Cover image of show The Mindful Dog Parent: Dog Training Advice & Calm Support for Overwhelmed Owners

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

Podcast by Sian Lawley-Rudd - The Dog Parent Path

English

Health & personal development

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

You got a dog because you wanted connection. Companionship. Joy. But right now, it feels like something else. There’s guilt after the hard walks. Dread before them. A quiet, persistent voice that says you’re not doing this right, that a better dog parent would have it figured out by now. You don’t need more training tips. You need someone who understands what it actually feels like to love a dog who’s struggling, and to be the person holding the lead trying to hold it all together. That’s what The Mindful Dog Parent is here for. This is the weekly podcast for overwhelmed dog parents who know that something deeper is going on — even if they can’t quite name it yet. Dog parents who are carrying more than just a dog lead on their walks. Dog parents who are ready to stop blaming themselves and start understanding what’s actually happening. Hosted by Sian Lawley-Rudd — dog behaviour expert, ethical trainer, and creator of Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ — each episode works across three layers: your emotions, your nervous system, and your mindset. Because all three are intertwined. You can’t change how your dog behaves without understanding how you feel. You can’t regulate your dog’s nervous system without first understanding your own. And you can’t build a genuinely different relationship without shifting the mindset that got you here. This isn’t dog training advice in the traditional sense. It’s something deeper — and more lasting. Inside, you’ll find: - Honest conversations about dog parent guilt, shame, burnout, and dread — the things nobody else is talking about - The nervous system science behind why you and your dog wind each other up (and how to change it) - Mindset shifts that change how you see yourself and your dog - Practical tools you can use on today’s walk, not just in perfect conditions - A pathway toward genuine calm and connection — for you and your dog together This podcast is for you if your dog is reactive, anxious, or just harder than you expected — and if you’re the kind of person who knows the solution probably starts with you, even if you don’t know where to begin. It’s for the overwhelmed dog parent who is done with surface-level fixes and ready to go deeper. New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe wherever you listen — and if something resonates, share it with the dog parent in your life who needs to hear it.

All episodes

52 episodes

episode When You Lose Your Patience With Your Dog (And the Guilt That Comes After) artwork

When You Lose Your Patience With Your Dog (And the Guilt That Comes After)

If you've ever lost your patience with your dog, shouted, snapped, yanked the lead harder than you meant to, and spent hours afterwards feeling guilty, this episode is for you. Today we're talking about what's actually happening physiologically when you lose your patience, why the guilt that follows is often disproportionate to what happened, and what to do with both the moment itself and the aftermath. In Episode 52 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I share a moment of losing my patience with Bonnie that I wasn't proud of, and explain why losing patience is a nervous system event, not a character flaw. This episode also covers repair: what actually helps after a moment like this, for you and for your dog. This episode isn't about excusing the behaviour. It's about understanding it accurately, so the guilt doesn't outweigh what actually happened. MAIN TOPICS What losing patience actually is Losing patience is a nervous system event, not a moral failure. Sustained stress moves your own nervous system closer to its threshold. Near threshold, the prefrontal cortex (responsible for patient, regulated responses) goes quieter and faster, more reactive responses take over. This is the same mechanism explained for dogs throughout the podcast — just in you, looking different. Why the guilt is so disproportionate The moment feels like confirmation of pre-existing guilt about being a 'good enough' dog parent. Your dog can't reassure you afterwards, so your brain fills the silence with the worst story. If part of your identity is 'the calm one,' a moment of losing patience threatens that identity directly, making the guilt about more than the ten seconds themselves. The reframe Losing patience sometimes is not evidence of being a bad dog parent — it's evidence of a stretched nervous system. This doesn't erase the patient work done the rest of the time. At the same time, repair matters: a calm, settled presence afterwards does more good than hours of internal guilt. Four practical steps * Know your own early warning signs (tight jaw, shallow breathing, rising irritation) * Build in an exit before you need one (shorter routes, permission to turn back early) * Repair quickly and simply (settled presence, not over-apologising) * Talk to yourself the way you'd talk to a friend (accurate, not harshest possible account) KEY TAKEAWAY Losing your patience sometimes is not evidence that you're a bad dog parent. It's evidence that you're a human nervous system under sustained pressure. The goal isn't perfection, it's managing your threshold better and repairing well when it happens. 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 * Threshold concept (previously applied to dogs, now applied to the dog parent) * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — lavendergardenanimalservices.co.uk * Free private podcast series — lavendergardenanimalservices.myflodesk.com/private-podcast-series * Bonnie — personal story throughout RELATED EPISODES * You're Not a Bad Dog Parent — You're a Shamed One — Episode 39 * You're Not Too Sensitive — Episode 50 * Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — Episode 47 * The Five Things to Do in the 24 Hours After a Really Hard Walk — Episode 51 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 quietly carrying guilt over a moment that doesn't define them * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com]

