The Mindful Dog Parent: Dog Training Advice & Calm Support for Overwhelmed Owners

Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days: What’s Actually Going On (And Why It’s Not What You Think)

31 min · 5 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days: What’s Actually Going On (And Why It’s Not What You Think)

Descripción

If you’ve ever wondered why your dog is worse some days and fine on others, same walk, same route, completely different dog, this episode explains exactly what’s going on. Today we’re talking about the stress bucket: the cumulative stress model that explains why reactive dog behaviour changes from day to day, and what you can actually do about it. In Episode 46 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m walking through the stress bucket concept, what goes into it (including some things you might not expect), how to help empty it between difficult days, and what this understanding changes about how you experience your dog. This is one of the most practical and immediately useful frameworks in Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™, and once you have it, you’ll never see your dog’s inconsistency the same way again. This episode follows naturally from Episode 44 (the window before a reaction) and Episode 46 builds the fuller picture of why that window looks different on different days. MAIN TOPICS The stress bucket The cumulative stress model, the idea that your dog has a bucket that fills with stressors throughout the day and across days. Cortisol takes 48–72 hours to clear, so stressors stack. When the bucket fills, threshold drops and your dog reacts earlier, more intensely, and recovers more slowly. It’s not regression. It’s biology. What goes into the bucket 1. Physical stress - pain, illness, discomfort (the most under-recognised contributor to reactivity) 2. Sensory stress - busy environments, loud noises, lots of movement and input 3. Social stress - interactions that required effort, even ones that looked fine 4. Routine disruption - changes to feeding, sleep, schedule, household 5. Your nervous system - your stress goes into your dog’s bucket through co-regulation How to empty the bucket 1. Decompression time - quiet, low-stimulus rest after stressful events. Sniff walks actively support cortisol clearance. 2. Predictability and routine - genuinely restorative for anxious dogs 3. Connection and rest - the uncomplicated together-time from Episode 45 is part of this 4. Reading the bucket before walks - what’s happened in the last 48 hours as useful information, not anxiety What this changes The story you tell yourself on hard days (bucket full, not backwards). How you prepare when the bucket has been filling. And how you understand progress, a dog whose bucket empties more easily and whose threshold has risen over time. KEY TAKEAWAY It’s not the leaf. It’s everything that went into the bucket before the leaf. Your dog is not inconsistent, their nervous system is responding to a constantly changing set of inputs, exactly as it’s designed to do. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * The stress bucket / cumulative stress model * Episode 44: What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts * Episode 45: You Became a Dog Owner. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ * Free private podcast series — lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series] * Bonnie — Sian’s dog, whose story features in Part Two RELATED EPISODES * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 * When You Start Trusting Yourself Again With Your Dog — Episode 32 * Your Dog’s Bad Day Doesn’t Mean You’ve Gone Backwards — Episode 31 * Why Your Dog Isn’t Learning Outside: Thresholds Explained — Episode 35 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Share this episode with a dog parent who is confused by their dog’s inconsistency * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down, leave a rating and review * Sign up for the free private podcast series: lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series]

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49 episodios

episode Why Your Dog Is Fine at Home but Falls Apart on Walks: What’s Actually Happening artwork

