Coaching Canine Companions Logo COACHING
CANINE
COMPANIONS
Dog Training for Sensitive, Anxious, and Reactive Dogs
🐾

Comprehensive FAQ:
Coaching Canine Companions

This isn't your typical FAQ page β€” it's a motivational guide that reveals the why behind the what, blending science, soul, and practical insight. From leash reactivity to emotional regulation, answered with heart and a fresh perspective you won't find anywhere else.

Let's See if We're a Good Match

The Most Frequently Asked Dog Training Questions β€” Answered

If you've ever wondered what your dog is really trying to tell you β€” start here. Questions are grouped by topic so you can jump straight to what matters most right now.

Sign Up for a Free Consultation

🐾

Trust & Bonding


Start calm, predictable, and consistent β€” sit quietly nearby, breathe slow, meet needs first, then invite connection. Let your dog choose when to engage.

Speak with your body β€” posture, breath, movement. Shift weight back, turn sideways, breathe deeply. That nonverbal vibe says "I'm safe, you're safe."

Dogs feel your energy first. Check your state β€” if you're tense, they tense. Breathe, reset, then show up curious and calm before any cue.

Own it, then reconnect β€” sit calmly, offer gentle touch or a slow walk. Every repair ritual teaches resilience: "Even when things go wrong, we find center."

Safety means no punishment for honest signals, consistent needs met, and choice given. Look for soft, curious body language β€” adjust if you see hesitation.

They choose proximity, check in visually, seek co-regulated play, and look to you for comfort. Pause on walks β€” if they glance back, celebrate that bond moment.

Be present, empathetic, reliable β€” respect signals, move with calm clarity, set gentle boundaries, and let your dog lead the pace of interaction.


🎯

Behavior Challenges


Barking often means fear or over-arousal, not defiance. Create space, reassure with a calm tone, then redirect into sniffing or movement. Pair each encounter with treats or play so "strangers = safe."

Pulling signals excitement or disconnect. Slow your pace, invite eye contact, and sprinkle in sniff breaks. Reward loose-leash steps with praise or treats β€” turn the walk into a shared adventure.

A growl is communication β€” thank them instead of punishing. Step back, give space, then reconnect gently. Respecting warnings builds trust and prevents escalation.

Reactivity is fear or frustration. Stay below threshold, use "look at that" games, create distance, and co-regulate with calm energy. Over time, they learn you've got their back.

Guarding comes from fear of loss. Trade up with high-value treats, never punish the guard, and play give-and-take games. Show your dog you're a giver, not a taker.

Absolutely. Aggression signals stress. Identify the unmet need, build choice and agency through consent games, and use play to engage the thinking brain instead of force.

Lunging is an outburst of emotion β€” excitement, frustration, or fear. Use a harness, start in low-stimulus areas, and introduce flow-walking games (circles, quick turns) to channel energy.

Jumping screams "I'm excited!" Teach an incompatible behavior like "sit" or "touch," reward four paws on the ground with praise or play, and calmly step away when they jump.


🧠

Emotional Resilience


Emotional resilience is your dog's ability to recover from stress, adapt to new situations, and self-regulate. It grows through consistent routine, co-regulation, and safe challenges.

Build a predictable recovery routine: decompression walks, cozy recovery spaces, soothing touch, and flow-based play after a stressful event to model calm return.

Shutdown is overwhelm β€” not stubbornness. If your dog freezes or flops, pause the session, co-regulate by sitting quietly, then return later with easier, playful activities.

Start with zero pressure: let them observe, explore at their pace, and offer gentle routines in a "confidence corner." Consistency, consent, and compassion build safety.

Try obstacle play, nose work, pattern games like "look at that β†’ treat," and decompression walks. These safe challenges strengthen your dog's confidence and coping skills.


πŸ•

Play-Based Training


Play regulates the nervous system, builds trust, teaches impulse control, and primes the brain for learning. It transforms training into a joyful, connection-driven experience.

