The Iceberg in Dog Behaviour

What You’re Not Seeing

When people look at dog behaviour, they usually only see what’s happening on the outside.

  • The barking.
  • The pulling.
  • The lunging.
  • The jumping.

But that’s only a small part of the story.
Dog behaviour is a lot like an iceberg.
When you look at an iceberg in the ocean, only a tiny part is visible above the water.
Most of it is hidden underneath.
Behaviour works the same way.

The visible part might be:

  • barking,
  • pulling,
  • reacting,
  • ignoring you.

But underneath that behaviour are hidden reasons like:

  • fear,
  • anxiety,
  • frustration,
  • stress,
  • physical discomfort,
  • or unmet emotional needs.

This is really important.
Because if we only try to stop the visible behaviour, we may completely miss the real cause.
Imagine a dog barking at another dog during a walk.
Some people think:
“That dog is naughty.”

But the dog may actually be:

  • scared,
  • overwhelmed,
  • frustrated,
    or unsure how to cope.

The barking is just the surface.

At CEWS, we try to look underneath the iceberg.

We focus on:

  • safety,
  • movement,
  • reduced pressure,
  • emotional regulation,
  • and calmer walking experiences.

Because when the hidden layers improve, the visible behaviour often improves too.

Instead of asking:
“How do I stop this behaviour?”

Try asking:
“What is driving this behaviour?”

That question changes everything.

When you understand the iceberg, you start understanding the dog.

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