• Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Private Member only forums for more serious discussions that you may wish to not have guests or search engines access to.
    • Your very own blog. Write about anything you like on your own individual blog.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral

Unmaking Monsters

Retrieved from https://www.cesarsway.com/cesar-mil...ornet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Nov15NL_2

By Cesar Millan

In the U.S., we’re approaching a presidential election year, and as the process of selecting the nominees began, there were 23 candidates just from the two major political parties. That makes it seem like a lot of people want to run for the office of U.S. president, doesn’t it?

But there are about 121 million people in the country who could run for president if they wanted to — natural born American citizens who will be 35 or older on January 20, 2017. In that case, that ridiculous looking number of candidates is actually less than two hundred thousandths of a percent of all the people who could run. Very few people want to be the president, and I could say the same thing about dogs.

A very small percentage of dogs are born wanting to be the pack leader. That is why it is so important for us to provide them with calm, assertive leadership. Dogs will not follow instability. But humans can and do, and we’ve seen many examples of that throughout history. In fact, it sometimes seems as if humans only want to follow unbalanced and aggressive energy.

When we don’t give our dogs that leadership, they will try to fill the gap, but this just makes them anxious or aggressive. You can’t force a dog to take on that role: In the canine world, pack leaders are born, not made.


However, when it comes to red zone dogs, they are made, not born — and they are made by humans. We’ve been doing it for thousands of years, at least as far back as Roman war dogs if not earlier. These dogs were formidable because they were bred to be that way, and this is how and why mastiffs were originally created. They came into battle with their humans and were unleashed to be killing machines.

As I said, though, even if dogs are bred to have the physical capabilities for waging war, they do not naturally have the instinctual tendency. That must be created in them and, unfortunately, humans are still doing this to dogs that will never see a battlefield.

Although staging a dog fight is now a felony in all 50 U.S. states as well as at the federal level — and just attending a dog fight is a federal felony — there is still a lot more of this going on than you would expect. According to the ASPCA, while it’s difficult to estimate the prevalence of an underground, illegal activity, the number of animals brought to shelters with injuries consistent with dog fighting indicates that there are still tens of thousands of people involved.

And, while dog fighting is frequently associated with gangs and other criminal elements, people from all walks of life come to them. Shockingly, some of them even bring their children, perpetuating animal cruelty through generations, even though it’s now also a federal felony to bring anyone under sixteen to a dog fight.

But you can’t just put any two dogs into a ring and expect them to automatically fight to the death. Before a dog will do that, it has to be “trained” (i.e., abused), and for dogs unfortunately born into this world, that abuse begins from the time that they’re puppies, during which they are never allowed to be dogs.

Puppies being groomed for fighting are constantly taunted and punished until they learn to show their teeth aggressively in response. Then they are left with chickens to chase until their prey drive kicks in and they learn how to kill. Dogs that fail to develop the proper aggression are often abandoned, dumped in remote areas or left in a ditch by the road. Or, even worse, these are the dogs used as “bait” to teach the more aggressive dogs how to fight and kill.

Sadly, the abandoned dogs that were not aggressive enough for the terrible humans who do this sort of thing are often still too aggressive for the good people who try to rescue them. Combine that with the dog invariably being from one of the power breeds, and even the ones that escape the fighting ring through abandonment wind up being killed in shelters, considered dangerous, incurable red zone dogs.

I pointed out previously a big difference between humans and dogs in following unstable energy, and this contributes to a trait, or curse, that humans can develop but dogs don’t: the unfortunate ability to hang on forever in submission to their abusers. There’s even a legal term for it: “battered spouse syndrome.”

Animals, especially dogs, don’t do this, and they will always tend toward balance. When they are out of an abusive situation, their minds tell them, “Finally, I can rest.” This is why I can take a red zone case that’s been rescued from the dog fighting world and bring it back to being calm and submissive. That formerly red zone case will continue to be a pit bull or mastiff or Rottweiler, but above all will learn to be a dog again.

Also unlike humans, dogs have no natural reason to kill each other. Once I block the instinct that was beaten into them by humans, they recover the instinct that was given to them by Nature. Balanced dogs are born. Humans make them otherwise.

Stay calm, and let your dog be a dog!

Comments

There is a yellow Lab a few houses down from me, it is really mean I've see it loose attacking other dogs wolf style. It's owner is not a nice person shouts at his dogs and family when he comes home from work, maybe hits.
Most labs I've seen were sweet tempered, all tho my ex-girlfriend family had one it was mean wanted to bite me, they left it chained up all the time out in the cold and threw some food at it once in awhile. I never saw them ever walk it or play with it, poor dog, they had 20 cats too that looked half starved, severely undersized, left to cry outside in the cold winter. I should have realized those people were bad sooner.
 

Blog entry information

Author
Ste11aeres
Read time
4 min read
Views
985
Comments
1
Last update

More entries in General

  • Primary sources
    I submitted an assignment recently about primary sources re: Charlemagne's coronation (800CE)...
  • Grades are starting
    Grade one starts. I remember the teacher saying I was "gifted". Now "gifted" didnt mean you were...
  • Hiding
    Have you ever been in a crowded room yet felt so alone? Always. Spent much of my life busy. In a...
  • Sustains
    The pain will not sustain me, for long. It will drain me. It will attain me. Hoping it wont...
  • Saddened (reading warning dad passing)
    Fading saddened. Don't want to leaving. I'm here to soundboard you. Bounce back. Ash i can...

More entries from Ste11aeres

Share this entry

Top Bottom