Why Your Dog Is Fine at Home but Falls Apart on Walks: What’s Actually Happening

If your dog is calm and relaxed at home but seems like a completely different animal on walks, reactive, tense, or anxious, this episode explains exactly why. Today we’re talking about why dogs behave differently at home vs outside, what threshold actually means in practice, and what you can do to help narrow that gap. In Episode 49 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m unpacking the nervous system science behind why your dog at home and your dog on walks can feel so different — and why that gap isn’t a behaviour problem. It’s information. Once you understand what’s creating it, you have somewhere useful to put your energy. This episode follows naturally from Episode 46 (the stress bucket) and Episode 47 ,(co-regulation), and builds the full picture of why reactive dog behaviour changes from situation to situation. MAIN TOPICS Why the environment is doing something Home is a known, controlled, low-stimulus environment — the nervous system can genuinely rest there. Outside is unpredictable, full of constant new input, requiring constant alertness. Threshold is explained: the point where a nervous system moves from managing to reacting. Below threshold, your dog notices things and stays regulated. Above it, the reaction takes over. Why the gap is bigger for some dogs Four contributing factors: genetics and breed (some nervous systems are wired for alertness), history (difficult experiences outside prime the nervous system to expect threat), the stress bucket (a full bucket means lower threshold before the walk even starts), and co-regulation (your nervous system state contributes to your dog's threshold). Framed carefully as information, not blame. The reframe The relaxed dog at home is not pretending. The reactive dog on walks is not the real version. They are the same dog in two different nervous system states. Progress is expanding threshold capacity — not creating a different dog. Every walk becomes information rather than evidence of failure. Four practical steps * Know your dog’s threshold signs — what does rising activation look like for your specific dog * Read the bucket before you leave — 30 seconds of assessment that changes the walk you plan * Bring home with you — micro-decompression moments on the walk (sniffing, sitting together, scatter feeding) * Celebrate below-threshold moments — noticing and quietly marking the moments your dog stays regulated KEY TAKEAWAY Your dog at home and your dog on walks are not two different dogs. They’re one dog in two very different nervous system states. And the gap between those states is not fixed. It can narrow. FREE RESOURCE * The One-Minute Reset — free from The Dog Parent Path™: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool [https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool ] MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Episode 46: Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — the stress bucket * Episode 47: Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — co-regulation * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com] * The free One-Minute Reset: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool [https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool ] * Bonnie — personal story in the intro RELATED EPISODES * Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — Episode 46 * Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — Episode 47 * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 * Why Your Dog Isn’t Learning Outside: Thresholds Explained — Episode 35 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Download the free One-Minute Reset: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool [https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool ] * Share this episode with a dog parent who is confused by this exact thing * Leave a quick review on Apple Podcasts * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com]

26 de may de 202627 min
episode The Dog Walk Dread: When Going Out Feels Like the Hardest Part of Your Day artwork

The Dog Walk Dread: When Going Out Feels Like the Hardest Part of Your Day

If you’ve been dreading dog walks, standing at the front door already braced for what might go wrong, this episode finally names what’s actually happening. Today we’re talking about the dog walk dread: why so many overwhelmed dog owners feel it, why it makes complete sense, and four steps to make walks manageable again. In Episode 48 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I share my own experience of the Sunday night dread with Bonnie, explain the nervous system science behind anticipatory anxiety in dog owners, and give you practical tools to interrupt the cycle, starting with the free One-Minute Reset from The Dog Parent Path™. This is one of the most common and least talked-about experiences in reactive dog ownership. If you’ve ever thought ‘I love my dog but I hate walking them’, this episode is for you. You are not alone, and you are not a bad dog parent. What the walk dread actually is The dread is not a character flaw or evidence of being a bad dog parent. It’s anticipatory anxiety, the nervous system building a predictive pattern based on repeated difficult experiences. After enough hard walks, the anticipation activates the same stress response as the difficult walk itself. Rooted in neuroscience (affect labelling, predictive nervous systems). Connected to Episode 47’s co-regulation framework: the dread transmits down the lead before the walk even starts. Why it makes complete sense (and why you’re not stuck) The nervous system is predictive, not pessimistic. It uses past data to prepare for the next experience. Thirty difficult walks creates thirty data points of 'walks are hard.' The nervous system updates slowly, which is why the dread can persist even after things start improving. But it is changeable. Every okay walk is a new data point. The prediction softens over time. The reframe Dread plus shame is exhausting. Dread plus understanding is workable. Understanding the mechanism shifts where you put your energy, from fighting the dread to working with your nervous system in the moments before the walk. Four practical steps * Name it before you leave - affect labelling reduces emotional intensity (neuroscience-backed) * Do the One-Minute Reset - free resource from The Dog Parent Path™, body-based regulation before the walk * Lower the threshold - on dread days, a manageable 10-minute walk is worth more than a 40-minute white-knuckled one * Mark the return - a deliberate closing ritual teaches the nervous system that walks end in safety KEY TAKEAWAY You’re not a bad dog parent for dreading the walks. You’re a dog parent whose nervous system has learned from experience, and whose nervous system can learn something new, one walk at a time. FREE RESOURCE MENTIONED * The One-Minute Reset - free download from The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com/reset [thedogparentpath.com/reset] MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Episode 47: Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — co-regulation and the dread transmitting down the lead * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ - thedogparentpath.com [ thedogparentpath.com] * Bonnie - Sian’s dog, whose story features in the personal story section RELATED EPISODES * Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — Episode 47 * Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — Episode 46 * When the Walk Goes Wrong: A Simple Way to Reset — Episode 40 * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Download the free One-Minute Reset: thedogparentpath.com/reset [thedogparentpath.com/reset] * Share this episode with a dog parent who dreads their walks * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts - search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down, leave a rating and review * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com]

