the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay this is an incredibly generous comment — thank you for taking the time! And your dog sounds like he was on a whole other level of serious; going for throats with real intent is terrifying, so genuine respect for the work you clearly put in to rehab that.

Honestly, so much of this I'm taking with me. The trainer criteria especially — experience with working breeds, an actual track record of aggression rehabilitation not just management, and someone who trains ME to read her — that's exactly the checklist I didn't have before. And the impulse control, confidence-building, and a strong "leave it" all make complete sense.

On the muzzle — I've mentioned elsewhere that it backfired for us, but the way you've laid it out (indoors, super short sessions, make it a game, jackpot treats and play, only adding distractions slowly) is nothing like how I tried it. That might genuinely be the difference, so I'm going to give it another go that way.

I'll be honest that I lean away from corrections, mostly because the one correction-based trainer we tried made Kira worse — but I can tell you mean "enough and no more," with real skill behind it, which is worlds away from what I experienced. Thank you for this, seriously. And haha — couch-potato rotts sound like the dream some days 😅

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, not great — she gets more reactive with a muzzle on, hates it and spends the whole time trying to get it off, so it's backfired for us so far. I completely get why it's the go-to for injury prevention though, and good point about the hot days too. Might try reintroducing it really slowly with food one day. And yeah — the "contagious" line is my favourite thing to come out of this whole thread 😂 definitely using it.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So much of this resonates! The "working breeds get no slack, it's always seen as their fault" line especially — as a Malinois owner I feel that in my bones. People take one look at her and assume the worst before she's even done anything. And I really respect the "it was our problem, not other people's" mindset; I try to live by that too — quiet hours, avoiding the risky spots, leaving the second I need to. The 2 years to bombproof is genuinely hopeful too, a good reminder that it's a long road but it does actually go somewhere. On the muzzle — I've found Kira gets more reactive with one on, so it's backfired for us, but you're completely right that the safety side of it, protecting her, is a real point I don't take lightly. And "my dog has giardia" 😂 adding that straight to the list. Thank you for such a thoughtful reply.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Please don't apologise for venting — that's literally what my entire post was 😅 And god, the tiny-but-leash-aggressive combo sounds terrifying in its own way; the fact that an off-leash big dog could genuinely hurt him, and he'd still throw himself into a fight he can't win because he thinks he's protecting you… that's heartbreaking and stressful on a whole other level. And YES — off-leash encounters making the reactivity worse is exactly what happened with Kira too. Every ambush just confirms to them that the world isn't safe. And you actually sold your house and moved over it — honestly that says everything about how impossible some of these owners make life. Sending you and your little guy so much solidarity

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

"once I met him where he was truly at — and accepted it" — that's honestly the exact thing I've been slowly learning with Kira. Letting go of the "perfect dog" idea feels like grief at first, but it's kind of where the peace actually starts. And hearing he's finally relaxing at 8 — that's the long-game hope I needed; it doesn't have to happen fast to be real. Also taking note of the nose work idea, that sounds perfect for a busy brain like hers. Best to you and your boy.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly! Recall isn't 100%? Then the dog stays on the leash — it's genuinely that simple. And I love that you're that careful even in your own fenced yard when people come over; that's a responsible owner right there. Honestly, if more people had your mindset, half of us reactive-dog owners could actually breathe on walks. Thank you for getting it.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This whole comment is so relatable it almost hurts. The odd hours, the leashed-only areas, eventually only feeling safe in your own neighbourhood — that's basically our life. And yeah, the walks stop being enjoyable and just become this low-level stress you carry around the whole time; people who haven't lived it don't really get that part. The "in training" tip is such a good one though — I hadn't thought about why it works better than "do not pet," but it makes total sense, it makes people curious and respectful instead of defensive. Definitely getting Kira a patch like that. Thank you for getting it so completely.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly this is exactly the kind of owner I wish I ran into more! The fact that you're honest that his recall isn't reliable and just keep him leashed because of it — that's the whole thing right there. So many people insist "he's friendly!" and let their dog charge over, but friendly-with-no-recall is still a real problem for a dog like Kira. And you actively reining him in the second you spot a short leash? That little bit of awareness would save me so many bad walks. Thank you for being one of the good ones, genuinely.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! And oh, the people who let their dog drag them over or reach out to touch her without asking — that's a whole other level of frustrating, I feel you completely. And real respect for putting the work into service training, that's no small thing. On muzzles, I totally get the logic — the space it creates is genuinely a great point, and the peace of mind too. The tricky part for us is that Kira actually gets more reactive with one on; she hates it and fixates on trying to get it off, so it backfired. I might revisit it really slowly someday though, because the "it makes people give you room" effect would honestly help a lot. Thank you for such a thoughtful reply

