Purrfect Pets in Payson

Purrfect Pets  in Payson I have been grooming dogs and cats since 1976. Finally have my dream - a one on one grooming studio

05/07/2026

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Here’s an article on Pet grooming and training .

Is Your Dog Really Anxious for Grooming — Or Have We Stopped Teaching Dogs How to Handle Things?

By Karen Osper The Posh Paw/The Perfect Paw

One of the most common things professional groomers hear today is:

“My dog has anxiety.”
“He hates grooming.”
“She just can’t handle being groomed.”

And while true anxiety absolutely exists in some dogs, there’s also a growing misconception happening within pet ownership and the grooming industry:

Many dogs are not actually anxious for grooming.

They lack structure, consistency, exposure, and training around handling and routine care.

Those are two very different things.

Somewhere along the way, normal resistance and lack of coping skills started being labeled as emotional trauma.

Dogs that squirm for nail trims are called anxious.
Dogs that resist brushing are called fearful.
Dogs that have never been taught to stand still are described as unable to tolerate grooming.

But grooming is not optional care for many breeds.

It is lifelong maintenance.

And like anything else in life, dogs improve through repetition, routine, exposure, and clear expectations.

Not avoidance.

Grooming Is a Learned Skill

Dogs are not naturally born understanding how to:

* stand still for extended periods
* tolerate brushing
* accept dryers and clippers
* allow handling of feet, faces, and sanitary areas
* regulate themselves in stimulating environments

These are learned behaviors.

Just like leash walking.
Just like crate training.
Just like going to the veterinarian.

The problem is that many modern dogs are unintentionally underprepared for normal life experiences because owners often remove the challenge instead of teaching the skill.

Don’t like brushing? Stop brushing.
Fights nail trims? Avoid touching the feet.
Acts wild for grooming? Call the dog anxious.

But avoidance rarely creates confidence.

Consistency does.

The Rise of Emotional Projection

Modern pet ownership has become incredibly emotionally driven.

People love their dogs deeply, which is a positive thing.

But many owners now interpret any form of discomfort, resistance, or frustration as emotional harm.

And that creates confusion.

Discomfort is not always trauma.
Resistance is not always fear.
Lack of training is not always anxiety.

Sometimes a dog is simply inexperienced, overstimulated, impulsive, or lacking boundaries and routine exposure.

Professional groomers see this every day.

Dogs maintained on regular 4–6 week schedules are often dramatically calmer and easier to groom than dogs who only come once or twice per year.

Why?

Because familiarity creates confidence.

The dog learns:

* what to expect
* how to tolerate handling
* how to self-regulate during stimulation
* and that grooming is simply part of normal life

Meanwhile, dogs that arrive severely overdue are often:

* matted
* physically uncomfortable
* unfamiliar with handling
* overstimulated
* and stressed before the appointment even begins

Then owners assume the dog “hates grooming.”

But often, the dog simply lacks preparation and routine.

Structure Creates Stability

One of the biggest misconceptions in modern dog culture is that structure is somehow harmful.

In reality, calm structure often creates safer, more confident dogs.

Predictability matters.

Dogs generally thrive when expectations are clear and experiences are repeated consistently.

That doesn’t mean forcing dogs through genuine fear or ignoring emotional wellbeing.

It means recognizing that resilience is developed through guidance, repetition, and exposure — not by removing every uncomfortable experience from the dog’s life.

Experienced groomers understand this balance.

The goal is not to overpower dogs.
The goal is to teach them how to successfully navigate grooming in a calm and safe way over time.

Groomers Are Seeing the Difference

Many seasoned professionals are beginning to notice a significant shift in the industry.

Dogs are arriving with less tolerance for handling, lower frustration thresholds, and fewer foundational coping skills than in previous generations.

Not because dogs are inherently worse.

But because expectations around training, structure, and adaptation have changed.

In many homes, dogs are now treated more like emotionally fragile individuals than capable animals that can learn resilience through consistent leadership and routine.

And while compassion matters deeply, capability matters too.

Dogs are often far more adaptable than people believe they are.

But adaptation requires practice.

Rethinking the Conversation

Perhaps the better question is not:

“Why are dogs so anxious for grooming now?”

But instead:

“Have we stopped teaching dogs how to handle normal parts of life?”

Because grooming, for many breeds, is not optional.

It is part of responsible ownership.

And while empathy should always exist in professional grooming, so should honesty:

Many dogs are not truly anxious.

They are simply underprepared.

And preparation, consistency, structure, and routine handling can change almost everything.

05/04/2026
05/04/2026

Started. Physical Therapy today. Told I need to stop doing as much as I've been doing. 3 weeks until I'm out of a sling.

04/15/2026

My shoulder is healing well.
Already feels 100% better. Now to be patient and let healing happen. I start physical therapy the first week of May. I check back with the Doctor the third week of May. I hope to get the okay to start grooming small dogs I June. I miss you all!

03/15/2026

My left rotator cuff is torn. Talking to the Doctor after the MRI I only have one option to gain back some
Motion and end the pain. That is surgery. The tear is large and there may be other issues. My surgery is March 30th. I will be unavailable able to groom at home until summer. My other shoulder hurts but I hope physical therapy will help it. We can't do anything until I am well on my way to healing from the first surgery

Looking forward to
I eventually getting some relief!

Had the pleasure  of grooming  16 year old Boots today. Love senior pups!
01/11/2026

Had the pleasure of grooming 16 year old Boots today. Love senior pups!

Darling young Havanese, Sophie!
01/07/2026

Darling young Havanese, Sophie!

Another busy day! Huckleberry  is ready for his vacation with Mom. My last 3 pups are bathed and nails done!  Plus I'm w...
01/03/2026

Another busy day! Huckleberry is ready for his vacation with Mom. My last 3 pups are bathed and nails done! Plus I'm working on deep cleaning my shop and double disinfecting my blades and tools.

Another busy day!  A new Aussie and 2 regulars. Then 3 more of my dog's. 3 of mine to go.
01/02/2026

Another busy day! A new Aussie and 2 regulars. Then 3 more of my dog's. 3 of mine to go.

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Near The 87 And Roundup
Payson, AZ
85541

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