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Description

What if your “problem” dog isn’t broken at all—just under‑fulfilled, over‑aroused, and waiting for clearer structure? We sit down with a listener whose three‑year‑old shih tzu wakes early, paces, fixates on a senior housemate, and melts down in public. The twist: he’s not “bad,” he’s wired like a working dog in a small body. Our goal becomes simple and doable—build a daily rhythm that channels drive, lowers stress, and teaches calm on cue.

We dig into the tug‑of‑war between genetics and lifestyle, especially when maturity unmasks anxiety. You’ll hear how we set “windows” of focused activity with marker words—Are you ready? opens the session; All done closes it—then pick up toys and move the dog into a crate or tether to practice settling. We break down short food games like get it and yes to engage the brain, then layer easy skills and play. The result is arousal with purpose, followed by true decompression, not nagging or guilt.

Multi‑dog homes get special attention: how to protect seniors, stop relentless pestering with a slip lead, and decide when to interrupt play versus let it flow. We talk crate training that builds alone‑time skills without drama, why randomizing session times prevents anticipatory chaos, and when a well‑fitted e‑collar can add humane clarity after foundations. If winter has cut your walks, you’ll learn how two short, high‑value sessions a day can outperform long, inconsistent exercise and steadily grow confidence for public spaces when weather returns.

By the end, we land on a compassionate truth: you can’t turn every dog into your last dog, but you can teach the one in front of you how to thrive. If this resonates, tap follow, share with a friend who’s overwhelmed, and leave a review telling us the one habit you’ll try this week.

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