Dog Training By Lynzee

Dog Training By Lynzee Improving the bond between you and your dog! My skill sets include Basic & Advanced Obedience, Reactivity on leash, and many more!

I love helping people with their dogs, I have a wealth of knowledge, and great resources to support you and your dog. https://venmo.com/code?user_id=3581541519197855399

👏🏼They’re 👏🏼NOT 👏🏼 trying 👏🏼 to 👏🏼 be 👏🏼 alpha👏🏼
06/03/2026

👏🏼They’re 👏🏼NOT 👏🏼 trying 👏🏼 to 👏🏼 be 👏🏼 alpha👏🏼

One of the most damaging ideas ever introduced into the dog world is the belief that dogs are constantly trying to dominate each other and humans. The “dominance theory” model taught people to view behaviour through the lens of control, hierarchy, defiance, and power struggles. Growling became a challenge. Avoidance became manipulation. Reactivity became an attempt to “be alpha.” Instead of asking what a dog was experiencing emotionally or developmentally, the focus became how to suppress the behaviour and regain control.

The problem is that this theory was built on a misunderstanding from the very beginning.

Much of dominance theory came from early captive wolf studies, where unrelated wolves were placed together in artificial environments with limited space and resources. Under stress, conflict naturally emerged, and researchers interpreted these interactions through rigid hierarchical structures. But wild wolf families do not function like this. Modern wolf research has shown that wolf packs are primarily family units.

The “alpha wolf” idea itself was later rejected by the very researchers who originally popularised it.

Yet the dog world continued building entire training systems around outdated ideas of power and submission.

What is often missed is that dogs are not entering our homes trying to outrank us. They are mammals born into a nervous system that is seeking safety, connection, regulation, and belonging. Behaviour is not driven by a desire for dominance. It is driven by survival, emotion, genetics, developmental experiences, attachment, and the state of the nervous system.

This is where the work surrounding social characters becomes incredibly important.

At the Wolf and Dog Development Centre, the understanding of canine behaviour moves far beyond simplistic ideas of dominance. Their work explores the reality that dogs are born carrying innate social tendencies and emotional predispositions that would historically have served a purpose within a social group or survival structure. Not every dog is designed to move through the world in the same way. Some dogs are naturally orientated towards environmental awareness and scanning. Some are more socially driven and relationship-focused. Some are naturally cautious, investigative, nurturing, or highly responsive to movement and pressure.

These are not “bad traits.” They are social characteristics that, in a natural setting, would contribute to the survival and balance of the group.

When we misunderstand these traits through the lens of dominance, we pathologise normal canine behaviour. A vigilant dog becomes “controlling.” A sensitive dog becomes “stubborn.” A dog struggling with emotional regulation becomes “disobedient.” But often the dog is not trying to dominate anything at all. They are expressing an ingrained survival system colliding with an environment they cannot cope with.

This is one of the reasons punishment-based approaches can be so damaging. If behaviour is rooted in stress, fear, developmental conflict, or nervous system dysregulation, suppressing the outward behaviour does not resolve the internal state. In many cases, it simply drives the stress deeper into the system. The dog may appear “calm” while internally remaining overwhelmed, hypervigilant, or emotionally shut down.

The work of Shaun Ellis and Kim Ellis has also helped challenge many of the myths humans have projected onto wolves and dogs. Shaun Ellis became known for his immersive work living alongside wolves, seeing their communication, relationships, social structures, and behaviour in ways that differed dramatically from traditional dominance narratives. Rather than seeing constant aggression and battles for status, the picture that emerged was one of deep social cooperation, communication, emotional sensitivity, and role-based functioning within the group.

Their work highlights something the dog world still struggles to fully accept: social mammals survive through connection far more than conflict.

Wolves do not spend their lives attempting to overpower one another at every opportunity. Stable groups rely on trust, communication, and cooperative functioning. Young wolves are guided through development. Adults can adapt behaviour according to the needs of the group. Emotional signals matter. Social harmony matters. Relationships matter.

