01/26/2026
BARRIERS TO BEHAVIOUR CHANGE
“My dog is so stubborn.”
“They just don’t listen.”
“He is such a slow learner.”
“But she does it at home.”
“He’s being dominant”
These are comments we might hear when behaviour change just isn’t happening — but they rarely tell the full story.
Dogs, like people, can only begin to change behaviour when they feel safe enough to do so.
Dogs are not machines that can be programmed with a set of inputs that guarantee results. They are individual, sentient beings with nervous systems not so different to ours. Shaped by genetics, life experiences, learning history, and sometimes trauma.
Their behaviour is always influenced by how safe, regulated, and supported they feel in that moment.
When we are stressed, anxious, exhausted, unwell, overwhelmed, or emotionally dysregulated, our capacity to learn, adapt, or change is unlikely if not impossible. This isn’t a lack of capability or willingness, it’s a lack of capacity.
The same is true for dogs.
A dog’s nervous system state, emotional safety, environment, motivation, developmental stage and physical health all affect whether behaviour change will progress. When these needs aren’t met, asking for different behaviour can be unrealistic and unfair.
If your dog is struggling, the most helpful question is not - “Why won’t my dog do this?”
It’s - “What might be making this hard for my dog to do right now?”
Sometimes our dogs need fewer demands, not more training.
Sometimes they need rest, decompression, distance from triggers or more predictability.
Sometimes today just isn’t the day — and that’s okay.
Trauma-informed care reminds us to slow down, lower expectations, and prioritize safety and regulation first.
Behaviour change doesn’t come from force, intimidation, pressure or control – true behaviour change happens when dogs feel safe enough and regulated enough to try.