037 | Claire Martin & Ozzy of Motherpuppers on Shutting Up and Showing Up

037 | Claire Martin & Ozzy of Motherpuppers on Shutting Up and Showing Up

Claire describes such familiar themes. Like what it’s like to look back at how her childhood dogs were treated with the knowledge she has now. How she thought she knew quite a bit about dogs until Ozzy came along.

 

Ozzy was adopted from a charity who had done a pretty great job preparing prospective adopters for what it’s like to bring a new dog into the home, and yet Claire, like many of us, still underestimated the reality, partly because she adopted Ozzy when he was still a puppy.

 

She talks about how it was particularly hard to be the one spending most of the time with the dog home alone and to feel like her partner was the one who just got to do the fun things with the dog, and how focusing on relaxation protocols was something that helped really well.

It had also helped to not walk Ozzy every day and we discuss what it takes to break through the socialization that exists around having to walk your dog every day to be considered a dog guardian.

We also talk about how Sarah Stremming and Hannah Brannigan inspired a “shut up and show up” mentality to bring about change in the dog world. About how the one tip Claire has for others is to put less pressure onthemselves: “Noone is going to die.”, and about what allowed her to change careers and move into dog training.

Links:

Claire’s website: https://www.motherpuppersdogtraining.co.uk/

Instagram:

https://www.instagram.com/motherpuppersdogtraining/

https://www.instagram.com/ozzyfromromania/

The dogwalking company Claire’s partner Matt walks for: https://fetchcambridge.co.uk/ 

Dog trainer Sarah Stremming:

https://sarahstremming.com/, and

Hannah Brannigan:
https://hannahbrannigan.dog/

Would you like to learn to put less pressure on yourself?

Granted, some stress is inevitable, but a lot of it is self-induced. 

What if you could learn to approach life in a more relaxed way? 

Get in touch about coaching with me!

036 | Leah Lykos of Canine Movement Lab on Somatic Work and Your Dog as Your Mirror

036 | Leah Lykos of Canine Movement Lab on Somatic Work and Your Dog as Your Mirror

Leah Lykos, a dog behaviorist out of Chattanooga Tennessee and guardian to three dogs, Eva, Biggie, and Mia explains how her focus is on movement and somatic work. That makes sense given that she operates from the philosophy that for dogs even more so than for humans there is no separation of mind and body.

We discuss something new to me: resistance feeding.

The idea behind resistance feeding is to not control the dog’s behavior but to provide an appropriate outlet for it.

Everything is always on a spectrum, so we discuss how to know if you’re allowing stress to dissipate or adding to the dog’s stress.

In that same sense of knowing if something is helpful or not, we touch on the concept of your dog as a mirror. When is hurting to see it that way and when is it helping?

Leah explains how she differentiates between people who are already so aware of their own stress and so focused on solving for that, that it inhibits them in working with their dog,

and people who are so detached from their body and their feelings. that they have no idea they may be projecting onto their dog.

From there we dig into the inner work we get to do thanks to our dogs.

When you have trouble connecting with your dog, what part of yourself do you have trouble connecting with or accepting?

How does understanding your dog help to understand yourself?

How do we regulate our own nervous system?

 

Leah explains that it is her daily work to figure out how she can stay passionate about what she’s doing, without getting completely wrapped up in every single case.

Are you worried your stress might be impacting your dog?

What if you could get rid of that stress? And the worry? 

How much more would you be able to enjoy life? How much more present would you be with all things non-dog as well?

Get in touch about coaching with me!

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