Dogs have inherited these deeply social mammalian systems, even though domestication has shaped them in unique ways over thousands of years.

This is why behaviour cannot be reduced to obedience alone.

A dog pulling on the lead doesn’t need “leadership.” A reactive dog doesn’t need harsher correction. A dog growling over food is not “challenging authority.” Often these dogs are communicating emotional conflict, insecurity, developmental deficits, chronic stress, or survival responses that humans have failed to understand.

The tragedy of dominance theory is that it taught generations of people to see communication as confrontation.

It encouraged owners to overpower signals instead of listening to them.

It framed trust based relationships as weakness.

And in doing so, it disconnected people from the emotional reality of the animal standing in front of them.

When we move beyond dominance theory, we begin to see dogs differently. We stop asking, “How do I control this dog?” and start asking, “What is this dog experiencing?” We begin looking at development, attachment, nervous system regulation, social needs, genetics, emotional safety, and relationship dynamics. We begin recognising that behaviour is not about winning power struggles. It is about understanding the mammal underneath the behaviour.

And perhaps most importantly, we stop forcing dogs into a constant battle for rank that never truly existed in the first place.

05/27/2026
05/25/2026

🐕 Does your dog go absolutely feral the moment they spot a squirrel, a cat, or a skateboarder? That's prey drive — and it's completely natural! But when it takes over, it can become a real safety concern. 🚗⚠️
Prey drive isn't just about hunting. It's a hardwired sequence of behaviours — from orienting and stalking all the way through to the chase — and understanding it is the first step to managing it. 🧠

Here's what you need to know:
🔍 Prey drive follows a predictable 5-stage sequence
🐾 Different breeds express it differently
⚡ The more your dog practises chasing, the stronger the habit becomes
✅ There are science-based steps you can take to manage it safely
🎯 And you don't need to eliminate it — just redirect it!

I've put together a detailed infographic breaking all of this down clearly, and I also have a full video on YouTube walking you through everything 👇
🎬 Watch the video here: https://youtu.be/B0derJhIaxY

Want a high quality version of this infographic to keep, print, or share? Grab the digital download and support the channel at the same time 🙏
📥 Get it here: https://buymeacoffee.com/trainmeplease/e/540548s

Save this post for reference and share it with someone whose dog has a little too much wild in them! 🐶🌿

05/22/2026

.secret.dog.walker

Let’s just stop with the hand, allow the dog to engage if they want, and take it from there. Follow the dog’s lead, not ...
05/21/2026

Let’s just stop with the hand, allow the dog to engage if they want, and take it from there. Follow the dog’s lead, not what you, the human, wants.

Let’s talk about the “magica hand.”

Well meaning people reach out their hand so a dog can sniff and make friends. For some dogs, that is fine. For others, it is the fastest way to get bitten.

A reaching hand can:
• Feel invasive
• Reduce distance
• Corner the dog
• Predict restraint

Some dogs have learned that biting makes the hand go away quickly.

A better option:
Allow the dog to approach if they choose.
Ignore them until they initiate affiliative behavior.
Watch body language carefully.

And if:
🚫 You are unsure about what you are seeing
🚫 There is a bite history
🚫 Handling is not necessary

Walking away is the safest choice.

Preventing bites is often about reducing unnecessary pressure.


Dog Illustrations by The Drawables, Owned By: Liz V.

04/27/2026

When I’m petsitting for you, not only can you be sure I’m taking excellent care of your pet(s) but I also apparently taste test treats for them too! 🤦🏼‍♀️

Let 👃 them 👃 sniff 👃
04/26/2026

Let 👃 them 👃 sniff 👃

Here’s a PSA on behalf of all dogs.

Stop correcting your dog for sniffing.

Stop it. Please.

