So I need help. So far today she growls when we ick her up. Like she 
does not like to be held, but after we ick her up she is hapy as can 
be. She loves to run on the floor more, I can tell but as I said I 
want her to be abloe to be handled. held, exspecialy when the 
children want to hold her and now is the best tme to get her used to 
it. She was held a lot when I got her , maybe she is sick of it, but 
I want her to still enjoy is and not growl.Its not a  im gunna biite 
you growl , it low, and short, as if saying " i don't want to be 
picked up" but she has to be used to it. I will pick her up less, 
but if she feels dominate when held then i will hold her less , but 
wont let her on furniture or to sleep in my bed with me, she will 
slepp in her crate because I am crate trianing her. I need help , 
should i still ick her up but less, not let her on furniture?When 
she does bad behavior punish her by putting her in her cage and not 
lettin her lay?But I want it to be somewhere she does not hate 
because she sleeps in it. She has two speerate cages, a small one 
[crate] for bed. then a gate thats open at the top that if we put 
her in during the day she has room to rome. 

get back to me lease

Thank you,
cassie

--- In [email protected], "marsha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> I guess we will have to agree to disagree. I do not train as a 
profession, but I train my own pets and have had dogs since I was a 
tiny tot and I do not feel that allowing an agressive pet up on 
furniture, to be held, ect, is going to make the situation worse. In 
fact, I feel that holding and showing love and kindness to an 
agressive pet will actually help in the long run. Yes, you must 
assert your dominance, but I disagree that that requires you to keep 
the pet on the floor so to speak, but then again, that is just my 
opinion and everyone must decide what works best for them.
> Marsha
> 
>   ----- Original Message ----- 
>   From: Sherri 
>   To: [email protected] 
>   Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 6:24 PM
>   Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Re: aggresive puppy
> 
> 
> 
>   I am a professional dog trainer and I did not say that carrying 
her would cause the problem.  She already has the problem and you 
don't want to aggravate it.  If a dog is not aggressive then 
sleeping on the bed is not going to make them aggressive, but if 
they are it will certainly support their dominant status.  Any dog 
that growls looses all priviledges until they learn who is the 
boss.  She is trying this "boss" thing on and if she gets away with 
it, it will get worse.  
> 
>   She must work for attention and be given free love and kisses 
for nothing.
> 
>   Sherri
> 
>   marsha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
>     I have had chis for 20 years, and have always enjoyed carrying 
mine around, and they sleep on my bed, get on my furniture and all 
that. I have never had a problem with that and it has never led to 
any aggression with any of my chis. I don't think those things are a 
problem....the only thing you need to worry about is correcting any 
signs of aggression immediately. I disagree that one needs to be so 
aloof in order to tame aggression. I will correct an aggressive pup 
one moment and give it lots of kisses the next. A lot like a toddler 
that bites.....you correct the toddler and then you let them know 
you love them. When my children were toddlers and did something that 
needed corrected, I might would give a swap on the pamper, but then 
I would tell them they can't do that, now give me a kiss. I do the 
exact same thing with my pups. They misbehave, I correct, then I 
love on them. 
> 
>     I have now been working on mom's puppy (4 months) for 2 days, 
and already, once she growls, I place her in my lap on her back till 
she stops, then I pick her up and give her a hug and kiss and go on 
with life. She is learning after only 2 days.
> 
>     Marsha
> 
>       ----- Original Message ----- 
>       From: cassmisty 
>       To: [email protected] 
>       Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 5:19 PM
>       Subject: [Chihuahuas] Re: aggresive puppy
> 
> 
>       The how do I get it so she is used to being held, because I 
want to 
>       bring her around when she is older [ 5 months or so] and 
bring her 
>       everywhre and socialize her shoudlnt I get her used to it. 
Like 
>       maybe carry her to her bed and from it, carry her to her 
food. Only 
>       little things like that that last lesss then a minute. Also 
I 
>       shouldnt let her be on our furniture anymore at all. not on 
my bed 
>       or couch?
> 
>       -- In [email protected], Sherri <sounddogs1@> wrote:
>       >
>       > She is a dominant girl and is trying to assert herself. 
She needs 
>       some guidance, rules and an education to let her know that 
>       the "boss" position is filled. Do not pamper her and make 
her work 
>       for things she would like. Make sure you keep her on the 
floor and 
>       DO NOT carry her around.
>       > 
>       > Sherri
>       > 
>       > Jessica Wolinski <jaded_ska_princess@> wrote:
>       > awwww just take your time with her she is a baby herself 
>       and needs to be taught things... I really don't understand 
why 
>       people get animals and right away expect them to be trained 
and 
>       behave... That is something that's taught just like a real 
child.... 
>       That is the reason we have soooo many homeless pets in this 
world 
>       because people don't thing it through enough... a pet is a 
HUGE 
>       responsibility and needs almost as much attention as a child 
does.. 
>       I would give it time and teach her what you want her to 
>       do..otherwise if you don't she wont know whats shes doing is 
wrong.
>       > 
>       > cassmisty <cassmisty@> wrote: My puppy is 7 weeks old. 
>       She is mean , aggresive, like wehn we pick her 
>       > up from sleeping, or the floor, i heard the worms thing, 
she has 
>       none 
>       > in her poop. Yet today sence we stoped giving her formula 
she has 
>       > calmed down . She growled at the baby. and once at my 
mother, 
>       thats it. 
>       > I picked her up today when she was playing and she did not 
growl 
>       at 
>       > me , I even picked her up when she was eatting and took 
the food 
>       from 
>       > her, not one growl from her. Yest. we could not do that. 
But she 
>       did 
>       > growl when I touched her mouth. Maybe it's teething thats 
also 
>       bugging 
>       > her, or like my last dog would not let us touch his feet 
without 
>       > growling, she just does not like her mouth touched. what 
should I 
>       do 
>       > about that ? We were going to run an ad today to find her 
a better 
>       > home, but we are going to ghive her a couple days or so to 
see if 
>       > stopping the formula or something would help. 
>       > 
>       > Thank you 
>       > Cassie
>       > 
>       > 
>       > 
>       > 
>       > 
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> 
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> 
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