19 de may de 202619 min
episode Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up (And What to Do About It) artwork

Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up (And What to Do About It)

Does your dog pick up on your anxiety? The short answer is yes, and in this episode I’m explaining exactly how that works, why it’s not something to feel guilty about, and how you can use the same connection to help both of you. Today we’re talking about co-regulation: the real physiological process that connects your nervous system to your dog’s, in both directions. In Episode 47 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m unpacking what co-regulation actually is (not just as a concept but as a lived, practical thing on the walk), what the escalating and de-escalating loops look like in practice, and four things you can do to work with the connection rather than against it. This episode is the capstone of the nervous system arc alongside Episodes 44, 45, and 46, and it ties together everything we’ve covered about the stress bucket, the window before a reaction, and being present with your dog. MAIN TOPIC What co-regulation actually is The physiological process by which nervous systems influence each other through presence, proximity, and the continuous signals bodies send. Research from Queen’s University Belfast found dogs can detect human stress hormones through scent. Your dog isn’t vaguely picking up on your mood, they’re receiving detailed physiological information. And a regulated nervous system is just as contagious as a dysregulated one. How the loop works in both directions The escalating loop (both winding each other up toward the trigger) and the de-escalating loop (the exhale, the softer grip, the slightly higher threshold). Maisy’s story illustrates the escalating loop without blame. Bonnie’s story illustrates the de-escalating version in practice. Framed throughout as information about agency, not evidence of failure. Four things to do with this knowledge * Start before you leave the house — sixty seconds of genuine pause before the walk begins * Regulate through your body not your mind — one exhale, dropped shoulders, unclenched jaw (callback to Episode 44) * Notice what your dog does for you — co-regulation is bidirectional, your dog is also regulating you if you let them * Repair after hard moments — quiet reconnection closes the loop (callback to Episode 40) The bigger picture You are never just walking your dog. Your presence is not neutral. The work you do on your own nervous system is directly your dog’s work too. When you get calmer, they get calmer. That’s not pressure, that’s power. KEY TAKEAWAY It’s not failure. It’s the loop. And the loop can run in either direction. You have more influence than you think, not through control, but through presence. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Queen’s University Belfast 2021 research — dogs detecting human stress hormones through scent (PLOS ONE) * Episode 44: What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts * Episode 40: When the Walk Goes Wrong — the Five-Minute Debrief * Episode 46: Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — the stress bucket * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — lavendergardenanimalservices.co.uk * Free private podcast series — lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series * Maisy and Bonnie — Sian’s dogs, both stories feature in Part Two RELATED EPISODES * Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — Episode 46 * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 * When the Walk Goes Wrong: A Simple Way to Reset — Episode 40 * You Became a Dog Parent. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? — Episode 45 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Share this episode with a dog parent who is stuck in the loop and doesn’t have the words for it yet * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down, leave a rating and review Sign up for my FREE one-minute reset tool: Does your dog pick up on your anxiety? The short answer is yes — and in this episode I’m explaining exactly how that works, why it’s not something to feel guilty about, and how you can use the same connection to help both of you. Today we’re talking about co-regulation: the real physiological process that connects your nervous system to your dog’s, in both directions.In Episode 47 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m unpacking what co-regulation actually is (not just as a concept but as a lived, practical thing on the walk), what the escalating and de-escalating loops look like in practice, and four things you can do to work with the connection rather than against it.This episode is the capstone of the nervous system arc alongside Episodes 44, 45, and 46 — and it ties together everything we’ve covered about the stress bucket, the window before a reaction, and being present with your dog. MAIN TOPICS What co-regulation actually is The physiological process by which nervous systems influence each other through presence, proximity, and the continuous signals bodies send. Research from Queen’s University Belfast found dogs can detect human stress hormones through scent. Your dog isn’t vaguely picking up on your mood — they’re receiving detailed physiological information. And a regulated nervous system is just as contagious as a dysregulated one. How the loop works in both directions The escalating loop (both winding each other up toward the trigger) and the de-escalating loop (the exhale, the softer grip, the slightly higher threshold). Maisy’s story illustrates the escalating loop without blame. Bonnie’s story illustrates the de-escalating version in practice. Framed throughout as information about agency, not evidence of failure. Four things to do with this knowledge * Start before you leave the house — sixty seconds of genuine pause before the walk begins * Regulate through your body not your mind — one exhale, dropped shoulders, unclenched jaw (callback to Episode 44) * Notice what your dog does for you — co-regulation is bidirectional, your dog is also regulating you if you let them * Repair after hard moments — quiet reconnection closes the loop (callback to Episode 40) The bigger picture You are never just walking your dog. Your presence is not neutral. The work you do on your own nervous system is directly your dog’s work too. When you get calmer, they get calmer. That’s not pressure — that’s power. KEY TAKEAWAY It’s not failure. It’s the loop. And the loop can run in either direction. You have more influence than you think — not through control, but through presence. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Queen’s University Belfast 2021 research — dogs detecting human stress hormones through scent (PLOS ONE) * Episode 44: What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts * Episode 40: When the Walk Goes Wrong — the Five-Minute Debrief * Episode 46: Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — the stress bucket * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — lavendergardenanimalservices.co.uk * Free one minute reset tool: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool [https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool] * Maisy and Bonnie — Sian’s dogs, both stories feature in Part Two RELATED EPISODES * Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — Episode 46 * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 * When the Walk Goes Wrong: A Simple Way to Reset — Episode 40 * You Became a Dog Owner. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? — Episode 45 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Share this episode with a dog parent who is stuck in the loop and doesn’t have the words for it yet * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down, leave a rating and review * Sign up for my free One-Minute Reset Tool, use it in those difficult moments: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool [https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool] * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com]

