Tony Nila Puppy & Canine Cognitive Behavior Specialist

Tony Nila Puppy & Canine Cognitive Behavior Specialist The greatest gift you can give a dog, is the freedom to think!

🦴 Why Chewing Toys Can Create Behavioral ProblemsChewing is natural, but what your dog chews matters.🧠 Man-made chew toy...
11/14/2025

🦴 Why Chewing Toys Can Create Behavioral Problems

Chewing is natural, but what your dog chews matters.

🧠 Man-made chew toys (rubber, nylon, or squeaky) keep the brain in problem-solving mode, not relaxation.
They trigger arousal instead of calm — the opposite of what we want for emotional balance.

⚠️ Over time, this kind of chewing can:
• Encourage destructive chewing of similar materials (like furniture or shoes)
• Reinforce prey drive when toys squeak or mimic small animals
• Keep the nervous system in constant alert

✅ Natural, digestible chews (like raw meaty bones, tendons, or rabbit feet) engage the jaw, satisfy instinct, and release calming hormones, the way nature intended.

Relaxation starts in the mouth. 🐶

📅 Join me Nov 29, 9 AM Pacific for my free Raising Your Perfect Puppy webinar.
Learn how calm cognition shapes lifelong behavior.

🔗 Enrollment Link Is In Bio

🗣 The greatest gift you can give a dog is the freedom to think.

Tony here! Ive decided to host a quarterly free 4 week long, 1-hour live webinar, where we’ll explore the first year of ...
11/11/2025

Tony here! Ive decided to host a quarterly free 4 week long, 1-hour live webinar, where we’ll explore the first year of your puppy’s life through a cognitive learning approach, the same method I teach in my private coaching program. So please share this with anyone about to get a new puppy or are already experiencing puppy antics 🐾😜

You’ll learn:
✅ How to avoid the top mistakes owners make in the first 6 months
✅ How to build confidence, curiosity, and calm, not obedience through pressure
✅ How to read your puppy’s developmental stages (and work with them)
✅ How to raise a puppy that thinks, not just reacts

🗓 Date: Saturday, November 30th
⏰ Time: 11am Central
💻 Where: Live via Zoom
💬 Cost: Free
🔗 Click Link In Bio To Enroll:

— Tony Nila
Canine Cognitive Behavior Specialist | Since 1995

Hey everyone, Tony here 👋Over the past few months, I’ve had a lot of messages from owners asking if there’s a way to rec...
11/09/2025

Hey everyone, Tony here 👋
Over the past few months, I’ve had a lot of messages from owners asking if there’s a way to receive ongoing guidance and community support without committing to a full private training plan, especially those raising puppy’s or who need help navigating unique behavioral challenges.

So, I’ve opened up an ongoing Group Coaching Program that meets weekly on Zoom.

This class is designed for owners who want to:
✅ Build better communication and trust with their puppy or dog
✅ Learn to manage behavior through calm structure and cognitive understanding
✅ Get real-time coaching and feedback from me each week
✅ Connect with other owners walking a similar path

The focus is on teaching you how to think through your puppy’s behavior, not just manage it , because when you learn to communicate through understanding, everything changes.

💻 Online Group Class via Zoom
💰 $195/month (month-to-month)
🗓️ Includes access to live classes, Q&A, and community support.

If you’ve been wanting to work with me but prefer a more flexible option, this is a great place to start.

👉 To learn more or sign up, you can visit:
🔗 https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/a95d109b/?categories=2025%20Programs

Or message me directly if you’d like help figuring out whether it’s the right fit for you and your dog.

Remember, the greatest gift you can give a dog, is the freedom to think. 🧠🐾

10/19/2025

🐺 Ready to Start Working With Me? Here’s How to Enroll 👇

Hey , I realized I never actually made a post explaining how to officially get started in our program 😅 so let’s fix that right now!

If you’re here, chances are you’re trying to understand your wolfdog on a deeper level, not just to train them, but to communicate with them. That’s what our Canine Cognitive Behavior Program is all about. It’s built to help you and your companion build trust, confidence, and emotional regulation through relationship-based learning.

Here’s exactly how to get started ⤵️

Step 1: Schedule Your Initial Zoom Consultation:
Before joining any program, we start with a one-hour Zoom consultation so I can meet you and your wolfdog, understand your goals, and make sure the program you choose fits your lifestyle.

🕐 1 Hour | 💲$50🔗 Book Your Consultation Here:
https://dogbehavior.as.me/schedule/a95d109b/appointment/23341540/calendar/220873

Step 2: Choose Your Cognitive Behavior Program:
Once we’ve met, you can choose the level of support that fits you best:

🟢 Basic — $195/month
Group class & community support. Perfect if you’re looking for guidance and accountability while working at your own pace.

🔗 Enroll in Basic
🟡 Standard — $295/month
Everything in Basic plus direct text support for quick questions between sessions. Enroll in Standard

🔗 🔴 Enroll in Premium — $495/month
The full experience — weekly private Zooms, nutrition coaching, unlimited phone support, and access to our private Facebook community.🔗

Enrollment link here:
https://app.acuityscheduling.com/catalog/a95d109b/?categories=2025%20Programs

Step 3: Begin Your Cognitive Journey
Once you’re enrolled, we’ll start tailoring a plan for you and your wolfdog. You’ll get immediate access to our group class and resources while we start working 1:1 to build a calm, confident, and connected relationship.

