g33
Posted : 4/16/2007 11:04:11 AM
Outdoorschik - I haven't read the entire thread on this subject, but I did read the whole original post. I wanted to wait a couple of days to reply.
I can say this from personal experience, that for women like us who have lived with and managed a dog(s) with aggression issues, we sometimes get desensitized to how much of our lives center around this kind of management. I hope you'll bear with me as I share something deeply personal.
I had a chocolate Lab that had some pretty serious aggression issues that I was unable to fix, and I tried everything. 3 years ago her rescue told me to put her down because there weren't any other options available. I chose to manage her at that time, because I was single with a relatively predictable lifestyle, and I also had people in my life who understood her junk and helped me manage her. About a year and a half after the rescue said to PTS, I met my husband. We got engaged and six months later I moved the dogs in with him while I lived with friends elsewhere before our wedding. Now, my husband had been around dogs all his life, but he had never been around rescues and had NEVER encountered a dog like my Bunny. He could not believe how much work and discipline she required (which never "stuck"), how much she ran my life and, consequently after the marriage, OUR lives. It was a battle every day either between he and I, or between us and her, because she growled at us every day, several times a day. We also have an 8 year old daughter (his from previous marriage) and we have people over at the house constantly. It was always a worry of what might happen. Not only that, she would bolt after other dogs too - nearly scaring a neighbor half to death one day.
Finally, his/our frustration reached a breaking point and I contacted her rescue to see about rehoming her. She was evaluated by a very well known behaviorist in my area who deemed her ineligible for rehabilitation (and this was someone who makes their living rehabbing the toughest behavioral issues). Her problems were never alleviated by either behavioral modification or meds (meds made her worse) and the behaviorist felt I'd have to have her on megadoses of Prozac for the rest of her life, and even then she would never be trustworthy. She was, unfortunately, a product of our puppy mill industry.
This dog was tearing apart my life and my marriage. It wasn't until I had another person in my life that I finally realized: holy crap - my life totally revolves around this situation, and I finally saw that the costs outweighed the benefits. I wasn't able to have relationships with other PEOPLE because of my dog, and not to mention my OTHER dog was pretty neglected because of all the attention we had to focus on just getting through the day with Bunny. I finally and with a very heavy heart, after a great deal of soul-searching, made the decision to put her down.
Now, I am not telling you that you should put Snickers down. I don't think dog-dog aggression is as serious as when you have dog-human aggression with a dog that has a bite history. My point in sharing this is that your husband may just have absolutely no experience dealing with this - and thus, his threshold is much lower than yours. He doesn't have the emotional attachment to Snickers that you do, and in the midst of a tough situation it can seem to him that all of the problems center around the dog. Perhaps this is an opportunity for you to have a "wake up call" to how much of yourself you have given away to try and manage your dog - and in the process you're sacrificing your ability to have relationship with your husband and other people in your lives. It's easy for outsiders to point fingers and say your husband is being controlling and blame the whole issue on him, but my feeling is to cut him some slack. You've been dealing with it for much longer than he has, and even though you lived together before you got married, marriage has a way of putting a "finality" to a lot of things and he may just be venting some frustration and worry that "it's always going to be this way".
Hang in there, you have my best hopes for a positive and workable solution. I think its great that your husband is willing to go to a behaviorist to work with and understand Snickers - that says a lot about his commitment to be with you and to have compassion for the things that are important to you.