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Is Your Dog Fulfilled?
Slate ^ | August 8, 2003, at 5:33 AM PT | By Jon Katz

Posted on 08/21/2003 10:53:44 AM PDT by dogbrain

I drive a couple of hundred miles each week so my border collies can embrace their destiny—or is it their ancestry?—by herding sheep at a farm. When I'm there, I'm always amazed at the scores of people who show up with all sorts of dogs, from avid herding breeds to bewildered mutts. Their owners are all eager to expose them to the ancient art.

"I do agility, obedience, and therapy dog training," the owner of a Lab/shepherd mix told me, "and I'd love to add herding. We have Thursdays and Fridays open."

America has enriched its children to the bone with soccer and ballet and computer camp and Chinese lessons. Now it's the dogs' turn. If your mutt isn't "fulfilled" yet, it will be soon. "Fulfillment" is the new buzzword among trendy California dog lovers, the Los Angeles Times reported last fall. The idea is to figure out what a dog was born to do—herd, hunt, retrieve, sit decoratively on laps—and find ways to do it.

Dog fulfillment feels like an inevitable movement. One of the baby boom's many dubious ideas was the Gifted and Talented Child. In the 1970s and '80s, schools created programs based on the same principle as dog fulfillment: We had to figure out what our kids could excel at and make sure they got vast encouragement to do it. Nervous principals and anxious parents made sure that every child was defined as gifted and talented at something. This has gradually led to families where too much is never enough: Every waking hour must be spent at some class or team or camp.

As Americans who love their dogs have increasingly emotionalized them and come to see them as family members, complete with complex psychological lives and histories, they feel more and more anxious and guilty about them. It follows that dogs, too, should have every chance at fulfillment. And it also follows that dog owners should come to feel as if they are never doing enough. "Is it OK to have a dog and still go to work?" one woman e-mailed me recently.

Dog owners vigorously search for activities that will endlessly stimulate and amuse their pets. Dogs belong to recreational and sporting associations, sometimes organized by activity (obedience, therapy, search and rescue) and other times by breed. Dogs have play dates or walking dates. They participate in agility, tracking, and myriad other sporting events. They are acquiring service and therapy certificates by the thousands. Dog day-care centers have sprouted everywhere so guilt-ridden owners can go to work feeling good that Max or Maggie (our dogs often have human names now, too) has sufficient exercise, stimulation, and companionship. And have you checked out the toy department at your pet store recently? It's like Zany Brainy in there.

A generation or two ago—in fact, for most of the species' evolutionary history—the idea that a dog needed to be fulfilled would have shocked even the most attentive owner. As recently as the '60s and '70s, dogs were rarely even leashed or confined; they generally were content just to hang around, occasionally squabbling with other dogs, getting into the garbage or menacing the mailman.

Today's dog owners might pause and consider that their pets may sometimes actually need much less from them than they want or feel they need to give. Most dogs require an hour of exercise a day, not endless fetching and chasing or romps with scores of excited peers. (A dog that chases balls, sticks, and Frisbees and races around all day is sometimes an obnoxious, aroused, or hyper dog, not necessarily a fulfilled one.) They certainly need love and attention, but not always as much of it as we think. They need food and things to chew on, but not as much as we usually provide. A trainer friend told me I wasn't helping my anxious border collie out by rushing him around to stimulating activities all day. "He needs to be socialized with dogs and people, but he also needs to learn how to be calm just as much as he needs to work. I see dog people smiling all the time when they see their dogs racing around in packs like maniacs, but they aren't always doing their dogs a favor. Dogs don't have 'fun' in the way that humans do, and people often confuse excitement and arousal for yuks."

In natural environments, which almost no dog or owner can find anymore, dogs are like lions. They lie around much of the day, rousing themselves every now and then for food or sex or to chase after something appealing. Dogs don't have human emotions. They don't get bored in the human sense of the word, although they do need some activity. They may get anxious when left alone—they are pack animals and usually prefer company—but loneliness is a human, not canine, emotion. With proper training and acclimatization, sometimes confinement, almost any dog can spend time alone, vegging out, smelling the smells and listening to the sounds of the world, chewing on rawhide, or staring at nothing in particular. One European study suggests that dogs left alone sometimes are smarter than dogs that are smothered by attention: They get the opportunity to solve problems by themselves.

Working with dogs and engaging in activities like agility, obedience, and herding is great, terrific for people and dogs alike. Nobody should feel badly about doing this stuff. I've spent some of the loveliest hours of my life out in pastures with my vigilant dogs, listening to the sound of sheep crunching away on grass. But it's sometimes OK to relax and let our dogs just be dogs. After considerable badgering by some great trainers, I now make sure my dogs spend several hours a day alone in the yard or quietly in their crates, learning to settle down. We have spent some of our happiest times together doing nothing.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: dog; dogs; fetch; mansbestfriend; workingdogs
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To: conservonator
Goose season?

Years ago, I used to duck hunt with a cousin who always had great Labs.
Also had an uncle who raised Chesapeaks. Funny coloring, very good dogs also.

21 posted on 08/21/2003 11:48:13 AM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: dogbrain
Life used to be simpler. We didn't even THINK to worry about such things.

Prairie
22 posted on 08/21/2003 11:49:01 AM PDT by prairiebreeze (Hillary utilized the blackout for broom riding and to practice scaring small animals.)
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To: kstewskis
ever see the movie 'Babe'?
(not the one with John Goodman as Babe Ruth)
23 posted on 08/21/2003 11:49:16 AM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: prairiebreeze
I know what you mean.
From what I can tell, dogs seem to have the MOST fun when their owners are away.
24 posted on 08/21/2003 11:51:44 AM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: Dog
** PING **

This has to do with dogs.

