Separation Anxiety • Barking Control • Fear of Men • Confidence Building
Start in your Super Session Learning Center for the full lessons, then use this page as your weekly game plan.
This is priority number one. We need the food that makes Lucy care deeply about the work.
Lucy needs more leadership, more clarity, and more structure first.
That does not mean less love. It means love with cleaner guidance.
Lily, Riley, and Ava all need to be on the same page.
Post the rules on the refrigerator so the whole house remembers.
Lucy is not just barking. Down deep, this is a confidence issue and a nervous system issue.
The 5-Minute Rule may need to become 10 minutes with Lucy. Lower arousal first.
Confidence grows when her nervous system gets calm enough to process and learn.
Because Lucy is worried about men and tall men, less pressure and more structure matters.
This page gives direction. The Learning Center gives the full explanation.
Tonal, visual, and spatial communication.
Spot the habits that accidentally create more confusion.
Learn what YES means and why timing matters.
Lower emotional intensity around arrivals, departures, and transitions.
Lucy should sit before getting what she wants.
Short, thoughtful sessions beat one long marathon.
Use the recipes and instructions from the Learning Center.
Read through it carefully. Password: 22359
Review the air can and ultrasonic device instructions.
Review proper collar and leash guidance.
For dogs with confidence issues, separation issues, noise sensitivity, or nervous-system over-arousal, I often recommend adding CALM support alongside the training plan.
I usually suggest people start with CALM first, then use it consistently while we do the real work through training.
Read first. Then practice. Keep sessions short, clear, and repeatable.
Lucy needs time to think, process, and learn how to work through life with more clarity, less emotional dependence, and less reactive barking.
Read first. Practice second. Keep it short. Keep it clear. Keep it consistent.
Support for anxiety, stress, separation issues, loud noises, travel, and dogs that struggle to settle
Some dogs do not just need training. They also need support while their nervous system learns how to calm down. That is where CALM can be a very helpful addition to a treatment plan, a behavior reset program, or a confidence-building program.
I like CALM for dogs that struggle with separation stress, nervous behavior, overstimulation, noise sensitivity, routine changes, and dogs that simply have a hard time settling their system down.
I usually suggest people start with CALM first before worrying about stronger versions. The goal is to support the dog while we do the real work through structure, timing, communication, and training.
This is a strong support option for dogs going through treatment programs, behavior reset programs, confidence work, separation work, and dogs whose nervous systems are just running too hot.