How would you like it if I corrected you for looking around a room? Imagine if you raised your head to look around a new place and I popped you or shoved you or said “HEY! PAY ATTENTION TO ME” You’d get pretty upset pretty quickly I’d imagine.

Dogs don’t smell because they are ignoring you or being stubborn. We humans primarily depend on sight, but dogs use smell AND sight to assess their surroundings and communicate. People spend more time interpreting visual data than olfactory information. Dogs are just the opposite.

Dogs devote lots of brain power to interpreting smells. They have more than 100 million sensory receptor sites in the nasal cavity as compared to 6 million in people, and the area of the canine brain devoted to analyzing odors is about 40 times larger than the comparable part of the human brain. In fact, it’s been estimated that dogs can smell anywhere from 1,000 to 10,000 times better than people.

Scent gives information. Smelling is normal. Smelling is necessary and natural. Smelling is relaxing. Air scenting is HUGE for recovering reactive dogs. LET YOUR DOG SMELL!

Correcting a dog for sniffing is one of the worst things I watch people do. It’s another example of how controlling we try to be in our dogs lives. If you don’t want your dog to smell, teach him to focus on you instead for PART of the time, and then give other ample opportunities to smell. Walks on a long line on a dirt road or in a field for your dog to zig zag back and forth on to smell is MUCH healthier and more tiring for them as animals than trying to keep them within 6 feet of you on a neighborhood walk.

Please accept that smelling is normal and work WITH your dog on it, rather than just trying to suppress it. Just because that blade of grass or tree isn’t interesting to YOU doesn’t mean your dog deserves a correction. Who cares if you don’t walk the extra block - spend those 5 minutes on that one tree if you need to. Your dog doesn’t complain when you watch YouTube videos of kittens for hours or read the news or binge on Netflix, so let him get his scent binge in to.

Happy smelling pups!

- Helen St. Pierre

This is Eden. Eden wonders why her parents left her in my care when I am clearly unfit. Why am I so unfit, you ask?I alw...
04/22/2026

This is Eden. Eden wonders why her parents left her in my care when I am clearly unfit.

Why am I so unfit, you ask?

I always bring Eden treats. She enjoys those small training treats that I can toss to her and she will catch every single one of them. Today, I brought chicken jerky sticks and sometimes when she eats them, she leaves little pieces on the ground, so I pick them up and give them to her. Well, this morning we did the same thing, EXCEPT the little piece I picked up was a STINK BUG!

From her perspective, I bent down, level with her face, screamed like a banshee and ran away. She’s not wrong, but also, she’s please forgive me!!!

It’s not a fun topic, it’s not the first topic, but in some cases, it’s definitely something to be discussed open and ho...
04/17/2026

It’s not a fun topic, it’s not the first topic, but in some cases, it’s definitely something to be discussed open and honestly. Is it always the outcome once discussed, absolutely not. I’m actually glad that most people do not understand why BE is and should be an option in some cases. But I’d be even happier if people could be more supportive, instead of bashing others for situations and decisions they’ve never had to live with. 💔

Something recently was brought to my attention, and I’m not the kind of person who hides. I face things head on and am as transparent as possible. So bear with me, this needs to be said.

NMBDT discusses behavior euthanasia with clients. Of course we do. We operate with utmost integrity, honesty, and believe in discussing with our clients ALL options and avenues with them, so they can make informed decisions with their family and dogs. Does that upset people? I’m sure it may, but until you’ve lived with a dog who has caused serious damage or harm to people or other animals or is a serious risk to the public, you have no right to judge anyone. Or job as trainers is not solely to get “results” - it’s to meet our clients where they are at, help them work with their dogs, understand their dogs, and in some really awful cases, manage situations that are tragic and difficult. We also have a pivotal role in keeping the public safe.

