01/06/2026
Couldn’t agree more!
🐕 “How do I socialise my reactive dog!”
The simplest answer … You don’t. And here’s why.
❗ The problem starts with the word “socialisation” itself.
Many people interpret socialisation through a human lens:
👫 Meeting people
🎉 Going to parties
☕ Socialising with friends
But that’s not what ‘socialisation’ means in dog behaviour science.
🐾 Socialisation is a developmental process that occurs during puppyhood.
The primary socialisation period generally occurs between approximately 3 and 12 weeks of age.
During this time, puppies are biologically primed to learn what is:
✅ Safe
✅ Normal
✅ Familiar
This includes exposure to:
👨👩👧👦 People
🐕 Other dogs
🚗 Vehicles
🔊 Sounds
🌳 Environments
🐄 Other animals
🤲 Handling
Once this developmental window closes, it cannot be reopened.
📅 By the time most puppies go to their new homes at 8 weeks old, a significant portion of this critical learning period has already passed.
This means that when we’re helping an adolescent or adult reactive dog, we’re not really “socialising” them.
🧠 We’re changing emotional responses through learning.
And that’s a very different process.
😬 Then comes the second fear period…
Many dogs experience a second fear period during adolescence, often between 6–14 months of age.
During this stage, dogs may suddenly become:
⚠️ More cautious
⚠️ More worried
⚠️ More reactive
A puppy who happily greeted strangers at 4 months, may suddenly bark at them at 8 months.
A dog who ignored other dogs - may suddenly become concerned about them.
This is a normal developmental stage.
However…
🚨 If a dog is already showing signs of fear, anxiety, or nervousness, forcing them into more social situations can actually make things worse, especially if the set up is wrong for the dog.
Repeated exposure does not automatically create confidence. In fact - this can often lead to flooding, feeling overwhelmed and shut down.
It can also:
❌ Increase anxiety
❌ Strengthen negative associations
❌ Increase reactivity
This is why advice such as:
👉 “Take them to the dog park.”
👉 “Let them meet lots of dogs.”
👉 “They just need more socialisation.”
…can be harmful for many reactive dogs.
💡 What actually helps reactive dogs?
A systematic process involving:
✅ Management
✅ Desensitisation
✅ Counter-conditioning
1️⃣ Work Below Threshold
First, identify the distance at which your dog can notice the trigger but remain calm enough to think and learn.
For example:
🐕 Your dog reacts to another dog at 30 feet.
😌 But at 100 feet, they can see that dog and remain relaxed.
That 100-foot distance becomes your starting point.
2️⃣ Desensitisation
Gradually expose the dog to the trigger at an intensity they can cope with.
Not so close that they panic.
Not so far away that they don’t notice it.
🎯 Just enough for learning to occur.
3️⃣ Counter-Conditioning
Every time the trigger appears:
🍗 Amazing food appears.
🎾 A favourite game starts.
❤️ Something wonderful happens.
Over time, the dog’s brain starts changing from:
🚨 “Dog = danger”
to
🎉 “Dog = good things happen”
4️⃣ Gradually Increase Difficulty
As your dog becomes comfortable:
➡️ Reduce distance slowly
➡️ Increase difficulty gradually
➡️ Move at your dog’s pace
Small wins build confidence.
💭 The goal is not to force a dog to tolerate the world.
❤️ The goal is to help them genuinely feel differently about it.
Because:
🧠 Behaviour follows emotion.
When we change how a dog feels, the behaviour often changes naturally too.
🐕 Reactive dogs don’t need more “socialisation”.
They need:
✅ Safety
✅ Trust
✅ Predictability
✅ Positive experiences
✅ Carefully structured learning
Confidence is not built by flooding dogs with things they fear.
🌱 Confidence is built through hundreds of successful experiences that teach them the world isn’t quite as scary as they thought.
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