Use toys with clear rules: offer the toy calmly, play give-and-take, teach release on cue, and end on a high note. This builds self-regulation through fun.

Absolutely! Games shift emotional states β€” jumping becomes "catch me," barking becomes tug. Redirecting energy into playful patterns rewires behavior from the inside out.

Be the party: call your dog, then run away while clapping. When they catch you β€” jackpot! Use a unique word like "Banana!" to keep recall fresh and exciting.

Discover their play style: food games, movement, or social interaction. Tap into what sparks their "yes energy" and build games around that natural motivation.

Introduce scent games, movement bursts, and surprise play breaks. Toss treats and say "Find it!" to flip the brain into curiosity mode and keep energy flowing.


🌱

Foundations & Puppy Work


Prioritize trust, safety, and curiosity: build connection, comfort, and routines. Create a "puppy haven," hang out with no agenda, and let them explore gently.

Keep it quality over quantity: introduce calm dogs and people, pair new sights with treats, observe body language, and protect their emotional boundaries.

Not mandatory, but a safe den helps. Feed meals inside, leave the door open, and let your pup choose to enter β€” make it cozy, not confining.

Simple, fun games like "Touch" (nose to hand), "Find Me!" (hide and call), or gentle chase. Celebrate every success with praise and smiles.

Shape desired behaviors: reinforce calm, redirect energy into play, and design environments where good choices β€” like chews and gates β€” are the easiest options.


🌊

Flow & Communication


Flow is trust in motion β€” a dance of attunement where you and your dog move with intention, sync rhythms, and learn without force.

Look for soft eye contact, cooperative movement, and quick recovery from surprises. Tiny "yes" signals β€” glances, tail flicks β€” show you're in tune.

The "yes state" is open curiosity and regulation. Build it with movement-based play, clear cues, and emotional attunement β€” model calm under pressure.

Stillness is the pause button of trust: breathe, soften, and give your dog space to choose. It communicates calm authority and invites focus.

Speak dog with posture: face sideways, lower your center, use soft eyes and curved movements. Align energy, body, and intent for clear, trusted signals.


πŸ’‘

Understanding the Canine Brain & Body


Dogs learn through association, repetition, and emotional experience β€” but only when they feel safe. If stress blocks learning, pause and reconnect before teaching new cues.

Fear narrows focus and triggers fight/flight or freeze, while joy opens the brain to creativity and connection. Flip the switch with play to shift your dog into a learning mindset.

Behavior mirrors nervous states: sympathetic arousal shows as barking or lunging, freeze pops up as shutdown. Co-regulate by modeling calm β€” your dog follows your lead.

Play floods dopamine, oxytocin, and serotonin β€” reducing fear, building trust, boosting memory. Treat play as training and regulation, not just a reward at the end.

Dogs process the world through motion β€” sniffing, running, chasing. Incorporate flow movement (circles, bursts, stretch breaks) to reset their nervous system and focus their minds.


🏠

Household Harmony


Prepare emotionally: set up a quiet "guest zone," let your dog observe from a safe distance, and reward calm behavior. Practice short, structured greetings before big visits.

Sudden barking often signals stress, routine shifts, or discomfort. Keep a behavior journal, reintroduce loved ones with treats and gentle play, and model calm energy to ease tension.

Introduce slowly on neutral ground β€” parallel walks, separate decompression breaks, and equal one-on-one attention. No forced closeness: let bonds form at their own pace.

Cultivate "energy hygiene": consistent routines, your own emotional regulation, and varied enrichment. Designate quiet recovery spots, play calming music, and offer rest rituals after excitement.

Morning: gentle wake-up, movement, mini play. Midday: chew or rest with enrichment. Evening: decompression walk, calm wind-down, ending with a gratitude cuddle to ground both of you.


πŸ’¬

Common Questions


Nope! Modern science debunks alpha theory. Dogs seek connection, safety, and calm guidance β€” not dominance. Soften your energy, invite cooperation, and watch responsiveness grow.