In the past, behavior euthanasia was only “okay” if a dog had done something catastrophic, but as these terrible and traumatic events began to increase, and the amount of behavior problems seen in dogs started to skyrocket, there was a realization that waiting until AFTER something awful happened wasn’t always a good option. Why wait until severe damage - both mentally and physically - was done? Why put families and animals through suffering. Discussing BE with dogs showing dangerous behaviors became much more prominent and accepted, in both the public, in rescue, and in veterinary practices.

Does that mean EVERY time we discuss it with clients it’s the outcome? Good God, no. Obviously not. Most of the time people come to us saying they DON’T want that outcome, and we work tirelessly to help them, but we absolutely support and withhold judgement if that’s a decision they come to. People should not live in fear, panic or severe distress with their animals, and the animals shouldn’t either. Just because as a society we have normalized aggression and maladaptive behaviors in dogs due to the increasing pressures our environments and expectations put on them, doesn’t mean a client making that decision is wrong. We have countless stories of cases where we have helped people and dogs successfully.

Aggression and reactivity are not the same as dangerous behaviors, they CAN be synonymous in some cases, but not every dog that displays reactive or aggressive behavior is dangerous. Helping our clients understand the differences and talking them through these situations is just as important as doing the actual training itself to help both humans and dogs live safely and happily together. The majority of our reactive and aggressive cases make great strides when the humans are educated on what their dog needs, how to work with them, and understanding them.

The idea that BE is worse than rehoming dangerous dogs is also not fair. Rehoming is absolutely a wonderful option for many clients and cases. Yes, we talk about this option too. But, that’s not always the right thing for the animal, the public’s safety, or the case involved. Keeping the dog and working with them is also something they have to consider from ALL angles. As you can see, none of this is cut and dry. There are LOTS of grey areas, and NMBDT stands behind discussing all of these with clients, so they can make decisions and discuss them openly, without fear or judgement.

Is it great for business? Nope. I could make a LOT more money if I told people that if they just pay me this much money, and do XYZ I could “fix” their dog and they’d never have to worry again. But, that’s not how we work. I would MUCH rather p**s people off but know I was honest and kept safety at the forefront of my mind than sell services and get “results” using short cuts or severe punishment to get dogs to fit into bubbles they weren’t designed for. Training and behavior modification is wonderful and a fantastic option for 90% of cases, but even those cases need to be well informed about risks, liabilities, and all the options they have.

Last month I had a case of a dog who had been to 2 trainers prior to an event that happened. The dog had a bite history, had been re-homed once, and was now in a new home. The dog attacked the new human and gave them 150 stitches in their legs while the roommate dragged the dog off the person. I was then called to talk to them at the advice of their veterinarian. This dog had been failed multiple times, and it was NOT the dog’s fault, but imagine me telling someone from their hospital bed that training could fix this and if they chose BE they were failing and didn’t love their dog? On the contrary, the clients I’ve had these discussions with love their dogs more than ANYTHING. So if we could stop the stigma with BE being the “easy” way out, that would be great. It’s often the hardest thing anyone can ever have to go through or do.

I wish I could say those cases are few and far between, but they aren’t. I did not become a dog trainer to look at scenes that look like crime scenes all the time. To be seeing bite marks and wounds on people and animals that were completely preventable, but that’s what I spend a lot of time doing now. Yes, I believe in training, but I also believe in safety, honesty, and supporting both dogs and humans to live happy lives together.

Last thing, I swear. Look at my house. Look at my dogs, my sanctuary, and my work. Look at our clients and community. Look at the time and hours and work we give for free to rescue and shelter dogs that need us. For 24 years NMBDT has shown time and time again how much we LOVE dogs. I JUST built a space exclusively for dogs to go play that may need more space and do better without other dogs around. We don’t do this for the fame or fortune. We do this work because we LOVE DOGS. ALL DOGS. That means that we have to be willing to have tough conversations and sacrifice our own needs and wants for the betterment of the dog, client, household, the public, whatever it is. We fight for dogs and their welfare every day, and we stand by our clients and community too.

