When you act as your pet

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3 years ago


When a pet behaves like a pet it’s ok. When a human behaves like a human it's ok. When a pet behaves like a human it is sympathetic. When a human behaves like a pet ... so judge for yourself.

Kada se ljubimac ponasa kao ljubimac to je ok. Kada se covek ponasa kao covek to je ok. Kada se ljubimac ponasa kao covek to je simpaticno. Kada se covek ponasa kao ljubimac.... pa procenite sami.

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Ma mozemo da se ponasamo kako hocemo, ja ceo zivod imam ljubimce i uvatim da se gnjavimo i ljubim ih i nikad mi nista nije bilo. a psu se ipak ne svidja sto ga gazdarica liznula.

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3 years ago

Your dog looks adorable! But yes, it would be weird if someone will be acting like a dog for long, do it once and its funny LOL!

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3 years ago

thanks dear :) i agree with you about this

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3 years ago

So adorable..😅

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3 years ago

Actually, my daughter tried this with our dog. He used to lick the ears of the person, who is sitting next to him. And, once she tried to lick him back, of course, he escaped.

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3 years ago

Prelep pas i gazdarica svaka cast ko voli zivotinje voli i ljude

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3 years ago

pa ne bih se slozio, ja sve vise volim zivotinje sto sa ljudima nije bas slucaj :)

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3 years ago

LIKE hehe

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3 years ago

Hahaha vazno da se dobro zabavljaju. Ljubimci se cesto nadju u cudu kad vide da ih vlasnik oponasa

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3 years ago

e da, i ja sam to primetio, ume tu da dodje do porilicno saljivih situacija

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3 years ago

Nije baš pametno u doba pandemije lizati se s ćukom, ali vjerovatno su fotografije ranije uslikane.

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3 years ago

nije pametno nikada lizti se sa njima nevezano za pandemiju, te ljude nisam nikada mogao da razumem koji se njuse i lisu za bilo kojom zivotinjom dobrovoljno

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3 years ago

'lizanje' sa ljubimcima zapravo moze da bude jaako korisno. Naucno je dokazano da ljudi koji ljube svoje pse tako jacaju svoj imunitet.

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3 years ago

ne bih se slozio sa tobom, a ne znam koji su to naucnici dokazivali, da je dobro da te pas lize posto je lizao svoje dupe

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3 years ago

Hahaha. Dog are very domineering Animal. It never cheats on his owner.

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3 years ago

Iako obozavam pse, ovo stvarnone mogu da razumem, mislim na ponasanje zene u ovakvoj situaciji. Lepo je voleti svog ljubimca, ali mislim da je ovo previse.

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3 years ago

The scenery is very romantic,.

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3 years ago

alwayss we can see something new from our pets

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3 years ago

Despite the fact that recent studies have reevaluated hierarchy models and have modified our understanding of behavior in the wild wolf, the concept of a hierarchal relationship among dogs and humans continues to be perpetuated. To ensure a well functioning family group, a family needs to know more about canine behavior than outdated strategies focusing on pack structure. In fact recent research has clearly indicated that the longstanding theory which maintained that alpha wolves control through aggression and relentless management is more myth than fact. These theories have been refuted by wolf biologists and if this theory is no longer considered true for wolves, then how can it be considered true for our dogs? New research on canine learning patterns indicates dogs understand us far better than we understand them. Decades of observation by wildlife biologists of free-ranging wolf packs have revealed startling insight into the lives of these majestic canids. For instance, seasoned leaders of wolf packs actually survey from near the back of the pack when traveling, rather than taking the lead position. Also, in times of scarcity, the leaders allow the young to eat first, rather than feeding themselves first. Wolf behavior experts, such as L. David Mech, have dedicated their lives to observing wolves in their natural state. Some interesting observations include: There is an absence of reports of wolves seeking high positions over the pack, there are no signs of a leader rousting a subordinate from a desired resting place, and an alpha wolf rarely initiates pinning (a dominance behavior). These experts who study wolf behavior describe the role of the wolf leaders as parents— guiding, teaching, and caring for their pack members. When the wolf offspring mature, they do not compete to overthrow the pack leader; instead, they leave the pack, find a mate, and start a family of their own. A parent-family model better describes wolf-wolf relationships than a competitive hierarchy Dominance hierarchy based training methods assume dogs are committed to a battle of supremacy and constant challenge with family members. This premise is incorrect and not supported by scientific study. Trainers advising families to take charge of the pack by eating first, walking through doors first, occupying a higher position and worst of all, pinning the dogs into submission are ignoring the current scientific research and subjecting the dog to unnecessary and sometimes cruel training methods. In reality, dogs have an intra-species relationship and a pattern of behaviors with their human family members that are driven by a variety of motivations, including: genetics, socialization, available resources, fear, conflicts, learning, behavioral pathology and disease. Furthermore, application of scientifically based principles of positive reinforcement, operant conditioning, classical conditioning, desensitization and counter-conditioning programs have been shown to successfully teach dogs desirable behaviors and prevent behavior problems while enhancing the human-pet bond.

  1. Myth: Don’t let your dog walk ahead of you. If he is ahead of you on a walk, he will walk all over you in all other areas of your relationship!

Fact: Dogs may pull when walking on a leash for a variety of reasons. They may have the desire to play, explore, investigate or be social. This can become a learned behavior that is self rewarding; the reward being successful attempts to experience a new area’s odors, other dogs, and people. In other cases, dogs pull to get out of a fearful situation!

The second part of this myth is actually more damaging: how a dog walks on a leash does not reflect your relationship, it simply means you haven’t taught your dog to walk on a leash. Teaching a dog to walk nicely on a leash will not improve separation anxiety, aggression or phobias. However, this should not be confused with the fact that dogs that show excitable or aggressive meetings and greetings on walks may need to learn to walk calmly by the owner’s side as part of the behavior management program. Mostly walking nicely on a leash is about manners, training and enjoying something you should do with your dog frequently. Dogs are simply not trying to take over the pack or be in charge. Dogs are learning how to interact by assessing what works and what doesn’t with each interaction. Dogs are great students of human behavior and draw conclusions based on your actions. Punishment, deference and fear as training methods do not foster a mentally, emotionally and behaviorally sound dog. A mentally and emotionally healthy dog is not necessarily achieved with obedience training. Families that focus on socialization, positive reinforcement, avoidance-based strategies and clear and predictable interactions will be rewarded by a dog that is an enjoyable member of the family.

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3 years ago