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You Know Your Dogs Doesn't Have Separation Anxiety When...


W Sibs
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I come home, after being gone for a week, and Charlie just lays in the middle of the living room floor, looks up to see me, wags his tails and then continue eating his pig ear happily and Emmy, runs towards me, sniffs me and then bolts outside again where she was having fun chasing bubbles (neighbours were blowing bubbles and it was coming over the fence).

It was only when I started unpacking when they started to come over to me only because Charlie wants to sit/lay/sleep in the luggage (one of his favorite things to do) and Emmy was curious to see what was in the bag.

Edited by CW EW
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it is :eek:

a little excitement won't kill them :love::laugh:

You need wheatens! They are happy to see you if you've just gone to the letter box lol!

:laugh:

it's an on going joke at home... that my dogs are never excited to see me, but if it's anyone else, the dogs are all over them like a rash.

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Akira's not excited to see me either. Seeing OH is a completely different matter, though. Even if he's at home, if she hears "his car" (the neighbour owns the same car, and it's a really distinctive noise) she'll race outside to be the first one to greet him. :laugh: :laugh:

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It was probably a really yummy pigs ear LOL!!! If Sash has a bone, I don't compete either. I do however, earn a wag of her tail.

Although, when it's a work day - Sash is always more excited to see OH. If I get to her first, she is craning her neck to see past me, to see if I've brought OH home with me too.

On the weekends/days off though, returning from the loo/shops/laundry is a significant enough event to have her all over me like it's been years. And she follows me around like a shadow... just in case I escape. If I use the toilet at the back of the house, she will follow me around the outside and stand jammed against the sliding door... waiting. If I take too long, I get a knock on the window as a reminder that she IS there, you know. LOL.

But she doesn't have seperation anxiety - just loves non work days so she can stick to me like glue and make up for the working days.

What did I do with myself before I gained my shadow??? :laugh:

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We had a little dog that had separation anxiety. She would jump all over me, screaming at top note when I arrived home.

The behaviorist vet told us (among many things) to ignore her completely for 15 minutes when we arrived home. Turn our backs on her jumping & screaming. We did that for a week or so.

Then a funny thing happened. When we'd arrive home, she'd ignore us for 15 minutes. She'd just take a glance & then go back to doing whatever she was doing.

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We had a little dog that had separation anxiety. She would jump all over me, screaming at top note when I arrived home.

The behaviorist vet told us (among many things) to ignore her completely for 15 minutes when we arrived home. Turn our backs on her jumping & screaming. We did that for a week or so.

Then a funny thing happened. When we'd arrive home, she'd ignore us for 15 minutes. She'd just take a glance & then go back to doing whatever she was doing.

You are lucky! I've been doing that for 4 years and STILL hasn't made a difference. Plus I upped the time to 30 minutes :laugh:

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Charlie and Emmy follows me around the house and sometimes wants me to follow them around too... but i can leave the house and comes back and to them, it's nothing. You should see how they carry on when the boyfriend comes and goes.. pathetic, I tell you! :laugh:

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In winter ... I get home from work, make my way through the garage, slip work shoes off at deck, inside sliding door. Open post, put down handbag ... flick on a light, the heater, no sign of doggo-d.

"Timmy? You around?" says I. Hmmm.

I literally have to track him down to either his crate, our bed which he has managed to wriggle under the covers of creating an interesting "lump" in the bed. Or on really lucky days, buried in a pile of freshly clothes dried sheets or towels, all warm and cosy.

In the warmer months, repeat above process replacing bed for window bay and laundry pile for my giant parsley bush. :eek:

Now, open the fridge door and you can barely count to ten before he's popping his little face around the corner. :wave:

Here is linen lump ...

DSCF3050.jpg

And bed lump ...

DSCF3040.jpg

Edited by LDR
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In winter ... I get home from work, make my way through the garage, slip work shoes off at deck, inside sliding door. Open post, put down handbag ... flick on a light, the heater, no sign of doggo-d.

"Timmy? You around?" says I. Hmmm.

I literally have to track him down to either his crate, our bed which he has managed to wriggle under the covers of creating an interesting "lump" in the bed. Or on really lucky days, buried in a pile of freshly clothes dried sheets or towels, all warm and cosy.

In the warmer months, repeat above process replacing bed for window bay and laundry pile for my giant parsley bush. :eek:

Now, open the fridge door and you can barely count to ten before he's popping his little face around the corner. :wave:

Here is linen lump ...

DSCF3050.jpg

And bed lump ...

DSCF3040.jpg

:love:

Timmy sounds like quite the character!!!

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We had a little dog that had separation anxiety. She would jump all over me, screaming at top note when I arrived home.

The behaviorist vet told us (among many things) to ignore her completely for 15 minutes when we arrived home. Turn our backs on her jumping & screaming. We did that for a week or so.

Then a funny thing happened. When we'd arrive home, she'd ignore us for 15 minutes. She'd just take a glance & then go back to doing whatever she was doing.

BAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAA - reverse psychology - I love it!!!

Makes you wonder how far up the evolutionary chain dogs really are :eek:

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