logo
Why Many Dogs Struggle to Learn Being Alone

Why Many Dogs Struggle to Learn Being Alone

Yahoo27-06-2025
Being left alone at home can be unfamiliar or even frightening for many dogs. Young or insecure dogs, in particular, quickly develop separation anxiety, which manifests through barking, whining, or even destructive behavior. This can become a burden, especially for single owners, as PETBOOK editor Dennis Agyemang knows from personal experience.
A few weeks ago, I adopted my first dog, Paco. He comes from an international animal rescue and is still unfamiliar with many things: neither city life nor its noises, but he's coping bravely. However, he doesn't know how to be alone yet. So, I have to organize my daily life well at the moment. Someone always has to be there to watch him when I need to go shopping or to the doctor. Because being alone isn't an option yet.
Taking out the trash has become a real challenge—and surely a sight for the neighbors—when I dash through the stairwell and communal garden with my trash bags at record speed before Paco barks down the whole house. He's quite loud, and my neighbors are noise-sensitive. In short, this can't go on in the long run.
But the good news: With gradual training, patience, and the right preparation, any dog can learn to stay alone calmly and relaxed. That's what I hear from various dog trainers online. The key is for the dog to build trust in small steps and understand: 'Being alone doesn't mean anything bad—my human always comes back.'
But why is being alone such a big deal for most dogs—at least initially? 'Dogs have a strong need for attachment. Once they have built trust, they want to stay with their social partner—and permanently,' explains dog psychologist Marc Ebersbach. Dogs perceive the absence of their owners not as temporary but as a loss of control. 'In nature, there's no situation where a pack member simply disappears, leaving the others behind. On the contrary, dogs follow when they need closeness.'
As a dog psychologist, he often hears the comparison to earlier times when it was no big deal for dogs to be alone. 'The often-cited comparison with the farm falls short: There, the dog is sometimes alone, but never without stimuli. He hears cows, tractors, people. He's in the middle of life—that's calming.' In a city apartment, however, that's usually not the case, explains the dog psychologist. 'Doors and windows are closed, the dog is acoustically and visually isolated. No stimuli, no orientation—he perceives the absence not as temporary but as a loss of control.' For the dog, often a big shock.
'The result: The dog is stressed, often panicked—and in stress, he can't learn. When I come back after five minutes, he can't store the experience as a positive one. That's the core of the problem.' But simply playing sounds against the silence in the apartment is not a cure-all, explains dog trainer Katharina Marioth.
'Of course, it's sensible not to make the apartment completely 'dead'—so leave windows open, play a radio station with soft music or TV noise—the main thing is that there's some kind of stimulus. Because for dogs, being alone is inherently unnatural.' The concentration of scent drops particularly sharply within the first 30 minutes after the person leaves. 'That's the crucial moment. In this phase, it often decides whether the dog relaxes or panics,' says Marioth.
Many make the mistake of directly training being alone, says Marc Ebersbach. 'But that doesn't work—the dog must first learn that spatial separation is not negative.' Therefore, he works with structured 'stay' training. 'The dog first learns to stay in a defined place while I move away—visibly. First spatially, then temporally. I work a lot with body language: hand forward, clear signals, repeated confirmation. This way, he learns step by step to endure distance and experiences the separation in a controlled and stress-free way.' Only then can the dog learn that being alone is not threatening, explains the dog psychologist.
He managed to take away his dog's fear, who was traumatized by previous owners who often left her alone for hours, through stay training. 'With the stay training, she gradually learned to detach from me,' says Ebersbach. It was crucial that he worked through space, not prohibition. 'I didn't tell her: 'You must not follow me,' but: 'This space is now yours—please stay there.' That's a difference dogs understand.'
It's important to proceed gently with training and not to overwhelm the dog, warns Katharina Marioth in the PETBOOK interview. 'The biggest mistake is believing that being alone is about control or 'pushing the dog away.' That's complete nonsense. It's about learning—and learning security in a completely unnatural situation.' Many dog owners make the mistake of quickly closing the door and leaving the dog alone without mentally preparing him first, says the dog trainer.
Training based solely on commands or punishment doesn't work, Marioth knows. 'Because if the dog is in panic, no 'sit' or 'stay' helps. We have to train the first 30 minutes when the dog loses his orientation. Ignoring this condemns the dog to constant stress.' That's not a sign of 'bad obedience,' but of being overwhelmed, warns the trainer.
'You have to see being alone as a process that must be learned step by step—with a lot of patience and careful observation. And you must not treat it as a one-time command but as a real challenge for the dog, which you systematically build up with stimuli and short absences.'
Stimulus Decoupling:Put on a jacket and shoes several times a day to erase expectations. Open/close the door without leaving—this removes the ritual's significance.
Relaxation before training:Daily targeted body massage at the resting place with a drop of lavender oil for 5–10 minutes. This releases oxytocin—a hormone that promotes relaxation.
Build 'Stay' training:Keep the dog in place with clear body language. Initially move away for only a few seconds, gradually increase—but always stay within the success range.
Reinforcement through ritual:Begin and end each exercise with a long massage. In between, short touches as a reward. At the end, give a chew item to reduce stress.
Observation with a camera:Leave the apartment only when your dog is relaxed—and return before he shows signs of stress. Only then can he store positive learning experiences.
Start training in the evening:Begin exercises in the evening when the dog is tired—this lowers the arousal threshold and makes learning easier.
It's always important to consider that being alone is not natural for dogs, emphasizes dog trainer Katharina Marioth. 'Being alone is a human invention. No dog is made to be alone for hours.' Therefore, the first half-hour after the person leaves is the most important training phase. 'During this time, the human's scent is strongest, and the dog still feels 'connected.'' Here, you must work positively, such as with special food toys or calming rituals.
Additionally, regular massages, linked with scent anchors like lavender oil or even the administration of CBD oil, can help the dog relax, says dog psychologist Marc Ebersbach. It's important to discuss the latter with the treating veterinarian beforehand. 'Anyone who simply pushes their dog away without allowing this learning phase shouldn't be surprised if the dog goes crazy. That has nothing to do with a loss of control but with a completely missing learning opportunity,' Katharina Marioth concludes.
The post Why Many Dogs Struggle to Learn Being Alone appeared first on PETBOOK.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fat cat too obese to fit through cat-flap looking for forever home
Fat cat too obese to fit through cat-flap looking for forever home