12 de may de 202638 min
episode Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days: What’s Actually Going On (And Why It’s Not What You Think) artwork

Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days: What’s Actually Going On (And Why It’s Not What You Think)

If you’ve ever wondered why your dog is worse some days and fine on others, same walk, same route, completely different dog, this episode explains exactly what’s going on. Today we’re talking about the stress bucket: the cumulative stress model that explains why reactive dog behaviour changes from day to day, and what you can actually do about it. In Episode 46 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m walking through the stress bucket concept, what goes into it (including some things you might not expect), how to help empty it between difficult days, and what this understanding changes about how you experience your dog. This is one of the most practical and immediately useful frameworks in Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™, and once you have it, you’ll never see your dog’s inconsistency the same way again. This episode follows naturally from Episode 44 (the window before a reaction) and Episode 46 builds the fuller picture of why that window looks different on different days. MAIN TOPICS The stress bucket The cumulative stress model, the idea that your dog has a bucket that fills with stressors throughout the day and across days. Cortisol takes 48–72 hours to clear, so stressors stack. When the bucket fills, threshold drops and your dog reacts earlier, more intensely, and recovers more slowly. It’s not regression. It’s biology. What goes into the bucket 1. Physical stress - pain, illness, discomfort (the most under-recognised contributor to reactivity) 2. Sensory stress - busy environments, loud noises, lots of movement and input 3. Social stress - interactions that required effort, even ones that looked fine 4. Routine disruption - changes to feeding, sleep, schedule, household 5. Your nervous system - your stress goes into your dog’s bucket through co-regulation How to empty the bucket 1. Decompression time - quiet, low-stimulus rest after stressful events. Sniff walks actively support cortisol clearance. 2. Predictability and routine - genuinely restorative for anxious dogs 3. Connection and rest - the uncomplicated together-time from Episode 45 is part of this 4. Reading the bucket before walks - what’s happened in the last 48 hours as useful information, not anxiety What this changes The story you tell yourself on hard days (bucket full, not backwards). How you prepare when the bucket has been filling. And how you understand progress, a dog whose bucket empties more easily and whose threshold has risen over time. KEY TAKEAWAY It’s not the leaf. It’s everything that went into the bucket before the leaf. Your dog is not inconsistent, their nervous system is responding to a constantly changing set of inputs, exactly as it’s designed to do. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * The stress bucket / cumulative stress model * Episode 44: What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts * Episode 45: You Became a Dog Owner. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ * Free private podcast series — lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series] * Bonnie — Sian’s dog, whose story features in Part Two RELATED EPISODES * What to Do in the Moments Before Your Dog Reacts — Episode 44 * When You Start Trusting Yourself Again With Your Dog — Episode 32 * Your Dog’s Bad Day Doesn’t Mean You’ve Gone Backwards — Episode 31 * Why Your Dog Isn’t Learning Outside: Thresholds Explained — Episode 35 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Share this episode with a dog parent who is confused by their dog’s inconsistency * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down, leave a rating and review * Sign up for the free private podcast series: lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series]

