Hyperawareness and Dogs
Your dog is nervous around crowds. He's never liked them much, but he is not dangerous; just wary. On this day, you are having a holiday party, so your house is unusually full of people, and your dog is behaving as he normally does; aware but functioning in his private corner of the world.
And then the door behind your dog bangs open, causing your dog to whirl around and almost bite the person who comes through the door and into your house. It was close.
"It came out of nowhere!"
"He loves John; I can't believe he wanted to hurt him!"
"He was just sitting there quietly, waiting for this opportunity!"
"He's not a safe dog".
None of those things are correct. The dog is just a dog, behaving like any mammal under a stressful situation that makes us hyper aware.
The party created a steady source of stress for that dog (a trigger), just like the spider in the shower was a source of stress for me. Not enough to make me leave the shower and not enough to cause the dog to leave the party.
Triggers, things that cause us to be more emotionally aware and on alert, change our arousal and vigilance levels to much higher than normal, and that, in turn, creates the stage for a possible disaster.
Trigger stacking is what happens when multiple triggers come one after the other. Trigger stacking is bad. Trigger stacking causes disasters – no one trigger is enough but in combination….bad things happen.
Triggers stacking can be one low level stressor that goes on for a long time (stuck in a room with a spider for hours), several low level stressors that come one after the other (spider, followed by husband opening the door unexpectedly), or a situation where one trigger ends up being more intense than expected (spider climbing up my arm). Any of those possibilities can create a panicky response – outside the control of the animal. Remember, humans and dogs are both mammals with similar base emotions, so your responses to fear are likely to apply to your dog as well.
Under circumstances where we are hyper alert, things that might have caused a typical startle under normal circumstances now risk a severe overreaction.
If your dog is sensitive and you know it, consider not subjecting him to prolonged stressors, like a holiday party, even if he has managed to behave well in the past. Even social dogs can become fatigued under the excitement of unusual stimulation and a tired dog – either physically or mentally – can make really poor decisions on the spur of the moment. Better to be safe than sorry.
If your dog has a history of nervous or fearful behavior, this warning should be heeded ten times over. Do not subject your nervous dog to triggers over an extended period of time, because a poor outcome is a likely result.
It's not worth the risk.
Denise Fenzi (she/her) has competed in a wide range of dog sports – titling dogs in obedience (AKC and UKC), tracking (AKC and schutzhund), schutzhund (USA), mondioring (MRSA), herding (AKC), conformation (AKC), and agility (AKC). She is best known for her flashy and precise ...
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Play with Dogs: Play for Everyone!
October 27, 2020- August 31, 2020