JackieG
Posted : 9/9/2011 6:18:42 AM
You have part of the solution already. Stop using the word Potty. She's learned that this is the start of the "chase me" game. Try this and do it when she doesn't need to potty, get a toy, sit on the floor, leash out of sight in your pocket, and engage her in a few seconds of play with you sitting on the floor. Stay happy, stay relaxed. You're training but you're not in "I'm the boss Commander mode". Snap the leash on without a word and keep the other end in your hand. Stand up and walk to the stairs with her on the floor and you holding the leash. You're calm and neutral. Don't drag her to the stairs if she's reluctant. Stop and give her a treat at the stairs. Go back to where you were sitting and playing and with the leash on and you still holding it, sit down and play for a few seconds. Repeat this four or five times in one session. Don't make any attempt to pick her up during these sessions. Never engage in the game of chasing her again.
I do believe that this is mostly a game of chase to her BUT she has been punished when she's had an accident during the chase. So there's an element of fear in it when the humans start getting angry. This could also be why she eliminates when she's chased. Stop chasing her and stop punishing her or getting angry. Sorry to repeat but this is crucial. When a dog is punished unfairly and this is unfair in the dog's mind, you create all sorts of problems.
Don't punish her for accidents, ever. They are the human's fault. Spank yourself with a rolled up newspaper if she has an accident. :)
To prevent accidents as you retrain her, I would start feeding her in a crate. When she's finished eating, gently reach in and pick her up,snap on a leash and take her outside for a walk and to potty. Don't pick her up until you reach the stairs. When you do pick her up, say nothing. Pick her up and give her a tasty treat. Praise her like she's won the Nobel prize as she finishes doing her business outside.
If you train her to love getting in a crate, using positive methods, you can use this as a way to easily get her on a leash when needed. This is more than just an issue with housetraining accidents. What if you need to leave quickly with her for a visit to the emergency room? What if there is a fire or flood and you need to get out quick?
If you don't get everyone in the family to quit chasing her and punishing her, your problems will continue to get worse. Explain to your family that she is not doing this to annoy and anger them. She's a dog. She's doing what dogs do. I suggest that only you work with her on this until you see real progress. This behavior isn't going to change overnight. You need to work on it several times a day in short sessions. There is no time line. It will take however long it takes. That will be determined by how often you work on it and how consistent you are with the re training. You say you tried the leash for 5 days and then took it off and she reverted to the chase game. She's been practicing this behavior for months and it may take months to retrain her. If you give up on a method because it's not working fast enough, you will continue to fail.
Next is going down the stairs. Many dogs have a problem with stairs that are open. Looks very scary to a dog. Slow and gentle training sessions will work. Start at the top stair with her on lead (not being held in arms by you) and you with the tastiest treats you can find. Make sure she doesn't have to potty before these sessions. Put a treat on the second step and you go to the third step. Encourage her to step down and get the treat. If she won't and is showing fear, don't try to pull her to the second step. Just keep working on it and she'll gain confidence. If treats aren't working, try a favorite squeaky toy. Don't try to get her all the way down in one session. If you make any progress, say she goes down three steps and then seems reluctant, go back to the top step and get her to go down just one or two and stop for that session.
I always suggest people do some reading up on dogs and how they learn. Dogs are such a huge part of so many families and we sort of assume that we know all about dogs. But it's amazing the insight you can gain if you spend the time to educate yourself on why dogs do some of the things that makes us crazy. Culture Clash by Jean Donaldson is a great book. Patricial McConnell's book, The Other End of the Leash is another good one. I'm reading a book now by Sophia Yin called How to Behave so You Dog Behaves. I'm loving it. These aren't boring step by step method books. They're meant to help us understand how our dog's minds work and why we fail in training because we don't communicate effectively what we want. Dogs want to get along and they are superb at it, if we give them fair and consitent training. Good luck and keep us posted.