CorvusCorax
Deary me...
I may have double standards but I don't include giving essential medication (which I regard as non negotiable) in the same category as training a puppy or an adult dog with established undesirable behaviours.
Not related to giving medication, just in general. I prefer co-operation and I am prepared to be patient and take things slowly. Current dog was unused /resistant to having her nails trimmed, forcing the issue would have ended badly for both of us. We worked on one or two nails a day with plenty of rewards and she now nudges the clippers - bring it on human!
I don't think a dog sees a big difference TBH?
I have also trained other things purely positively, in the way you have described, linking the scary thing with something positive, because I can see that the dog is genuinely concerned/worried.
Like Clodagh, most effective thing I ever trained was accidental. I caught my dog humping a cushion when he was a pup and I was so outraged I roared at him and chased him out of the room. He's not scared of me and he's not scared of cushions, the sofa or the room, but he never did it again.
A lot of his behaviours in later life are because I *wasn't* clear/firm/black and white with him when he was a cute little puppy.
There are people on the forum who will say that they also stopped things like stock chasing accidentally - the correction came from nature (an electric fence, a kick from an animal) and solved the issue....that stuck in the dog's mind over and above the lure of a treat or praise.
It is now *more important* to them to avoid the unpleasant experience, whereas before, the thrill of chasing was worth more than what the humans had to offer. Not particularly nice but that's nature.
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