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Fat cat too obese to fit through cat-flap looking for forever home

A fat cat called Moose, too obese to fit through a cat flap, is looking for a forever home. The chunky ginger domestic short hair arrived at Little Valley animal shelter in Devon weighing 8.62kg, with matted fur from being unable to groom herself. On a specialist diet with daily exercise, she has dropped to 7.75kg after nine weeks. Her new family will need to continue her diet, help with grooming, encourage gentle exercise, and provide a quiet home as the only pet, possibly with children.

A German city mobilizes to save Sorbian, a vanishing Slavic language
A German city mobilizes to save Sorbian, a vanishing Slavic language

Washington Post

time6 hours ago

  • Washington Post

A German city mobilizes to save Sorbian, a vanishing Slavic language

BAUTZEN, Germany — In the singsong cadence of Sorbian, Europe's westernmost Slavic language, a milk-drinking dragon came to life in a small preschool in Bautzen, a German town in east Saxony, not far from the borders with Poland and the Czech Republic. Outside, bilingual signs mark the town's name not only as Bautzen but Budyšin, in Sorbian. Inside, a dozen children giggled as a teacher animated the green dragon hand puppet, telling a modern tale rooted in Slavic folklore. The Sorbs, a West Slavic group, settled in what is now eastern Germany more than 1,000 years ago and never left. Borders shifted, regimes and ideologies changed. But the Sorbian language, in its upper and lower variants, endured. Now, however, the Sorbian language is on the brink, threatened by assimilation and also overt hostility from the region's surging German ultra-nationalists. In response, artists, educators and tech innovators are undertaking an urgent effort to preserve the language and Sorbian customs. 'The language can only be saved if more and more people speak it,' said Stefan Schmidt, a Sorbian-language broadcaster and father of five Sorbian-speaking children. 'It's an ambitious goal.' The Sorbs are one of Germany's four officially recognized national minorities, alongside the Danes, Frisians, Sinti and Roma. The designation provides cultural funding, education and media in Sorbian, as well as protection under European law. Fewer than 20,000 people still speak Upper Sorbian in Saxony — and even fewer speak Lower Sorbian in Brandenburg. UNESCO, the United Nations cultural and educational arm, lists Sorbian as endangered, along with other minority languages such as Welsh and Breton. Beate Brězan, head of the Witaj Language Center in Bautzen, has a bold goal: 100,000 active Sorbian speakers by 2100. State and federal funding, bilingual signage and public awareness campaigns help, Brězan said — but the true battleground is within family homes. 'What happens at home is key to the language's survival,' she said. This isn't the first time Sorbian has confronted extinction-level risk. The Nazis sought to erase Sorbian identity through cultural annihilation and assimilation, and banned the language from public use. In the former East Germany, Sorbs were given more freedom, but only within a tightly controlled framework that often commodified their traditions. Across the rest of Germany, the Sorbs are best known for their elaborate traditional dress, or 'Tracht,' and their colorful Easter eggs. But here in the Lusatia region — straddling Brandenburg and Saxony — the effort is to make Sorbian relevant day-to-day, not just in folklore or on holidays. The Witaj Language Center's digital arm, for example, is working to ensure Sorbian has a digital presence. Its Sorbian translation app, Sotra, launched in 2019, is now being developed to include speech functions. In a small studio in Bautzen, Sorbian native speakers like Veronika Butendeich have recorded hours of Sorbian sentences. It's painstaking work — but essential if children are to use the language digitally, said Daniel Zoba, who leads the digitization effort. 'If it's not available in Sorbian, they'll take it in another language — and get used to German or English,' Zoba said. At Jan Radyserb Wjela preschool, named for a 19th-century Sorbian poet, about 80 percent of the children come from German-speaking families. 'We speak only Sorbian with the children,' day care director, Grit Hentschel, said. 'They first understand through constant listening — and only later start to speak.' For Hentschel, who learned Sorbian at school while growing up in a German home, the mission is personal. 