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Canine Behavior/rescue dog anxiety

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Hi,
We recently took on a 4 year old German Shepherd, (pure bred spayed female) , as a rescue project from the city pound. They had tried to adopt her out without success and it was hoped she would not have to be put down. We have owned German Shepherds in the past, having them live long healthy lives as loved family pets. She has been a difficult project, but we are having success and she is really improving.
She was microchipped and ear tattooed, so we have some idea of her history which has not been good. Repeated returns to various animal shelters and abandonment. She shows emotional signs of having been mistreated. (afraid of the raised hand with cowering expectations of being hit) She was last picked up as a stray, malnourished and dehydrated with a piece of chewed rope around her neck in the downtown busy streets. The best guess is that she was tied up to a tree in a wild section of the park where homeless people live which is near the downtown area where she was found, and may have escaped.

She was in the city pound for a month. Her behavior was to sit with her head in the corner, and would not make eye contact with people. She was not aggressive, in fact she was very sweet and would lick your hand once or twice and withdraw back into her corner. She was not adoptable due to obvious behavior problems.

We took her home to work with her. For the first 3 days she would only pace and whine constantly. She would not relate to or make eye contact with people. She would let you pet her once or twice and then pull away and run away looking for away to escape. She would try to jump through glass windows, even on upper floors two stories up. Pacing and whining was constant. She also would have long periods of just looking up, at the sky or ceiling like she is transfixed on looking for something.

She would calm down on a leash, seems to be house trained and walks well on a leash. She obviously has been taught to walk on a leash and to heel. She is calm when being walked on leash, so she gets lots of walks. She would only go to sleep if she was on a leash and held. I slept the first 4 nights with her on leash beside my bed and the leash looped around my foot. When she would start to whine, I would give a short gentle tug, and she would lay back down and go back to sleep.

One month later she is doing really well. She is still a bit skittish, but is fitting into the family and seems much happier. She sleeps beside our bed off leash. She sleeps through the night. She goes to everyone's bed in the morning and licks them in the face until they wake up. She will maintain eye contact and comes when called. She will come up to us and use her nose to "nuzzle" for head petting. I can walk her off leash and she loves chasing and returning the ball. Lots of exercise in fenced areas where she can run and play. She is a keen tracker. She loves training and is very smart as German Shepherds are. She sits, stays, comes and goes down on command. She takes treats very gently from the hand. She is very good with other dogs, but plays a bit rough and is protective of her ball.

The problem is that she still has short periods, "out of the blue" once every two or three days, when she returns to her previous behavior. Not as bad, but she will start to whine and pace, then be transfixed, motionless with her head staring in the corner or up at the sky or ceiling. Treats or trying to get her to walk or even get her attention in these times is impossible. It is very strange and I have not been able to see any thing that would trigger the behavior. the behavior will last one to two hours and then,as suddenly, she is fine. The rest of the time she is fantastic and people who just see her for a short time comment on what a wonderful happy dog she seems to be, very affectionate and smart. I am not sure if she still has emotional problems that will get better over time or if she is having some kind of seizures or other physiological symptoms. We have had been to several vets and her health seems to be fine based on all of the regular tests. I think she will respond well to some type of structured training and would enjoy it. We are looking at a Shutzhund training program. I am contacting you because you seem to have experience with Shepherds and may have seen this type of anxiety before. Is it separation anxiety, maybe from another dog she was with, or from people? However she seems not to have been in a stable situation since she was first dropped off at an animal shelter when she was one year old. The owners at that time listed the reason for abandonment as they did not want to pay the vet bills for ear infections. She was then adopted out by the animal shelter to an old couple and returned to the shelter after a few months. One of them died. Then she was adopted out again, but we cannot trace those owners. But it was in a town several hundred miles away. So who knows what her experience has been over the past two years. No record.
It may have been original separation anxiety from the first owners that was never dealt with, and then just neglect for the past two years. So I am not sure if it is separation anxiety or neglect or a combination of these factors. Any help or advice from your experience would be appreciated.

Answer
Hi, Gary,

Thanks for the question.

This isn't separation anxiety. It's probably the aftereffects of the abuse and neglect (it sounds like PTSD). The more you can get her to play on a regular basis, particularly tug and fetch, the better off she'll be. Just make sure you always let her win at tug, and praise her enthusiastically for winning. Playtime with other dogs will also be beneficial.

When she exhibits anxiety, or the odd, staring behavior, try to josh her out of it. Don't comfort her physically.

ShutzHund could be very beneficial as long as the training/trainer isn't too rough.

You might also try this exercise to rebuild her confidence: http://www.tiny.cc/SwimUpstream

I hope this helps!
LCK
http://www.LeeCharlesKelley.com
“Changing the World, One Dog at a Time”

Canine Behavior

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Lee Charles Kelley

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I've been training dogs in New York City for nearly 20 years. My training approach and philosophy are based on the way police dogs, search-and-rescue dogs, and detection dogs are trained--through the prey drive, inherited from the wolf. It's true that there's been a shift away from using the "wolf model" in dog training recently, and to some extent, there's a good reason. That's because trainers have been using the wrong model, the one that says you have to be the "alpha" or the pack leader in order to control your dog's behavior. This simply isn't true. In wild wolves there is no dominance hierarchy, no "alpha" wolf, and no pack leader (not in the traditional sense). The pack instinct only exists to enable wolves to hunt large prey by working in harmony. (Wolves who live near garbage dumps, for example, and who don't hunt together, don't form packs.) So if wolves don't have an instinct to "follow the pack leader" or "obey the alpha wolf," how could dogs have inherited it from them?

Years ago, before I became a dog trainer, I noticed that the happiest, most obedient, and best-behaved dogs I met weren't the ones who'd been to a dog trainer or behaviorist; they were the dogs whose owners always had Frisbees and tennis balls on hand. And while it might seem that my approach would only be relevant to high-drive dogs who love fetch and tug-of-war, it isn't. Even something as seemingly unrelated as a housebreaking issue or greeting behavior are often the direct result of a dog's predatory energy not having an acceptable outlet.

All behavior is an expression of energy. So when a dog's energy isn't utilized in a way that feels satisfying to his or her instincts and emotions, that's when behavioral problems develop. Giving the dog an acceptable outlet for its energy will almost always bring the dog's behavior back into alignment with its instincts

Feel free to ask me questions about any training/behavioral issue.

LCK

Experience

20 years as a dog trainer. I'm also a bestselling author, writing a series of dog-related mystery novels for Avon.

Organizations
Dog Writers Association of America

Education/Credentials
Just a natural gift I have for understanding and training dogs

Past/Present Clients
Too numerous to mention.

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