In her recent blog post,
“Why Dogs Heal PTSD,” Tracy Stecker beautifully describes how the canine-human
bond can help war veterans overcome PTSD and start getting back to normal.
We usually think of PTSD
(post-traumatic stress disorder) as a condition primarily afflicting such
veterans. But battered children and spouses can also exhibit symptoms. Victims
of automobile accidents, natural disasters, and violent crimes can too. So can
abused dogs.
Nicholas Dodman, of Tufts
University, says, “There is a condition in dogs which is almost precisely the
same, if not precisely the same, as PTSD in humans,”
Can dogs with PTSD also be
cured through the canine-human bond?
There was a case in the
news recently of a canine Iraq-war veteran, a formerly-playful 2-year-old
German shepherd named Gina, who developed PTSD as a result of her duties as a
bomb-sniffing dog. She returned home to Colorado cowering and fearful.
“She showed all the
symptoms,” said Master Sgt. Eric Haynes, the kennel master at Peterson Air
Force Base. “She was terrified of everybody.” She was no longer the “great
little pup” Haynes remembered. She wanted nothing to do with people. “She’d
withdrawn from society as a whole.”
Haynes and other handlers
coaxed Gina on walks, sending someone ahead to pass out treats for bystanders
to give her. They got her over her fear of walking through doors by stationing
someone she knew on the other side to reward her with pats and play.
“She started learning that
everyone wasn’t trying to get her,” Haynes said. “She began acting more social
again.”
Dr. Nicholas Dodman says
he doubts that Gina can recover completely. “It’s a fact that fears once
learned are never unlearned. The best thing you can do is apply new learning,
which is what (Gina’s handlers are) doing.”
I think fears can be
unlearned, or at least disposed of. I’ve helped many dogs with PTSD-like
symptoms recover completely.
I once worked with a cute
Jack Russell (also named Gina) who had been so abused by her previous trainer
(a firm believer in dominance) that if you said the words “stay” or “down”
casually, even on the phone, she would panic, evacuate her bowels, and hide
under the bed for up to 4 hours.
I asked Gina’s owner if
there was anything she did, in any situation, where she acted like a real Jack
Russell, determined to bite or wrestle with something or someone.
They told me there was.
They called it the spoon game. If you dropped a spoon (or fork or knife) on the
kitchen floor, Gina would come tearing out from under the bed, grab the utensil
in her mouth, shake her head around furiously, “killing it,” then race to the
living room, hide it under a sofa cushion and bark at it until someone came to
pull it out for her.
Her owners didn’t like
playing this game because Gina didn’t know when to stop. But I knew (or felt)
it was the key to curing her fear of the words “down” and “stay.”
Over the course of
half-an-hour, I helped Gina get over her fears.
First, I dropped the spoon
on the kitchen floor, watched Gina go through her playful/predatory routine,
then I pulled the spoon out from its hidey-hole, teased the dog with it, and
said, in a very happy and playful voice, “Down!”
Each time I did this she
bolted straight back to her spot under the bed.
I’d wait a few minutes,
then drop the spoon on the kitchen floor again. By the end of our session I had
not only cured Gina of her panic, but she was actually obeying the down command
as if it were the most fun thing in the world to her. She loved it!
Some might say I was
desensitizing Gina to the word “down.” I don’t see it that way. I see this as
what drive trainers call conflict training. Putting the dog in a state of
conflict over what she wants to do (run and hide) as opposed to what you want
her to do (lie down on command). It works by making the dog see that, a) she’s
safe from harm, and b) that obeying the command is more fun, and more
satisfying, than hiding under the bed.
Once a dog feels safe, at
least within certain controllable parameters, it will naturally start to
gravitate toward playful—i.e., predatory—behaviors, because the prey drive is
the source of a dog’s strongest, deepest, and happiest social impulses.
The reason I thought I might
be able to cure Gina’s PTSD-like symptoms was because the first dog I ever
cured of such fears was my own dog, a Dalmatian named Freddie.
When he was around 14 mos.
old, Freddie was frightened by the sound of a Manhattan store gate being
dropped very loudly right next to his head. He bolted across the busy street,
almost getting hit by several cars, which frightened him even more.
Some well-meaning
pedestrians on the other side tried to stop him, but they did it by lunging at
him, trying to grab his collar. This put him in a blind panic. He ran all the
way from Second Avenue to Central Park, where he hid out in a secluded section
called The Ramble. He lived there, hidden from view—drinking lake water and
eating grass—for 3 days.
A nice young woman found
him while walking her Doberman pinscher. She’d seen one of the flyers I’d put
up all over town, and called to tell me the good news. Fred was a bit skinny,
and his poops were green, but otherwise he was fine: tired but happy.
About a week later he
started having panic attacks. The slightest noise—the kind that most New
Yorkers (and most New York dogs) easily tune out—would set him off. His eyes
would widen, his ears went back, his breath became quick and shallow, and his
head, shoulders and tail went down. He was in a blind panic.
This went on for months.
There was no escaping the ubiquitous noises of the city. And nothing seemed to
help. Desensitization didn’t work. And once he was in a panic, distracting him
with food was impossible. The only two things that helped, at least
temporarily, were having him bark on command, and having him carry a toy in his
mouth.
The first—barking—I
learned from a Sheltie name Duncan, who cured himself of thunder-phobia by
barking at the storms. One day I tried it with Freddie. I said, “Speak!” and as
soon as Freddie barked, his ears, shoulders, and tail came up, and he behaved
as if nothing had happened.
But it didn’t stop the
panic states from recurring.
The second—carrying a
toy—seemed to work like a baby’s pacifier; as long as Freddie held the toy
firmly between his jaws, he was less prone to be thrown off-balance emotionally
by sudden noises.
Dogs need to know where
the danger is.
One of the hallmarks of
canine social play—where two dogs play together—is the mock danger involved.
Take most playful behaviors, remove the playfulness and pretense, and you’ve
got aggression and, yes ... danger.
The other forms of play
that most dogs and owners are familiar with, involve chasing and biting prey
objects: Frisbees, tennis balls, sticks, and tug toys. Going back to the wolf
model, an inhibited wolf—one who’s shy about chasing prey objects (in this case
rabbits, mice or moose)—won’t survive long. So the act of chasing a prey object
involves losing one’s inhibitions. The act of catching up with it, grabbing
hold of it, and “killing” it, is also enormously satisfying to both wolf and
dog.
The thing that eventually
cured Fred of his panic attacks completely was when I was able to engage him in
all-out, whole-hearted, rough-and-tumble play, where he got to chase a tennis
ball with all his might, and bite down on it as hard as he could. The day I got
Freddie to play like that, with all his heart, was the last day he exhibited
any symptoms of panic or PTSD. And he lived to the age of 15 (which in dog
years is 105!).
That’s why I knew (or
hoped) that “the spoon game” would cure Gina.
Going back to the other
Gina (the former bomb-sniffing shepherd). She was described by her handlers as
being a playful pup. Well, of course! All puppies are playful. But part of the
treatment that enabled her to trust people again, and to no longer be
frightened of doorways, etc., was “giving her pats and play” whenever she went
through a door.
Play therapy can work
wonders in dogs with PTSD.
“Life Is
an Adventure—Where Will Your Dog Take You?”
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