My soft Sibe was
described as one who was fearful of certain people (known and unknown)
in familiar and unfamiliar situations. These are some of the things I
did to help him and therefore, myself.
Get your Sibe into an
obedience class. Do this at any age. It is good for (re)focusing and
socialization. Discuss the softness of your Sibe with your trainer
beforehand so s/he can help target training towards this particular
issue.
An agility or rally
class will build self confidence in your Sibe and you! Start the class
at the same time or once the obedience class is completed. Your Sibe
takes many cues from you (most are at a level you are even unaware of!),
so you need to feel comfortable and confident, as well. All three (3)
of these classes will help both of you! A soft Siberian can be non
confident for a variety of reasons. Unless you are breeding and it
appears to be a genetic issue, I'd move on...
Deal with the
behavior(s) You'll go nuts trying to analyze why s/he is shy around
certain people and not others~certain situations and not others. In the
end, you still need to deal with the behavior(s). *Boy, did I have
trouble with this as I LOVE to analyze everything, but in this instance,
it only took up valuable time.*
Use "high end" edible
treats for rewarding appropriate behavior. Don't use the everyday
stuff! Use things s/he will really love and want to work for-meat,
cheese, the good stuff! I use clicker training and positive methods.
Clicker training lets the Sibe have an auditory reinforcement at the
exact moment when their behavior is something I want them to repeat.
Also, vary your reinforcers~ you can also use squeekers, tennis balls,
noise makers and fuzzy toys of various kinds...whatever is reinforcing
for your Sibe. Change them out often. Do your best to make it fun and
surprising. Your Sibe will reward you by doing what you want to see.
Teach your Sibe a
repertoire of "things" (tasks) to do. These should be the easy every
day to day things, ie. sit, lay down, shake, look at me....Require him
to do these outside of his "safe area" (the house-the yard). By making
him do his usual (comfortable) things in an unusual (uncomfortable)
place, you'll train him to focus his mind on you and his task. You are
also changing only 1 variable (the place) and keeping 1 thing stable
(the task). This will increase the probability of success. Success
leads to increased confidence. Add additional tasks (that s/he has
already mastered in their safe area). Add new places slowly as your Sibe
can handle them.
When s/he acts in a way
you want to discourage, give NO positive or negative reinforcement.
Don't look at your Sibe, don't talk or touch him/her. If
possible....totally ignore your Siberian, even though it will be hard to
do. Sibes don't like to be ignored and are smart enough to realize that
s/he will have to make the first move (which is what you want).
Negative reinforcement is rewarding in its own right to a Sibe.
Sometimes you have to intervene in serious situations. Then, do only
what is necessary and keep yourself under control. Pick your battles, as
"they" say. Ignore when you feel you can, intervene when you feel you
have to! *This is SO much about training ME as it is about training my
Sibe!*
Don't force your Sibe to
be touched or given a treat. Treat only the behavior you want repeated.
If you treat (or try to force treat) when he is fearful, you are
reinforcing the fearful behavior.
Start little and work
up. Keep training sessions short and always end on a positive note, no
matter how small. Ideally, you want (and absolutely need) him/her to
have lots of short, positive experiences and I mean LOTS!
Go to public places
(quieter parks (not high energy, busy dog parks), large store lots,
grocery store lots) at off hours. Take a walk around (this is of the
utmost importance!), then just sit on those benches and relax with your
Sibe. The *goal* is to have your Sibe become comfortable. Start by
letting him/her see you being relaxed and comfy in public places.
Adjust your time. Leave when s/he acts appropriately (sits calmly, lies
down, tail relaxes, not on "high alert", and any other signs that you
recognize as your Sibe "crisis" signals) then, come back another day to
a different spot. Feel free to bring that clicker and those high end
treats/reinforcers to give occasionally when s/he shows some relaxation
and you see what you want. Remember, leave on a positive note...don't
overstay. You need lots of short and positive experiences. Don't stay
so long as to have a negative experience. AND, if by chance, you do
have a negative experience, don't throw up your hands in dismay and
quit--pull yourself together and start fresh the next day. Siberians
have a wonderful way of working and living in the now. We, as trainers
and owners, need to do that as well.
You need to be relaxed,
comfortable and a good leader. Training yourself to be a good leader
probably will take time and energy. It is not for the faint of heart!
Examine your own behavior and make sure you are rewarding only the
behavior you want.
Consistency~this is
something that you'll have to work on day to day. Don't allow a
behavior one day and let it slide the next. If you do this, you are
confusing your Sibe. Families must work together, as well. Your Sibe
relies on your consistency and knowing what to expect from you (AND each
member of your family) everyday and every time!
Talk with others in the
know and get their input. Read...Use what fits into your program and
what is right for you, your Sibe and your situation. With me and my
situation, I was selective. I used what was right for me and did not
use what I deemed inappropriate for my situation. I do not think there
is a "one size fits all" answer. Pick and choose wisely. If one thing
doesn't work, don't throw out the entire program, and quit. Only adjust.
"The only thing constant is change.", as my mom always said, so feel
free to change/adjust as needed for your situation and Sibe. However,
change 1 thing at a time and give each change time to see if it helps.
This is about learning trigger points in your Sibe, intervening early
and training YOU to respond only to desired behavior.
Think of this as having
1 long term goal and many short term objectives (necessary to reach that
long term goal). The long term goal will take a while to reach, but
consider the short term objectives as baby steps in reaching that goal.
Feel good about every baby step reached! Each objective is an important
step for both you and your Sibe.
In my experience, there
is no "miracle", but there is light at the end of the tunnel! It has
worked for me and my guy...wasn't a cake walk, but absolutely well worth
it in the end! I have the 4 legged proof!