✨ If you’re new here, start with the consultation. It’s the perfect way to ask questions and see if the Cognitive Revolution approach is the right fit for you and your wolfdog puppy.

🐺 Video Summary: “Hand Feeding, Space, and Natural Puppy Learning”This video features Tony Nila explaining a critical mi...
08/02/2025

🐺 Video Summary: “Hand Feeding, Space, and Natural Puppy Learning”

This video features Tony Nila explaining a critical misunderstanding in popular hand-feeding techniques for puppies. It clarifies what natural learning looks like for dogs, particularly how mother dogs teach space, invitation, and consent — and how human intervention often disrupts this process.

🔑 Key Takeaways
1. Hand Feeding Is Not Enough
Many trainers and puppy raisers recommend hand feeding to build bonding and trust.

Tony argues that hand feeding alone is not the complete lesson, it misses the spatial negotiation taught by a mother dog.

Simply allowing a puppy to invade your space and take food from your hand may create entitlement and boundary confusion.

2. Natural Learning Sequence (from the Mother Dog)

Initially, the mother provides food (milk) directly, creating natural follow behavior.
As pups grow, she begins to ask for space before allowing access to food, this teaches the pups that invitation is required.

When humans ignore this stage and go straight to hand feeding, they undo this boundary and the puppy regresses in spatial awareness.

3. How to Restore Healthy Boundaries
Tony presents a corrective technique:
Put food in a closed fist and extend the hand away from your body.
Let the puppy muzzle, nibble, and mouth at the hand (mimicking the rooting behavior during breastfeeding).
When it becomes uncomfortable (you’ll feel why the mother backs away), ask the puppy to “Get back.”

Wait for a pause in behavior, even a split second of hesitation.

When the puppy pauses, say “Good,” open your hand, and offer the food.
Repeat this. After 4–5 rounds, the puppy will start to wait for permission, honoring your space.

🧠 This teaches thoughtfulness, inhibition, and respect for personal space, far more important than mechanical “sit” or “stay.”

4. Don't Use Food as Payment
Tony reinforces that mothers don’t use food to reward behavior, food is food, not a reward system.

Using food as a training bribe aligns with operant conditioning, not natural learning.
This disconnect can lead to dogs who behave only when paid, and who don’t develop self-awareness or internal regulation.

📘 Summary Philosophy:
"Feed from the hand, yes, but only after thought and consent are established. Teaching space and patience is more valuable than simply giving food."

🐺 Video Summary: “Hand Feeding, Space, and Natural Puppy Learning”This video features Tony Nila explaining a critical misunderstanding in popular hand-feedi...

🧠 The Evolution of Psychological Approaches: From Behaviorism to Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications for Dog Train...
01/30/2025

🧠 The Evolution of Psychological Approaches: From Behaviorism to Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications for Dog Training 🐕

The mid-20th century marked a significant shift in the field of psychology with the advent of the cognitive revolution, transforming our understanding of human thought processes and behaviors. This transition from behaviorism to a more cognitive approach has had profound implications across various disciplines, including the field of dog training.

The Rise and Limitations of Behaviorism:

Initially emerging in the early 1900s, behaviorism focused solely on observable behaviors and external stimuli, discarding the scientific exploration of the mind and internal mental states as unobservable and, therefore, not scientifically measurable. Prominent figures such as John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner championed this perspective, underscoring the primacy of external behavior over internal processes.

However, as the century progressed, behaviorism began to show cracks in its foundation. It struggled to adequately explain complex behaviors like language acquisition, problem-solving, and memory, all of which involve intricate internal cognitive processes not easily attributable to external stimuli alone.

Technological and Theoretical Advances Spark a Revolution:

By the mid-20th century, several developments contributed to behaviorism's decline and the rise of cognitive psychology. Technological innovations, particularly the 🖥️ computer, provided new metaphors and tools for modeling cognitive processes, shifting the focus toward the internal mechanisms of the mind.

Theoretical frameworks also evolved during this period. Noam Chomsky's critique of Skinner's behaviorist approach to language development highlighted the inadequacy of behaviorist principles in explaining the complexities of language, a fundamentally cognitive function. Similarly, psychologists like Jean Piaget and George Miller emphasized the importance of studying internal cognitive processes scientifically, further paving the way for cognitive psychology.

🧠 The Cognitive Revolution and Its Impact 👨‍🔬

Officially taking hold in the 1950s and 1960s, the cognitive revolution brought a renewed emphasis on the mind's internal processes, such as thinking, memory, and problem-solving, establishing cognitive psychology as a dominant field. This era also witnessed the rise of interdisciplinary studies involving psychology, linguistics, anthropology, philosophy, and neuroscience, contributing to a broader, more integrated understanding of the mind.

Implications for Dog Training:

Despite these advancements in psychology, the field of dog training remains one of the few professional areas still largely anchored in behaviorist principles. This reliance on behaviorism in dog training raises questions about its future, particularly concerning the potential for formal accreditation and the alignment with contemporary psychological science. The use of behaviorism in dog training stands in contrast to the cognitive approaches now prevalent in other fields, suggesting a disconnect between current scientific understanding and applied practices in dog training.

In conclusion, while the cognitive revolution has reshaped much of psychology, dog training as a profession still largely adheres to behaviorist methods. This alignment with an older psychological model highlights the unique position of dog training in the broader context of professional practices and raises significant questions about its scientific and academic credibility.

As psychology continues to advance, it remains to be seen whether dog training will adapt to incorporate more of the cognitive approaches that have revolutionized understanding in other areas.

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