'I really live the Sorbian culture and I wear my Tracht with pride,' she said. 'We're especially proud when former students come back and say they passed their school exams in Sorbian,' she said. With fewer children raised in Sorbian-speaking homes, maintaining native-speaking staff is a challenge. The facility now partners with a local vocational college to sustain staffing. Sorbian language is taught just as much through Sorbian culture. The highlight of the year at the preschool is Ptači Kwas (Upper Sorbian for 'Bird Wedding'), a midwinter tradition, featuring Tracht crafted by a dwindling number of seamstresses like Petra Kupke in nearby Räckelwitz. The country road from to Kupke's studio winds through rolling cornfields, flanked by ornate wayside monuments that bear witness to the Upper Sorbs' deep Catholic roots. Across the state border in Brandenburg, the Lower Sorbs have traditionally followed the Protestant faith. Kupke, 57, began sewing Sorbian outfits in the mid-1990s after losing her factory job following German reunification. She learned from local grandmothers mastering the intricate floral embroidery to keep Sorbian identity alive, one stitch at a time. 'It makes me proud to look around the church at festivals and see my work,' she said. But with few young people taking up the craft, she worries for its future. Training an apprentice is expensive. Traditionally, the outfits are worn only on religious and festive holidays, and Kupke believes things should stay that way. But some younger Sorbs have begun to merge elements of the Tracht with modern streetwear. Janźel Panaš — known onstage as Angel van Hell — is one young Sorb pushing boundaries. Earlier this year, Panaš, 24, performed in drag at the first non-heteronormative bird wedding organized in Cottbus by Kolektiw Wakuum, an initiative that aims to create a space for feminist and queer elements within Sorbian society. Wearing traditional ribbons, an apron and a denim bonnet, Panaš played the role of the wedding entertainer. 'My mum was worried I'd upset people — the bonnet didn't fully cover my hair, like it's supposed to,' he recalled. But for Panaš, blending tradition with personal identity offers a path forward to preserving Sorbian culture. Dressed in drag, on a hot August day in his hometown of Schleife, Panaš wore one of his favorite pieces: a neck bow passed down from his great-grandmother and updated with a silver hoop chain. 'She was the last person in our family who really spoke Sorbian,' he said of his great-grandmother. Even in Germany, 'many people outside of Lusatia don't even know that Sorbs exist,' he said. Rural population decline is one of the main challenges. But for families like Andrea Schmidt's in Räckelwitz, the language is very much alive. Growing up in Crostwitz, Sorbian was part of everyday life. Now, her grandchildren carry on the legacy. 'Witaj Wowka!' her granddaughter Hana, 20, called through the kitchen door — 'Hi grandma!' 'It would feel artificial to speak German with the children,' Schmidt, 61, said. Jurij, 4, the youngest of Hana's four brothers, entertained himself on the lawn with a toy horse, practicing to ride through the village as an 'Osterreiter,' or 'Easter rider' — a traditional Sorbian procession proclaiming the resurrection. Despite studying and living in a big city, Hana still speaks Sorbian with her roommates from back home. In her teenage years, she once had doubts: 'There was a phase when we spoke more German. But the awareness of how important Sorbian is came back quickly.' An emerging threat from ultra-nationalists is a concern for many Sorbs. The Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, classified as extremist by domestic intelligence, is surging in the Sorbs' traditional heartland. Last year, the Domowina, an umbrella organization of Sorbian societies, banned AfD officials and candidates from holding office within its ranks. A number of young Sorbs recounted incidents in which they were threatened by far-right groups and told to speak German. Despite the hostility, families like the Schmidts remain defiant. 'We definitely don't avoid speaking Sorbian,' Hana said. For her grandmother, protecting the language is a matter of identity and of the heart. 'It's amazing with how much emotion and with how much love you can pass it on,' Andrea said. 'If you don't put your heart and soul into it, it won't work.'

