calliecritturs
Posted : 7/17/2011 12:18:34 AM
Billy was 6 when he came to us but it was abundanly clear after a few weeks he'd been pretty badly traumatized in different situations and it came out in the oddest places.
The little blonde girl who made mincemeat out of him in foster care -- that we worked on for years and really got MUCH further than we ever thought we would in taming that fear aggression he had (ONLY for little blonde girls or multiple "hands" RUSHING him towards his ears).
But the one thing that sticks in my mind that touches on what you're saying has to do with teaching him a simple "lie down" command.
Right out of the box when we got him his "sit" was flawless. But when we started obedience training with him and tried (never thinking THIS was gonna be hard) to teach him to "lie down" -- he would stand there and look at you and begin to **tremble**. And if you repeated "down" in a no-nonsense voice, pointing to the floor in front of him he would simply start to shake WORSE. And heaven help you if you tried to gently 'help' him towards the floor in any way.
Agressive? Nope.
TERRIFIED. He would shake and shiver and literally turn into a STONE statue -- but one who shook and trembled violently.
WHAT did that idiot do to him? We'll never know. But we went thru **every** tried and true trick to try to get him to lie down.
No way, no how. Was NOT happening. And it was absolutely heartbreaking to see the physical response to the word "down".
It's SUCH a common word -- and we literally discarded the idea of trying to just call it something else. Cos if it had to do with him lying down "on command" in ANY way -- it was NOT happening!
so finally -- we just plain got really creative. I'd see him lie down just of his own accord to relax and I would say out loud to David "Wow -- that is a NICE 'lay down' Billy is doing, isn't it??"
David would play along -- and we'd mention EVERY time we SAW him get into a prone position what an AWESOME and special thing that was. Nice lie down Billy" and David and I continued to "remark" to each other verbally how GREAT it was and eventually we began to directly address HIM "nice lay down!"
(literally it was a step closer to giving a command -- but to direct our comments TO him rather that just talking "about" him).
It took literally about 3 months. Finally we went back to "obedience" class and I casually said "Billy - lay down" -- and he did, and no fear, no shaking, no trembling. My trainer was so proud she nearly cried.
It really unlocked a whole world of communication with him -- cos he knew he wasn't going to be forced and with *him* the idea of doing something merely to **please** me was a powerful motivator.
But man -- everyone had a theory on how you could "lure" him into a down or force it or whatever -- and he'd obviously "been there done THAT" in a horrible way.
He taught me much about just continuing to try and really listening to the dog to see what it really was that triggered the fear response.
(have I said this week how much I miss him??)