Think of treats as training currency β€” not bribes. Start strong, then mix in praise, play, and surprise rewards so your dog stays motivated without always needing treats.

Use harnesses, clickers, long lines, and tug toys. Avoid prongs and shocks. The right tools amplify trust-based communication β€” they don't replace it.

You haven't ruined anything! Balance love with clear routines and boundaries. Add structure through fun reset routines to realign the dance of affection and flow.

Never! Dogs are neuroplastic for life. Slow transitions, soft cues, and trust rituals β€” like daily soft talk β€” ignite growth at any age.


🧩

Troubleshooting Specific Issues


If recall falters, it's often overwhelm or low motivation. Make "come" the best part of their day with special cues, jackpot rewards, and zero scolding on return.

Start with 1–3 minute absence drills, pair alone time with calm experiences (Kongs, soft music), use a "be right back" cue, and return calmly without fanfare.

Outside is sensory overload. Build engagement there with name→treat games, long lines, and gradual progression: backyard → quiet street → park edge → park core.

Use a Y-front harness, pause on pull, reward the first slack with forward movement, and weave in circle games or touch→treat breaks to shape loose-leash walking.

They're self-regulating without you. Break yard time into short, purposeful bursts β€” games, sniff walks β€” reinforce calm at thresholds and guide energy into flow.

Destruction = overwhelm. Front-load days with enrichment, set up a cozy den, rotate toys, and practice alone-time with stuffed Kongs and soothing background noise.


✨

Confidence Building


Look for freezing, avoiding eye contact, overreaction to minor triggers, or "Velcro" behavior. These clues tell you your dog needs more safe exploration and positive feedback.

Offer frequent wins: pattern games, low-pressure agility (cushion walks), scent work, and trick training. Celebrate each success to wire their brain for capability.

Freeze is their "pause for safety." Instead of pulling, get low, use a soft voice, and reward the tiniest forward step. Supporting them in pause builds trust.

A slow, sniff-driven journey on long lines β€” your dog chooses the path, you mirror their pace and energy. This autonomy boosts their inner courage.

Honor their space: have visitors ignore the dog, toss treats from a distance, and use gentle games like "Find It" to shift focus from fear to curiosity.


🧭

Training Philosophy


It's emotional coaching, not just obedience: rooted in neuroscience, play, and somatic awareness. We focus on why behaviors happen and build trust, not just compliance.

Punishment suppresses and breaks trust. We redirect energy, reinforce positives, and support emotional regulation so dogs learn from safety, not fear.

Obedience teaches "what" to do under pressure. Our coaching teaches "how" to feel safe and choose behaviors β€” connection before correction, flow before force.

Dogs mirror our energy and nervous state. When we learn calm presence, we teach dogs co-regulation. Growth is a two-way dance.

Intuition β€” or "felt sense" β€” helps you read energy shifts and emotional undercurrents. Trust it to know when to pause, soften, or play beyond the science.


🐢

Senior Dogs


Use gentle enrichment: nose work, food puzzles, soft training games, and "life review" walks revisiting favorite spots. Scatter kibble games are great for brain fitness without strain.

Provide consistency, comfort, and choice: bedtime rituals with soft music and gentle touch, predictable routines, and quiet play. Your calm presence is their anchor in changing bodies.

Switch to "flow play": slow tug at floor level, gentle toss-and-catch, puzzle toys, and short chase-then-cuddle sessions. Keep it optional, rewarding, and kind to aging joints.


πŸ› οΈ

For Pet Professionals


Frame it as science-backed emotional coaching: long-term change rooted in trust, not quick fixes. Use metaphors β€” "helping dogs choose, not forcing compliance" β€” and share compelling case studies.

Start with observation and regulation: calm ritual, simple play (touch or treat scatter), explore triggers, then coach the human in co-regulation before teaching behaviors.

Hold space: normalize struggle, celebrate micro-wins, model breathing and energy shifts, and pause to name feelings. Emotional safety for owners creates safety for dogs.


