Mission Control
Confidence Reset: Bar Is Open / Bar Is Closed
Classical First, Operant Second • Weeks 1–3 Field Work
Non-Negotiables
Eyes up early • Move before reaction
Marker “YES” within ½ second • Treat after
Sideways body • Clean U-turns • No guessing intent
Client Handout
Trainer Playbook (Master)
Print-Ready Cards
Client Handout • Universal
What to do for the next 3 weeks
The point of this page
Your dog doesn’t need a lecture. They need reps. We’re building calm confidence first — then we add structure.
Quick Reference
Eyes Up
Scan ahead for dogs/people. If you see it early, you can move early. That’s leadership.
Marker Rule
You have ½ second to say YES. Treat comes after. Late “YES” = wrong picture.
Stop • Drop • Pop
Turn sideways, lower your center, clean U-turn. Practice it even when “nothing is happening.”
No Guessing
“She just wants to play” might be true — or it might be overwhelm. We don’t assume. We test cleanly.
1) Read the Foundation (twice)
Bar Open / Bar Closed + Addendum
This is how we start a confidence program. Not with obedience. Not with guessing. We’re answering one question: Does the dog still think this situation is unsafe or overwhelming?
2) Dog Interaction Rule (keep it clean)
Introductions are not “vibes.” They’re variables.
OK Pairings
Male + female
or
Known neutral dog who is comfortable with female dogs
Not Yet
Unknown dog pairings
“Let’s see what happens”
Stacking strength + uncertainty
3) Walking Work (Weeks 1–3)
Pick long, straight streets. Different times of day. Different energy levels. This isn’t a stroll — this is pattern-breaking + brain reps.
Random Stops (no autopilot)
Mailbox → mailbox • wall → tree • 5 steps → stop • 10 steps → U-turn • 1 step → sit • U-turn → heel • 5 steps → heel • U-turn → heel
4) Handler Mechanics (practice even when calm)
If your mechanics are clean, your dog doesn’t have to guess.
Eyes Up
Scan ahead. See it early. U-turn early. Calm stays intact.
Stop • Drop • Pop
Turn sideways • get low • clean U-turn. Do it like it’s your job. Because it is.
5) Marker “YES” (½ second rule)
Marker is information. Treat is payment. You’ve got ½ second to say YES — then treat.
If the “YES” is late, you paid the wrong moment. We want clean pictures, not confusion.
6) Socialization Option (structured, not chaotic)
If a reputable daycare exists nearby, call and ask about evaluations. Their screening tells us what we need to know.
Notes / places to call:
________________________________
________________________________
Common Mistakes
  • Eyes down → you notice triggers too late
  • Waiting until the dog is already “up”
  • Facing the trigger head-on instead of turning sideways
  • Talking too much, moving too little
  • Late “YES” (you paid the wrong moment)
Troubleshooting
If you’re surprised by dogs/people: increase scanning distance + move earlier.

If U-turns feel messy: practice Stop/Drop/Pop in the driveway with zero triggers.

If your dog escalates: your threshold was too close. Create more distance, then restart reps.

If treats “don’t work”: your timing was late or the trigger is too close. Fix distance first.
Next Skill (Coming Soon)
Operant Layer: Sit • YES • Structured Reps
We add obedience after the dog starts disengaging on their own and recovery time shortens. Confidence first. Then structure.
Trainer Playbook (Master)
Classical First, Operant Second — the missing page nobody explains
This section is for you (or any trainer). It’s the blueprint behind the client handout.
Phase 1 — Pure Classical (Bar Open / Bar Closed)
No sit • no cues • no expectations
Trigger appears → bar OPEN (continuous high-value food).
Trigger leaves → bar CLOSED (food stops immediately).

One question only: Does the dog still think this thing is dangerous?
Phase 2 — Transition Window (Addendum)
Choice starts showing up
This is the moment structure earns its right to exist.
We’re waiting for
Dog disengages on its own
Looks back to handler
Breath softens
Intensity drops
Recovery time shortens
Handler job
Eyes up scanning
Move before reaction
Sideways body mechanics
Clean U-turns on demand
Keep reps boring + predictable
Phase 3 — Operant Layer (Exceptional Canines Style)
Only after Phase 2 signs appear
Now — and only now — add: SitYES marker • structured reps • break/release • controlled access.
Marker Timing Rule
You have ½ second to say YES — then treat. If “YES” is late, you just reinforced the wrong thing. Fix timing or increase distance.
Trainer Errors That Break The Program
  • Adding sit too early (operant before classical settles)
  • Feeding with no clear bar on/off timing
  • Waiting until the dog is already escalated
  • Handler facing triggers head-on instead of turning sideways
  • Late marker timing (“YES” after the moment)
Trainer Notes (Make this universal)
Swap the dog’s name for “your dog.” Keep it clean, neutral, repeatable.

Teach mechanics as a skill: scanning, sideways turns, U-turns, leash handling. Don’t assume the handler “gets it.” Build it like you’re training a new employee.
Add client-specific notes here later:
________________________________
________________________________
Exceptional Canines™ • Mission Control Handout • (Add more modules below without changing layout)

Print Options

 

Welcome

tips and tricks For Your Puppy

Submit A Valid Email And Get Our Weekly Newsletter Completely Free