Blog — Reactive Dogs
Biophilic Design for Dogs: Prospect and Refuge
What Is Biophilic Design? Biophilic design is the practice of incorporating elements of nature into the built environment to strengthen our connection to the natural world. This can include: Natural light Vegetation Water features Natural materials Designs that mimic organic shapes and patterns The goal is simple but powerful: to improve physical, mental, and emotional well-being by bringing us closer to the environments we evolved in. Why It Matters for the Nervous System I was introduced to this concept more deeply through a presentation by Dr. Niki Elliott at a Polyvagal Institute gathering. What stood out most was how biophilic...
Regulating the Human First
If you feel your nervous system needs a reset: There are moments when the nervous system asks for a pause—a softening, a return to something steadier and more resourced. In the language of polyvagal theory, we might say the system has shifted out of ventral vagal safety and into states of mobilization (fight/flight) or immobilization (shutdown). When this happens, the goal isn’t to “fix” ourselves, but to offer cues of safety that invite the body back into regulation. This can begin very simply. Slowing down and orienting to safety One of the most direct ways to signal safety to...
The Importance of DEEP SLEEP
The Sleep/Stress Cycle The often-overlooked issue of getting enough quality sleep may be the missing key to regulating your dog’s nervous system. As many of us have experienced at some point in our lives, it’s difficult to get both the quality and quantity of sleep we need when we are chronically stressed. This can leave us “trapped” in a cycle—stress prevents restful sleep, and lack of sleep keeps us in a state of stress. This is why it’s so important to prioritize healthy sleep habits for both ourselves and our dogs. Entering a state of deep sleep and properly cycling...
What is Leash Reactivity, Really?
What Is Leash Reactivity, Really? Leash reactivity is one of the most commonly discussed behavior challenges in dogs, but it is also one of the most misunderstood. People often use the term as a diagnosis or label for barking, lunging, growling, or over-excited behavior on leash. While these are the visible expressions, they are not the root of the issue. Leash reactivity is not a single behavior pattern, and it is not a personality trait. It is a nervous system response that emerges under specific conditions. To understand leash reactivity, we have to look beyond what the dog is doing...
Re-Wiring Your Dog's Brain by Triggering a Reaction
Why Avoidance Alone Doesn’t Create Change The only way to truly rewire your dog’s brain is by activating old memories and then reshaping them. If your dog is consistently kept in a bubble of “safety,” where triggers are avoided or constantly distracted away from, you may be successful in the short term. Your dog may stay under threshold more often, and reactive outbursts may decrease. But underneath the surface, the emotional response remains unchanged. The original associations—fear, frustration, or defensiveness—are still intact. Without being revisited, those neural pathways don’t have an opportunity to evolve. Interrupting vs. Re-Patterning In the...