For some reason, dog owners often have difficulty distinguishing between appropriate and inappropriate play. Some may think that perfectly acceptable play behavior is bullying because it involves growling, biting, and apparently pinning the playmate to the ground. Appropriate play can, in fact, look and sound quite ferocious.
The difference is in the response of the playmate. If both dogs appear to be having a good time and no oneโs getting hurt, itโs usually fine to allow the play to continue. Thwarting your dogโs need to play by stopping him every time he engages another dog, even if itโs rough play, can sometimes lead to other behavior problems.
With a bully, the playmate clearly does not enjoy the interaction. The softer dog may offer multiple appeasement and deference signals that are largely or totally ignored by the canine bully. The harassment continues, or escalates.
Any time one play partner is obviously not having a good time, itโs wise to intervene. A traumatic play experience can damage the softer dogโs confidence and potentially induce a life-long fear-aggression or โReactive Roverโ response โ definitely not a good thing!
Some bullies seem to spring from the box fullblown, meaning there could be a genetic element behind this type of personality. However, there can certainly be a learned component of any bullying behavior. As Jean Donaldson reminds us, the act of harassing a โnon-consenting dogโ is in and of itself reinforcing for bullies.
By definition, a behavior thatโs reinforced continues or increases โ hence the importance of intervening with a bully at the earliest possible moment, rather than letting the behavior become more and more ingrained through reinforcement. As with most behavior modification, prognosis is brightest if the dog is young, if he hasnโt had much chance to practice the unwanted behavior, and if he has not been repeatedly successful at it.
To prevent your dog from becoming the neighborhood bully, download Canine Aggression now.
The Whole Dog Journal used to have such good detailed content. Now articles like this one provides very little detail and simply refers the reader to buy a book. Disappointing.