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- #121
Justmehere
Sponsor
Yep. There are patches that are made and most SD teams these days have them on the best. Most people leave the dog alone, but too many don't.I have a dumb question, is it possible to put letters on the coat that tell others to leave you guys alone as the dog is working?
That's a great reminder! I initially didn't say a thing, yes or no, and wish the nurse had even asked. She just held up her phone and started snapping away... but I had it within me to say no after doing nothing at first... I can always change my mind. It's easy to forget that. When she pulled back the curtain for the patient, I verbally said "no, my dog can't do this" instantly, as she told my dog the commands to engage the other person...@Justmehere - that nurse! - but what I wanted to mention is that you still always get to change your mind. So if the first instinct is to just get along in the moment, and say 'yeah, sure, OK' to the picture - if your gut tells youright after, that you didn't like thatchoice? it's OK to make a new choice.
Sometimes it all makes me just want to go live with dogs.
I think every service dog team has to figure out what is right for them and the culture they are in, and will get a lot of practice saying something... I'd agree that directness can help but being polite (at first) makes sense too.That's rather rude to say to someone, in my opinion.
I have found that "stop petting my dog now thanks" or telling someone just plain "no" to requests to pet the dog actually tend to lead to a longer unwanted interaction, not a quick end to interaction. It's annoying. People want to discuss it more, and usually in a defensive and escalated way. For me, "now is not a good time to pet the dog" and occasionally adding "please stop petting the dog now" works the best to get someone to stop petting without much fuss and engagement."Leave us alone, thank you" - doesn't have to have an angry tone about it, but it's going to end the interaction.
If someone is touching my arm in an unwanted way, I easily can say "leave me alone" with greater success... but if it's the dog they are touching, people get weirdly entitled about it. People tend to tell me. "But I love dogs..." and "but you dog loves me" other objections... then it becomes an even longer engagement to tell them no once again very directly and enforce the boundary.
Oddly, "now is not a good time" seems to work best in my area. It's not the most direct, but people usually apologize and just stop and walk away. Go figure.
When I was in another state, I found that "stop petting the dog now please" went over just fine. It was a different and more direct culture as a whole though. When I was in the south, I found that I had to dress up my boundary even more to be heard and I'd start off with "sir" or something and folks would stop more quickly.
Any version of "no" should be more than enough, and I agree service dog owners shouldn't shy away from directness for fear of being rude - but as to a "no" that actually works the most effectively with the most people quickly - it really does vary and in some areas extra politeness goes a long way.
Sometimes it doesn't.
Like when people who walk their dog down the sidewalk who let it run up and engage mine. I always tell them to pull the dog away, but rarely is their first response to pull the dog away. 99 percent of the time they want to discuss the friendliness of their dog. In that setting I have to tell them my dog might attack (unlikely but a possibility with any dog, even an SD) in order to get people to stop quickly without a lot of fuss.
People get passionate and vocal about dogs with complete strangers in a way I never expected before training/using SDs. It's why dogs are great as therapy tools - people talk more easily, but it's got a big drawback when the dog isn't everyone else's therapy dog, but an SD for the handler.
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