Fact Check: Photos claiming to show Russian man saving drowning bear in Lake Tahoe tell a different story
Fact Check: Photos claiming to show Russian man saving drowning bear in Lake Tahoe tell a different story

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Fact Check: Photos claiming to show Russian man saving drowning bear in Lake Tahoe tell a different story

Claim: Online photographs show Ivan Stepanov, a Russian tourist, saving a drowning bear beneath the Tallac Bridge in South Lake Tahoe. Rating: A seemingly heartwarming story of an animal rescue spread like wildfire across social media in August 2025. The story, accompanied by photos in each post, was of a Russian tourist named Ivan Stepanov, who dove into frigid waters to rescue a sedated, drowning bear beneath the Tallac Bridge in South Lake Tahoe. According to the story, Stepanov said when asked why he risked his life, "In my country, we say a man's strength is measured by who he chooses to protect—even if it has claws." A Facebook post (archived) of the story got nearly 400,000 reactions in just a couple of days. Another Facebook post (archived) of the same story got 16,000 reactions. An Instagram post (archived) sharing the story got over 40,000 likes. Several readers reached out to Snopes to ask if it was true and many others searched the site for the story. The story as told in the Facebook posts was false. The photos were real, though, and from a real drowning bear rescue by an American man in Florida. A Google search for "Ivan Stepanov bear" yielded no legitimate news outlets covering the rescue, just social media posts spreading the story. A reverse image search (archived) for the photo attached to the story, however, returned 17-year-old news articles about a man who rescued a bear in Florida. The rescue, according to The Gainesville Sun, Tampa Bay Times and Gulf Breeze News, was the work of Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Adam Warwick in 2008. After the bear wandered too close to people's houses, state wildlife officials shot it with a tranquilizer gun so they could move it, but the bear reacted by paddling out into the Gulf of Mexico. Warwick, believing he had only a few minutes before the tranquilizer dart took effect and the bear would drown, jumped into the water and first tried to splash it to encourage it to go back to shore. But that didn't work, so Warwick got behind the bear, hugged it and tried swimming it to shore. "The bear was heavy. Warwick used the animal's buoyancy to help him haul it to shore," the Tampa Bay Times wrote. "The animal was awake but could barely move. The bear tried to help out with a little doped-up paddling of its own." According to the Times, Warwick and a colleague drove the bear three hours east to Osceola National Forest the next morning. Two weeks later, the bear wandered into another residential area and Warwick found it a home at Hardee County Animal Refuge to save it from being euthanized, The Gainesville Sun reported at the time. Six years later, in 2014, the rescue got some national attention with stories from Game & Fish Magazine and the Financial Times. The version with "Ivan Stepanov" wasn't a real bear rescue shared with the wrong photo, either. Not only was there no real reporting of the tale, it also happened at a place that doesn't exist. While there is a Tallac area around South Lake Tahoe, there is no Tallac Bridge, even where the road crosses Tallac Creek. In fact, there are no bridges that cross Lake Tahoe. "Daring Rescue: FWC Biologist Saves Drowning Bear from Gulf." Gulf Breeze News - Your Community Newspaper, Gulf Breeze News, 3 July 2008, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. Garry, Stephanie. "Biologist Pulls Doped Bear from Gulf." Tampa Bay Times, 10 July 2008, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. Hanson, Debbie. "Florida FWC Biologist Makes Heroic Black Bear Rescue - Game & Fish." Game & Fish, Game & Fish, 20 Mar. 2014, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. "Ivan Stepanov Bear - Google Search." Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. "Lake Tahoe - Google Maps." Google Maps, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. The Associated Press. "Rescued 375-Pound Black Bear Will Go to Hardee County Zoo." Gainesville Sun, 10 July 2025, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025. van Gilder Cooke, Sonia. ""I Saved a Bear from Drowning."" Financial Times, Financial Times, 13 June 2014, Accessed 15 Aug. 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store