5 de may de 202631 min
episode You Became a Dog Parent. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? artwork

You Became a Dog Parent. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person?

If you’re an overwhelmed dog parent who has lost the uncomplicated feeling of just being with your dog, somewhere underneath the training and the management and the hard walks, this episode is for you. Today we’re talking about the quiet erosion of connection that happens when dog parenting gets hard, and how to find your way back. In Episode 45 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m exploring how the shift from “just being their person” to “being their manager” happens gradually and without anyone intending it, and why rebuilding that connection matters so much more than most dog training advice acknowledges. Not just for your wellbeing, but for your dog’s nervous system and the foundation of everything you’re working on together. This is one of the most personal episodes I’ve made. I hope it gives you something real. How the shift happens The gradual drift from uncomplicated love to management mode — how caring deeply and trying hard can, without anyone noticing, turn a relationship into a project. Includes the Maisy story: having her love but not always her presence, and recognising those aren’t the same thing. Why the relationship matters more than you think The nervous system science behind why connection isn’t separate from the training work, it’s the foundation of it. The ordinary uncomplicated moments are deposits into the nervous system bank that build the felt sense of safety your dog needs. Your dog doesn’t need a perfect trainer. They need a safe person. What it looks like to just be their person * Let a walk be just a walk - one walk this week with no agenda, no training, no assessment. Includes the Bonnie story. * Sit with them without an agenda - five minutes, no phone, no treats, just full presence * Notice what you love about them - not what’s improved, not what’s hard, just what is specifically and particularly theirs * Let them be enough as they are today - just for today, not abandoning the work, just letting the relationship be the point A note on guilt For the listeners who will hear this episode and feel guilty about having been in manager mode. The training focus came from love. Nothing needed to be different. This is about adding a layer, not correcting a failure. KEY TAKEAWAY Your dog doesn’t need a perfect trainer. They need a safe person. And being their safe person doesn’t require technique or knowledge or getting anything right. It just requires presence. MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Sian's Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * Free private podcast series — lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [ lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series] * Maisy — Sian’s dog, whose story features in Part One * Bonnie — Sian’s dog, whose story features in Part Three RELATED EPISODES * When You Can’t Feel Joy With Your Dog (Even Though You Love Them So Much) — Episode 25 * You’re Not a Bad Dog Parent — You’re a Shamed One — Episode 39 * You’re Doing Better Than You Think: The Evidence You Keep Ignoring — Episode 41 * When You’re Waiting for Your Dog to Get Better — Episode 42 APPLE PODCASTS REVIEW ASK If The Mindful Dog Parent has helped you, the most useful thing you can do is leave a review on Apple Podcasts. It takes two minutes and it’s how other overwhelmed dog parents find the show. Search The Mindful Dog Parent on Apple Podcasts, scroll down, and leave a rating and review. Thank you so much. CALLS TO ACTION * Share this episode with a dog parent who has lost a bit of the joy * Subscribe to the podcast, so you don't miss an episode * Sign up for the free private podcast series: lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series [lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series] * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com] (website still under construction)

28 de abr de 202625 min