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Am I Proud of My Dogs?

Fran on Friday

0620_tngo_mail1You dog owners who are somewhat active on social media have probably seen posts by people who have been “tagged” to post a picture displaying their pride in being a dog owner. I was tagged today, and I had a hard time with my comments.

As most dog owners do, I have tons of pictures of my dogs and I post lots of pictures of them. Sitting, lying down, chewing on stuff, jumping, you name it. But how does my pride in being a dog owner enter into it?

Merriam-Webster’s simple definition of “pride”:

  • : a feeling that you respect yourself and deserve to be respected by other people

  • : a feeling that you are more important or better than other people

  • : a feeling of happiness that you get when you or someone you know does something good, difficult, etc.

The second definition doesn’t apply here – more important or better than others? I don’t think so. The first one – well, that goes without saying. So it comes down to the third definition. I do get a feeling of happiness when my dogs do things that are good or difficult.

I train my dogs so that they can be happy just “being.” With me, or in their crates, or at home with Hope when I’m not there. I want my dogs to be that independent, but still know that I’ll be there when they need something. I think that’s hard for some dogs.

I train my dogs to do what I tell them to do – both in the competition ring and outside of it. I think that might be easier than the hours we spend happily in each others’ company, just being.

I bring my dogs to work sometimes, and I’m lucky that I get to do that. Most of the time at work I don’t ask anything of them. Just to be. Or sometimes pose on a stupid mail table so I can take their picture (that’s Tango).

Sustaining the motivation

Dog training is not serious.Dog training is an ongoing process. It’s not about the ribbons. It’s not about the scores. It’s not about the applause. Those things are nice, but it’s not why we train our dogs. Every day – every single day – we’re doing something with our dogs. Even if it’s just feeding them and taking them outside to eliminate, we’re doing something with them. On a Saturday I may say, “I’m doing nothing today!” But I’m not being literal. I can’t do nothing. Because that face is looking up at me. I know that he’ll get into trouble if I don’t make him think for at least five minutes a day. And he won’t leave me alone until I do something with him. He’ll jump on me, looking at me with that face…

So we’ll practice “sit.” And “down.” And “come.” And so on. And then we’ll run around and be silly, because dog training is not serious. It’s important, but it’s not serious. Even fetching a ball teaches a dog useful skills. Like coming back to me while he’s holding something. And running around in a circle with me teaches him to chase my shoulder on an agility course. And then maybe I can do nothing on a Saturday.