Oh it's not just service dogs. EVERY dog I've ever had has at some point interrupted me and the hubby trying to figure out what we were doing.
Yeah, this is more the issue to me. Dogs are going to react in different ways, but if they decide that you are being inappropriately dominated, or that you are distressed? Dogs will stick their nose in to check out if you’re okay, irrespective of whether they have specific training for things like panting or increased BP. Which is why I think a lot of dog owners keep the dog outside the room!
If you’re at the point where you’re going to get intimate with a partner, they’re going to already know that you have Chopper, and probably that he’s your Assistance Dog. So, it might be simpler to simply let your partner know, “Get me my dog if anything goes wrong”. That avoids you putting Chopper in the situation where he’s receiving markers that he’s trained to respond to, and being told “No, no,
this heavy breathing is ok”, particularly if sex is going to become a regular thing. That could get pretty confusing for Chopper...
ETA. I kept my dog with me mostly when I was dating, but he’s trained to indicate when my distress levels are increasing. And sex was distressing for me. I couldn’t have my dog with me for that. It would have been unfair on him to be telling him to just chill out, when exactly the type of issue he’s trained for is going on.
Think of it perhaps like: a seizure alert dog being routinely told by the handler to ignore seizures. If you want Chopper to react when you’re having flashbacks, and to interupt you when that happens? The decision seems to be more about (a) is sex going to cause me to have flashbacks etc; and (b) is that something I’m prepared to handle.
Asking your partner to let Chopper hang out at the end of the bed “just in case I have a meltdown or something, but just go ahead and ignore him otherwise”....The problem with that scenario is not whether Chopper should be in the room, yeah!?