drive

The Myth of “Training The Drive Out of A Dog”

The Myth of “Training The Drive Out of A  Dog”

Drive is biology, not behavior. It is the expression of genetic programming etched into a dog’s nervous system and refined through centuries of selection. When I see people trying to suppress drive with harsh methods or deprivation, I don’t see training—I see trauma. The science is clear: suppression elevates cortisol, shuts down dopamine, and erodes neuroplasticity. The dog may look calm on the outside, but what I often see is learned helplessness—the quiet of defeat, not the balance of fulfillment.

In this article, I explain why suppression is abuse, and why fair, mild corrections, used only after drive has been properly channeled, are not cruelty but part of biology itself. My work is about engagement, mental stimulation, and breed-specific outlets that respect the dog’s genetics while building partnership. True training isn’t about erasing drive. It’s about harnessing it with purpose while keeping the spark of the animal alive