It only seemed right that you were here.


Tony

25 posted on 08/21/2003 11:53:24 AM PDT by TonyInOhio (Nothing is printed in the New York Times / 'til it's edited by a Liberal with an axe to grind)
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To: joanil
My dogs get homemade dogfood every night -- made with chicken livers.

One of my dogs is an extremely picky eater and even turns her nose up at every store-bought dog treat known to man except freeze dried liver. The only commercial dogfood I found that she would eat readily was frozen Biljac, but that is too rich. Ordinarily, I would just let it sit until she decided she was hungry and had to eat it, but the other dog is a garbage can and will eat anything in great quantities, and she always found a way to get "miss picky's" food before miss picky decided she was hungry enough to eat it, so I ended up with one skinny dog and one rolly-polly.

I figured that since miss picky liked freeze dried liver treats so much, that maybe the key was liver dog food. She still turns up her nose at store bought liver flavored dog food, but she cannot wait to get the homemade stuff. Since I found the recipe I now use, problem solved.
26 posted on 08/21/2003 11:55:52 AM PDT by RedWhiteBlue
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To: dogbrain
It was inflated until he sunk his teeth into it. He isn't happy with basketball until he's "killed" it, easier for him to carry it, I guess.
27 posted on 08/21/2003 11:57:40 AM PDT by rageaholic
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To: dogbrain
Actually, they eat better proteinwise than we do, I make good sure of that!
They have what.............10 good years if they are lucky.
I make sure they enjoy every day.
Even if it means making chicken livers.
They just love to kick back and savor the scent.
28 posted on 08/21/2003 11:58:00 AM PDT by joanil
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To: najida
"Barking at squirrels (hoping they fall fully cooked from the transformer)"

some deeper thoughts on that

29 posted on 08/21/2003 11:58:02 AM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: prairiebreeze
I do agility, obedience, and therapy dog training," the owner of a Lab/shepherd mix told me, "and I'd love to add herding. We have Thursdays and Fridays open."

Having Thursdays and Fridays open....allows me to freep...:-)

30 posted on 08/21/2003 11:58:14 AM PDT by Dog (: "And good ol' boys were drinking whiskey and rye, singing 'This'll be the day Saddam dies...'")
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To: dogbrain
From what I can tell, dogs seem to have the MOST fun when their owners are away.
boy you got that right, I can always tell when its been a while since she's gone to the dog park for a couple of hours as she manages to knock everything off of the counters, unroll the toilet paper onto the floor and empty every garbage can in the house and still look perfectly innocent when I walk in the door
31 posted on 08/21/2003 11:59:24 AM PDT by boxerblues (God Bless the 101st, stay safe, stay alert and watch your backs)
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To: MississippiDeltaDawg
Is your dog fulfilled?
32 posted on 08/21/2003 11:59:28 AM PDT by dighton (NLC™)
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To: Dog
This is your brain.

This is your brain in FR.

33 posted on 08/21/2003 12:00:37 PM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: dogbrain
One day a fully-inflated soccer ball showed up in my back yard. I had a 5 pound male yorkie at the time, and he determined that we had been INVADED. He chased that ball around the yard endlessly. Two days later, the ball was in shreads. I have no idea how those little jaws managed to mangle such a large diameter ball, but they did.
34 posted on 08/21/2003 12:01:23 PM PDT by RedWhiteBlue
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To: dogbrain
"Is Your Dog Fulfilled?

My last dog just laid around all day and licked his private parts, so I guess you could put me down in the Yes column.

35 posted on 08/21/2003 12:01:52 PM PDT by Mad Dawgg (French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
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To: Mad Dawgg
(....ahem, this is about your DOG, Mad Dawgg, not you...)
36 posted on 08/21/2003 12:04:02 PM PDT by dogbrain ("Life is hard son. It's harder if you're stupid.")
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To: dogbrain
Muttly like hunting.

Muttly even had The Boss buy white mouse for our cat when we had to live in the city...so he would be nice and happy. Good kitty. Very intelligent...and ferocious. Even pooped in toilet...unlike yours truly...who doesn't especially like loud water...or any kind of water...except birdbath water...which I am supposed to stay away from.

Dogs need purpose. We chew fur off arm otherwise, and run in circles until we drop...which of course Muttly does for the sheer joy of it...and to dig a bigger hole...which seems to be important, for some reason.
37 posted on 08/21/2003 12:04:44 PM PDT by PoorMuttly (Muttly is as Muttly does)
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To: RedWhiteBlue
My dog eats everything and likes it. He likes the dried grass on people's lawns. He loves cheese, apples, dead birds, slippers, carrots, candy wrappers, anything that drops from the kitchen counter onto the floor. I can't remember the last time I bent over to pick up a crumb.

What he likes most of all is anything I happen to be eating. I sit him next to me at the dinner table and periodically drop kibble (from a pre-measured amount) into his bowl. He thinks he's eating people food.

I love my dog. And to think one of the worst insults in the arab world is to call a person a dog. I can't comprehend why anybody would dislike man's best friend.

38 posted on 08/21/2003 12:05:05 PM PDT by rageaholic
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To: dogbrain
(....ahem, this is about your DOG, Mad Dawgg, not you...)

(Blush) Oh sorry... my bad

39 posted on 08/21/2003 12:07:20 PM PDT by Mad Dawgg (French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
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To: dogbrain
He does.....
40 posted on 08/21/2003 12:07:23 PM PDT by 1Old Pro
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