this same tactic to desensitize her to other things she's afraid of - things that now send her into the shakes. Make a game of it at first, engage her sense of competition and make the noise softly at first, treat/praise if she stays engaged and happy and repeat up to the count of 10. Short, sweet, nothing scary and gradually increase the sudden sounds and if it's all kept competitive and fun for her, she should learn that sounds are really nothing to fear.
Chance are a dog that is having this type of anxiety and reactions to noises or objects now will always have repeat bouts all along during her life, even after a year of nothing happening but you can work her through those each time. Many dogs are subject to bouts of unreasonable fear of things suddenly and for no reason we can understand. Google "My dog has developed a sudden fear of...." and see the millions of pages of responses. It can be a sudden smell or pain from gas or anything bad they associate with a given objector sound, smell and they begin to fear that thing or a person, another dog, etc. When you see the fear, trying to distract the dog with a competitive game, some activity that gets them moving forward and distracted on food she really wants - even a piece of the prime rib you're making for dinner held in front of the dog's nose as you walk them around through the house - whatever it takes to snap the mind out of that fear - can help redirect her attentions to other things during that time - even if she's got a tummy that won't allow her to actually eat the prime rib - you can use it as a distraction and at the last minute switch it to a treat her tummy can tolerate and feed it to her. A quick leash up for a walk outside, a car ride, a game she enjoys playing with you, playing a recording of a cat yowling - things like that - to re-orient the dog can get their mind going in a different direction and help them get past their current bout of the shakes. Just keep working with the dog at quick distractions any time you see fear and usually dogs come through these times in one day to up to a couple of months for those with pretty fragile psyches.
The worst thing you can do is feel sorry for and soothe the dog, saying "Good girl, don't you worry, it's all okay", reinforcing her fearful reactions and making her think that what she's currently feeling is a good and proper reaction, approved by you. Dogs engaged in that way often escalate their fear to neurotic behavior in time, become aggressive, nervous fear-biters. In the wild, free from human intervention, dogs don't nurture fear but ignore it in another dog, usually going about their business until the scared dog joins in with the group activity of the moment, whatever it is. Dogs don't rush up to a scared dog and soothe it, lick and cuddle with it. Weakness is not tolerated at all and nervous dogs quickly snap out of it and carry on with life for fear of pack retribution.
__________________ Jeanie and Tibbe One must do the best one can. You may get some marks for a very imperfect answer: you will certainly get none for leaving the question alone. C. S. Lewis |