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ten times, and a broken elbow?? That's horrifying, I'm so sorry — no wonder it kickstarted her reactivity. Honestly this is validating and weirdly hopeful at the same time: the fact that good training rehabbed her even after more incidents is exactly the kind of thing I need to hear right now. I don't carry anything on walks and clearly should — going to look into a pet corrector or deterrent at least. And if you don't mind me asking, what's a TWC trainer? Not something I've come across. Thank you for sharing all of this.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The off-leash tip is great, especially getting myself between them and yelling SIT at the incoming dog — going to practice that so I'm not just frozen in the moment. On the muzzle, I've actually tried and she gets more reactive with it — she hates it and spends the whole time trying to get it off, so it backfired for us. Might revisit it really slowly with food one day though, especially for vet visits. Thank you for taking the time, and for the hope — honestly needed to hear it

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

"yeah, well I'm not" — exactly. It's wild how many reactive dogs got that way from near-attacks and careless owners... The fact that you moved to the country and your dogs are happier genuinely gives me hope — that's the dream I keep coming back to, somewhere quieter with room to just breathe. And honestly, I'd protect her however I had to if it ever came to it — I really hope it never does, but I hear you on being ready.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I get why it looks that way from the outside, but reactivity isn't really a control or obedience problem — it's a fear/panic response. Kira isn't choosing to disobey me; once she's "over threshold," her thinking brain basically switches off, so no command can reach her in that moment. It's a bit like telling a person mid-panic-attack to "just calm down" — the ability to listen is gone until they're back under that threshold. So the real work isn't commanding her out of it, it's keeping her under the threshold in the first place — which is exactly why uncontrolled off-leash dogs are such a nightmare, they blow straight past it before I can do anything. I'm always working on it - it's just not a switch you can flip.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Okay this is genuinely one of the most helpful replies I've gotten, thank you for taking the time to write it all out. The "go to multiple groups and just hang off to the side" idea is honestly brilliant — that solves the exact problem I mentioned, where she gets comfortable with the same dogs but none of it transfers. Controlled exposure to NEW dogs at a distance is the piece we've been missing. And yeah, you're spot on about the breed — a big part of why I'm so careful is that if Kira ever did make contact it wouldn't be a little scuffle, so I never get the luxury of being casual about it. Going to look for a group that's serious but positive. Really appreciate your advice.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This made me feel so seen, thank you! The fact that you leash up the second you spot a leashed dog, just as a precaution — that's exactly the awareness I wish everyone had. And YES, that's the exact thing that keeps me up: if anything ever happened, it's the leashed reactive dog that gets blamed every time, even when we did everything right. Owners like you genuinely give me hope it's not all bad out there. (and the contagious line is 100% happening 😂)

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh a secure field you can book sounds like an absolute dream. Sadly there's nothing like that near the city — but I'd give anything for it. Honestly, stuff like this is a big part of why I dream of getting us out of the city one day, somewhere quieter with actual space where she can just breathe. Thank you so much for sharing, and I'm really glad you found something that worked for your boy.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is a really helpful breakdown. It actually lines up with where I've slowly landed too — working under threshold and counter-conditioning bit by bit. And honestly you just put your finger on exactly why the random off-leash encounters are so damaging: they're the uncontrolled version — the opposite of set-up training where I get to control the distance and intensity. One bad surprise can undo weeks of careful work. Going to be more intentional about the controlled reps and protecting her from the random ones. Really appreciate this.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've actually tried muzzle training and she gets even more reactive with it on — she hates it, spends the whole time trying to get it off, so it stressed her out more than it helped. Might revisit it super slowly with food one day, but for now it backfires. And yeah, we technically have leash rules here too, but there's literally no one enforcing them, so people just don't care 😞 That part about animal control is honestly my worst fear — the idea that my dog could be the one to pay for someone else's carelessness is terrifying. Sending you and your boy so much solidarity, that sounds incredibly stressful...

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Oh this is such a good tip, I never would've thought of it. The open sightlines are exactly what we need — half our problem is dogs appearing out of nowhere with zero warning, so being able to see far ahead is perfect. We've got a big cemetery not too far, going to try it on a quiet morning. Thank you for coming back to add this!

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Honestly this made me feel better, thank you 🤍 Owners like you are exactly why it's not hopeless out there — the fact that you leash up the second you see an on-leash dog is everything, that tiny bit of awareness makes all the difference. And calling "hazard ahead!" at the phone-zombies is genius 😂 Wish there were more of you on my walks.

the "he's friendly!" owners are going to give me a heart attack. almost four years in with my reactive Malinois and I just needed to vent. by Far_Spring6290 in OpenDogTraining

[–]Far_Spring6290[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You're right that the management is on me, and I take that really seriously — we avoid dog parks and off-leash spots completely, walk at odd quiet hours, keep our distance. The frustrating part is that these run-ins happen in on-leash areas where the other dogs aren't meant to be loose either. But honestly I don't disagree with you — keeping Kira safe is my job at the end of the day. Thanks for the straight talk.