| OK,
OK, remember, this was PRE-clicker, my moment of being hit by
the
lightning bolt, after I had given up "obedience training"
but before I had
any idea of what was going to replace it.
I am,
in Canada, the grandma of Giant Schnauzers, and am frequently
called upon to answer questions and help people out with Giant
problems. Some friends were getting a divorce, and the tension
in the household had driven their 15-mo homebred puppy bitch quite
out of her mind. They called to tell me that they had taken her
to a show but couldn't show her because she was in the crate and
no
one could get her out (a pro handler later told me he had looked
in the crate from quite a ways back, and "there was nothing
in THAT crate but BIG TEETH and LOTS OF THEM"). They put
the crate on a plane, and I picked it up at the airport and deposited
it in my living room.
They were
right, there was a lot of movin' and shakin' going on in there,
and none of it friendly. I couldn't think of anything else to
do, so I opened the crate door and sat quickly down on the couch
(see, I've been a Couch Trainer for a LOOOOOONG time!) with a
broom to fend her off if necessary. She sat in the crate and snarled
and snapped for a very long time, and when she finally slowed
down a little, (sheer luck, had NO idea what I was doing), I whispered
"yes" and tossed a bit of hot dog in the crate, which
caused another round of snarling and snapping and teeth hanging
out all over the place. It took her three hours to actually pick
up the first piece, and another hour to cross the 10' between
the crate and my lap. For the rest of the day, I just kept her
with me with a leash, saying "yes" when she did something
reasonable and ignoring her or walking away when she was less
than reasonable.
By the
following evening, she had settled down beautifully and seemed
to believe that I was capable of controlling the universe without
her worrying about it or helping. I took her and another Giant
to a training building, and handed the leash to a trusted friend
while I worked the other dog. The bitch was a bit leery, but seemed
able to respond reasonably. I told my friend to ignore her, and
offer her a
bit of hot dog once in a while.
Everything
was going well until someone else showed up, a dog barked, she
jumped back and pulled the leash out of my friend's hand and darted
out the door. Sue Ailsby, Professional Dog Trainer - motto: I
can kill anything in less than 24 hours! As I ran out the door,
I saw her standing in the middle of the street, up on her toenails,
pupils dilated, daring someone to breath and she would be GONE
-
a black dog in the middle of a strange city in the middle of the
night, and no one would EVER catch her. Still not having a clue
what I was doing, I started saying "yes" quietly, and
pretending I had a hot dog. The third time I said it, I saw her
pupils constrict. The fourth time, she looked around as if she
had just woken up, gave herself a little shake, and trotted over
to me with a shaky little "Gosh, this is
embarassing, out in the middle of the street! Let's go back inside!".
When I
got home, I was telling my surgeon husband what happened, and
said
"It was totally amazing - it was as if someone had shot her
with a tranquilizing dart. One moment she was freaked out of her
mind, the next moment she was totally relaxed!" And he replied
"You really don't know what happened, do you?! You taught
her a word which forced her to think about food. When she was
thinking about food, she was not physically capable of producing
adrenalin. When she stopped producing adrenalin, she stopped being
afraid." This led to my vision of the big red button I could
"install" in the dog's forehead by pairing the "click"
to the food, then when the dog was approaching a situation where
it was about to be
afraid, or angry, or hysterically excited, I could "reach
out and push the button" and short-circuit the whole event
by simply saying "yes" and making the dog think about
food.
This idea
of using the dog's body FOR me was so earth-shattering for me,
I have difficulty talking about it. It led quickly to the realization
that as a J&P trainer, I spent all my time using the dog's
body AGAINST me - teach the dog to sit by pushing down, thus forcing
the dog to push back against me. Would it not be more sensible
to teach the dog to STAND by pushing down? YES! Teach the dog
to come by pulling it toward me? No! Teach the dog to come by
PUSHING IT
AWAY! Understand, at this point my entire world is shattering
in little pieces around me, but I'm too excited to stop. I start
to shiver just thinking about this. I was a J&P trainer for
25 years! So what started me on The Path was my dear departed
Spider and her teeth in that crate. She stayed with me, by the
way, and showed me many other things once we started in the right
direction.
Sue eh?
(shivering)
Afterword:
That wonderful dog became the first Giant Schnauzer in history
with a sheepherding degree, and placed in herding trials. She
was a Group winner in conformation, and earned her CDX. She ran
on a competitive dogsled team. A movie star tried to buy her (but
failed). |