23 Jun 2026 - 20 min
episode The Five Things to Do in the 24 Hours After a Really Hard Walk artwork

The Five Things to Do in the 24 Hours After a Really Hard Walk

If you’ve ever wondered what to do after a bad dog walk, when you’re home, the walk was hard, and you’re sitting in that particular kind of silence that follows a difficult one, this episode is a five-step framework for exactly that. Today we’re talking about the 24-hour window after a reactive or hard walk, why it matters more than most people realise, and what you can do to support both your nervous system and your dog’s recovery. In Episode 51 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I share the distinction between processing and replaying, the most important piece in the episode, and give you five specific, practical steps to work through in the hours after a hard walk. Not to analyse what went wrong. But to actively support the reset that changes what tomorrow’s walk looks like. This episode follows naturally from Episode 46 (the stress bucket), Episode 47 (co-regulation), and Episode 48 (the walk dread), and rounds out the practical walk toolkit alongside Episodes 40 and 44. MAIN TOPICS Why the 24 hours matter Cortisol takes 48–72 hours to clear. A hard walk adds significantly to the stress bucket. What you do in the hours after either supports the clearance process or interferes with it. This applies to both your dog’s nervous system and your own. Carrying on as normal after a stress response is one of the least helpful things you can do. Processing vs replaying Replaying is running the walk through your head looking for what went wrong, arriving at a verdict about yourself or your dog. It feels like processing but keeps the nervous system in a stress loop. Processing is acknowledging what happened and setting it down — letting the body complete the stress response through movement, stillness, or rest rather than re-triggering it through thought. The five steps support processing, not analysis. Why this changes tomorrow’s walk A dog who decompresses properly after a hard walk starts tomorrow with a lower bucket and higher threshold. You, having done your own reset, arrive less braced and less anticipatory. That transmits down the lead before anything has happened. The 24-hour window is an investment in tomorrow, not just today’s recovery. The five steps * Step One: Name it and set it down — affect labelling, factual not verdict-based * Step Two: Decompress together — calm, low-stimulus time for both of you * Step Three: Move your body differently — physical completion of the stress response * Step Four: Sniff walk before bed — parasympathetic activation, the most powerful tool for the dog’s bucket * Step Five: Reset your story before tomorrow — one hard walk is one data point, not a verdict KEY TAKEAWAY Hard walks happen. They will keep happening, even as things get better. But the 24 hours after a hard walk don’t have to be lost time. They can be the window where you and your dog do the work that actually changes what comes next. FREE RESOURCE * The One-Minute Reset — free from The Dog Parent Path™: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE * Episode 40: When the Walk Goes Wrong — the Five-Minute Debrief (immediate post-walk reset) * Episode 46: Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — stress bucket and cortisol * Episode 47: Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — co-regulation * Episode 48: The Dog Walk Dread — affect labelling in Step One * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — thedogparentpath.com * FREE One-Minute Reset Tool - RELATED EPISODES * When the Walk Goes Wrong: A Simple Way to Reset — Episode 40 * The Dog Walk Dread — Episode 48 * Why Your Dog Behaves Differently on Different Days — Episode 46 * 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: https://sianlawleyrudd.myflodesk.com/one-minute-reset-tool * Share this episode with a dog parent who’s in the aftermath of a hard walk right now * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com

9 Jun 2026 - 29 min
episode You’re Not Too Sensitive. You’re a Dog Parent Who Cares Too Much - And There’s a Difference artwork

You’re Not Too Sensitive. You’re a Dog Parent Who Cares Too Much - And There’s a Difference

If you’ve ever been told you’re too sensitive. or if part of you wonders whether you’re too emotional to be a good dog parent, this episode is a direct answer to that. Today we’re talking about what it actually means to be a highly feeling, deeply caring dog parent, why that’s so often misread as a flaw, and what changes when you understand the difference between sensitivity as a problem and sensitivity without support. In Episode 50 of The Mindful Dog Parent, I’m sharing my own experience of being told I feel too much, and how that story got louder during Bonnie’s reactivity. This episode names the people-pleaser and fixer pattern that sits underneath a lot of dog parent overwhelm, and reframes sensitivity as an asset that needs the right container, not something to overcome. This episode is one of the most personal I’ve made. I hope it gives you something real. MAIN TOPICS What ‘too sensitive’ actually means Neither the 'sensitivity is a deficit' version nor the 'sensitivity is a superpower' version is quite right. The honest picture: sensitivity is a nervous system that processes information more deeply. In dog parenting, it creates attunement. But sensitivity without support means the hard moments land harder, the accumulation depletes faster, and the recovery takes longer. That’s not too sensitive. That’s a sensitive person in an unsupported environment. Where caring too much comes from The people-pleaser and fixer pattern, taking on more responsibility than is yours, feeling accountable for things outside your control, making other creatures’ experience your problem to solve. In dog parenting this shows up as total responsibility for every reaction, hypervigilance, inability to just be with the dog without monitoring. Bonnie’s story. Naming the pattern as the beginning of changing the relationship with it. The reframe Sensitivity without boundaries and self-compassion is what’s hard — not the sensitivity itself. The same trait that makes the hard moments devastating makes you an attuned, deeply caring dog parent. Sensitivity as an asset that needs the right container. That container is what the nervous system work, emotional tools, and self-compassion practices build. Four practical steps * Name what’s yours and what isn’t - accuracy over total responsibility * Notice when you’re carrying your dog’s feelings (empathy vs absorption) * Give your sensitivity somewhere useful to go (tool rather than wound) * Self-compassion as a nervous system intervention (physiological, not soft) KEY TAKEAWAY You are not too sensitive. You are a sensitive person who has been doing this without the right support. Those are not the same thing. And the sensitivity that has felt like a burden in the hard moments is the same sensitivity that makes you the right person for this dog. 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 * Highly Sensitive Person (HSP) concept — referenced, not defined in depth * Nervous-System Aware Dog Parenting™ framework * The Dog Parent Path™ — thedogparentpath.com * Bonnie — personal story throughout RELATED EPISODES * You’re Not a Bad Dog Parent — You’re a Shamed One — Episode 39 * You Became a Dog Owner. When Did You Last Just Be Their Person? — Episode 45 * The Dog Walk Dread — Episode 48 * Why You and Your Dog Wind Each Other Up — Episode 47 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 the dog parent in your life who has been told they care too much * Leave a review on Apple Podcasts — search The Mindful Dog Parent, scroll down * Find out more about The Dog Parent Path™: thedogparentpath.com [thedogparentpath.com]

2 Jun 2026 - 22 min
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 May 2026 - 27 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 May 2026 - 19 min
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