We’re not for every person or dog, and that’s okay. You’ll still be treated with respect and kindness here. There are lots of trainers out there, we’re humbled and honored to be loved by many, but accept that not everyone stays. That’s okay. But, building a business by talking trash about another one is not a good look. You're also making the people who have had to make that agonizing decision feel like garbage, and that's even worse.

Slander and bashing a business publicly is a legal offense, and I’m taking it more seriously now. I will absolutely be in contact with my lawyer and handling things on my end appropriately.

Thanks for reading,

Helen St. Pierre

02/01/2026

I’m a professional dog trainer of 23 years, so here’s a list of things I can guarantee you my dogs are better at than most -

1. Begging for food. That’s right. My dogs 100% know how to turn on the drool and charm when I’m eating or cooking. Does it work? Maybe. Do I always pay cheese tax? Absolutely.

2. Taking over my furniture and bed. Yes. My dogs sleep with me, lay on me, take up real estate on the couch, my lap and anywhere else they find comfort.

3. Getting super excited at greetings. My dogs jump up and hug me all the time. In fact, I don’t ever wear anything I care about. It’s super fun in summertime when I’m in shorts.

4. Chewing stuff that isn’t theirs. Shoes, the corner of a rug, we’ve even lost a chair leg to adolescent teething. Toys? Oh sure they have TONS of them, that I rotate and fill with food and freeze and hide - but what are toys compared to a family heirloom?

5. Ignoring me. Why come back when I’m calling them when it matters most? Why not make me stand in my underwear at 5am for a few minutes. They sure do love to keep me on my toes. It’s even better when it’s in public and I’ve just told people I’m a dog trainer!

6. Getting sick at the worst possible times. It’s not a vacation if someone doesn’t start pooping water or ingest something unknown while I’m gone. Or when I’ve just finished putting the kids to bed and cleaning the house, they are SO good at vomiting right at the bottom stair so I can step in it barefoot on my way downstairs to “relax”.

7. Barking at nothing, and everything, at all times. Leaf fall? Vacuum going? Small creak in floor? We could all die and they keep me safe. Without them, I may fall into the awful spiral of having peace and quiet, and who wants that?

8. Pointing out my flaws. Nothing like an adolescent saint bernard or a screaming dachshund to make you recognize you need more work on your patience, timing and delivery. If it weren’t for them, I’d never have to really work on myself!

9. Leaving too soon. Just as we’ve figured out all of each other’s idiosyncrasies and habits and settle into a friendship of a lifetime, they have to go. We get a few amazing years together, and then my heart gets absolutely shattered, yet I still wouldn’t have it any other way. And THEN, I choose to take the journey all over again.

10. Being my best friends. Long day, feeling gloomy, struggling to see a bright side? They are there through all of it. Making me laugh, keeping me grounded, never taking things too seriously and always ready to try again for me. At my best and my worst they adore me, what better friends can you get than that?

I’m a dog trainer, but I still have dogs. They are not perfect, neither am I. My dogs are still allowed to be dogs as they accept that I’m still allowed to be a human. They are gonna dig a hole in my favorite spot of the yard and I’m going to take away the soggy tennis ball they found in the swamp. They will shred a new bed I bought for them and I’ll ask them to walk politely next to me instead of dragging me down. They will bark at a suspicious plastic bag and I will ask them to perform silly behaviors in front of people. They need to smell a tree branch for 10 minutes and I want to watch this new Netflix documentary. It’s a two way street and I’ve learned to embrace it instead of try to control it. That’s the only way I’ve found for it to be truly fair to them and to myself.

If you want a dog trainer who doesn’t advocate for allowing dogs to be dogs, and humans to be humans, and finding a compromise that’s fair and humane, I’m not your trainer - and that’s okay with me. They aren’t here long enough to make such big deals out of such little things for the level of friendship and devotion we get in return with them. Love your dogs everyone. For them, and for you.

- Helen St. Pierre

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Harrisburg, PA

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