🌍

Real-Life Scenarios


Turn vet visits into "happy visits": walk in, treat, leave. Practice "mock vet" at home with gentle handling, favorite treats, and a calming cue or vet-kit to build trust.

Keep routines steady, bring familiar beds/toys first, explore new spaces in small doses, and use decompression walks to help your dog settle their nervous system in the new home.

Desensitize: feed meals in a parked car (no engine), let them choose to enter/exit, then progress to short idle rides, and reward every calm moment with treats and praise.

Create a retreat zone with white noise or calming music, use gentle bodywork or a snug wrap, and co-regulate β€” sit together, breathe slowly, and offer soft touch to anchor calm.

Start at a safe distance, reward quiet for treats, teach a "let's go" cue to exit, and gradually pair calm kid exposure with high-value rewards to reshape their emotional response.


❀️

Relationship Deepening


Look for soft eye contact, voluntary proximity, willingness to explore new things near you, and quick recovery from surprises β€” these subtle cues speak volumes of trust.

Try "soft talk" time: sit quietly, speak gently, breathe in sync. Or morning gratitude walks β€” let your dog set the pace and celebrate one thing you love about them out loud.

You're the emotional thermostat β€” when you calm your breath and energy, your dog mirrors that safety. Mutual regulation deepens connection and resilience.

Yes β€” co-meditation builds intimacy: sit side by side, place a hand on their back if they welcome, breathe slowly together, and repeat a grounding phrase for five minutes.

Loose wiggly movements mean safety and joy; tension or hesitation show mistrust or overwhelm; voluntary check-ins signal curiosity and bond. Film interactions to learn their unique language.


πŸ“–

About the Method


Lorrie J. Harris is the founder of Coaching Canine Companions, blending neuroscience, play, and somatic insight into a compassionate training approach that honors dogs as emotional beings.

Her five pillars: Emotional Safety First; Connection Before Correction; Play as Portal; Regulation Over Control; and The Human Learns, Too β€” transforming behavior through trust and co-regulation.

Begin with Field Notes from the Canine Mind (Book 1 of the Trilogy) β€” it unveils the science of emotional regulation, the roots of reactivity, and practical tools to shift from fear to connection.

It integrates Polyvagal Theory (nervous regulation), Attachment Theory (safety bonds), Somatic Experiencing (body-based healing), and Positive Reinforcement β€” grounding training in how dogs truly learn.

Because a dysregulated brain can't learn β€” connection calms the nervous system, paving the way for clear communication and lasting behavioral change.


🌿

Mindset for Humans


Normalize it as feedback β€” pause, breathe, and ask, "What does this moment need from me?" Then reset your energy before re-engaging with your dog.

Cultivate patience by focusing on progress over perfection: celebrate small wins, document micro-shifts in a journal, and let go of rigid outcomes.

Dogs mirror our tone, posture, and energy. Co-regulation means modeling calm β€” when you ground yourself, you give your dog permission to relax and learn.


πŸ›€οΈ

Progress & Maintenance


Start small and ritualize: anchor 2–5 min sessions after meals or walks, track micro-wins, and pair cues with daily routines so training weaves naturally into life.

Watch for quicker recovery from stress, increased flexibility, engagement, and voluntary check-ins. Keep a weekly log of behaviors, triggers, and wins to spot subtle shifts.

Backsliding is feedback β€” not failure. Return to your dog's favorite game, reconnect deeply, then recalibrate your plan. Each spiral builds resilience and understanding.

It varies: emotional history, consistency, and issue type all play roles. Some dogs shift in days; others in months. Focus on connection speed, not quick fixes.

Recipe for longevity: daily 2–5 min of intentional connection, one structured play/training session, and one decompression activity β€” woven into your natural rhythm.

If you've been searching for a calmer, more honest way forward with your dog β€”

You can begin gently here. Lorrie works with dogs and their people from North Kingstown, RI, in-person and online.

Schedule Your Free Consultation