Pawz4me wrote:
Francesca Knowles wrote:
She'll get over it, provided you do NOT acknowledge her "fears" etc. in any way, such as urging her to eat etc. Dogs pick up on our anxiety, which only reinforces their own.
Suzanne Clothier and Patricia McConnell, two of the best dog trainers and behaviorists alive today, disagree with you.
The Myth of Reinforcing Fear
You Can't Reinforce Fear
I wasn't speaking to fears of unusual occcurrences like thunderstorms, fireworks and the like. The O.P.'s concern has to do with anxiety in a changed environment, and how best to help the dog adapt to it.
I guess I could have put it differently: it's possible to teach a dog NOT to be anxious about certain things by treating them as normal. This situation is a perfect example. The O.P.'s dog is anxious, likely due to the unfamiliarity of the circumstances. If the owner's behavior says "business as usual", the dog will learn that norm as nothing to be afraid of and will no longer
need comforting.