Enrichment for the Real World

Pet Harmony Animal Behavior and Training

You've dedicated your life to helping animals- just like us.  Emily Strong was training praying mantids at 7.  Allie Bender was telling her neighbor to refill their bird feeder because the birds were hungry at 2.  You're an animal person; you get it.  We've always been animal people. We've been wanting to better animals' lives since forever, so we made a podcast for people like us.  Join Emily and Allie, the authors of Canine Enrichment for the Real World, for everything animal care- from meeting animals' needs to assessing goals to filling our own cups as caregivers and guardians. 

  1. #165 - Juliana DeWillems: Set Your Dog Up to Succeed (Without Guilt)

    15 HR AGO

    #165 - Juliana DeWillems: Set Your Dog Up to Succeed (Without Guilt)

    Management is one of the most underused and misunderstood tools in dog training. KPA CTP and author Juliana DeWillems (she/her) joins Emily to reframe management (aka antecedent arrangement) not as a shortcut or bandaid, but as behavior science done proactively. They explore why good management increases a dog's options rather than restricting them, how it ties directly into enrichment, and why guilt around "not training" gets in the way of genuinely good outcomes. And for the professionals in the audience, they also get honest about building a sustainable dog training career, and it may look different than you think.  TLDL (too long, didn’t listen): 3 Key Takeaways  1️⃣ Management Isn't Cheating — It's antecedent arrangement, and when done thoughtfully, it improves welfare and the human-canine bond. 2️⃣ Management IS Enrichment — Arranging the environment to open up reinforcers and reduce conflict belongs in every enrichment plan. 3️⃣ There's No Single Right Career Path — Build toward your actual reinforcers. The "traditional" trajectory isn't necessary or always more lucrative. For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    1hr 18min
  2. #164 - When Management Turns into Micromanagement

    27 APR

    #164 - When Management Turns into Micromanagement

    Is your dog’s management plan starting to feel more like a full-time job than a support system? In this episode, Emily and Tiffany break down the critical differences between strategic management and exhausting micromanagement. Whether you’re a pet parent feeling trapped in a plan that requires constant perfection, or a behavior professional wondering if your recommendations are actually building capacity, this episode is full of frameworks and real-world examples to help you think more clearly about what supportive management actually looks like. TLDL (too long, didn’t listen): 3 Key Takeaways  1️⃣  Management vs. Micromanagement — Management is thoughtful antecedent arrangement that reduces risk and supports learning, while giving pets and people more options. Micromanagement is restriction-focused control that replaces skill-building, exhausts everyone involved, and keeps both humans and animals in survival mode. 2️⃣  Sustainable Plans Are Built, Not Defaulted Into — If a plan requires constant vigilance and zero mistakes, it’s not sustainable. Plus, it’s probably not actually management. Great plans include built-in breaks, “good enough” day protocols, and layered fail-safes that don’t rely on perfection to stay intact. 3️⃣  Freedom Is Designed, Not Earned — When freedom feels impossible, it’s usually a signal that the plan hasn’t been designed to accommodate it rather than evidence that the animal is too far gone. This reframe opens the door to building plans that increase choice, control, and autonomy rather than restricting them. For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    52 min
  3. #163 - Fears from Pets Past

    20 APR

    #163 - Fears from Pets Past

    Have you ever found yourself bracing for a repeat of everything that went wrong with a previous pet? In this episode, Emily and Veronica get real about how our experiences with past pets shape how we show up for the animals in our lives right now. From shame spirals to hypervigilance to carrying baggage from past cases, they break down why this happens, why it matters, and what you can actually do about it to meet the pet in front of you. TLDL (too long, didn’t listen): 3 Key Takeaways  1️⃣ Your feelings are valid, but your premise might be flawed - Acknowledge your emotional responses without letting them make all your decisions. 2️⃣ Preparedness vs. hypervigilance - Past experiences can make you a better caregiver when you extract the lessons and leave the hair-trigger fear response behind. 3️⃣ You don't have to erase your past to show up in the present - Curiosity, community, and compassionate objectivity are your best tools. For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    52 min
  4. #162 - Choice, Control, Agency, and Predictability

    13 APR

    #162 - Choice, Control, Agency, and Predictability

    You've heard the buzzwords: agency, choice, control, predictability. But if you've ever tried to implement all of them at once and you know it can feel like trying to juggle 100 balls. Emily and Allie break down why agency isn't a pass/fail ethical litmus test, but rather a set of individual dials you can turn up or down depending on your learner, your context, and your real-life constraints. Whether you're working with a rescue dog who's never seen an open door as an option, a senior pup navigating the stairs, or yourself trying to make it through a brutal work sprint, this conversation reframes how to think about autonomy, empowerment, and what it actually means to give someone more agency in the real world. TLDL (too long, didn’t listen): 3 Key Takeaways  1️⃣ Agency Has More Dials Than You Think — Skill and bandwidth are missing from most conversations about agency, and leaving them out sets up both trainers and learners to struggle. 2️⃣ Dials, Not Checklists — You don't need to have all the dials turned up at once. Knowing which specific dial to adjust makes you more effective, more sustainable, and less overwhelmed. 3️⃣ Predictability Is Often the Most Accessible Place to Start — When choice and control aren't possible, a simple predictability cue can meaningfully restore a sense of agency for your learner. For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    1hr 10min
  5. #159 - When Your Training Isn’t Showing Results in Real Life

    23 MAR

    #159 - When Your Training Isn’t Showing Results in Real Life

    You nail a training session. Your dog is locked in, responding beautifully, and you feel that rare rush of “we’ve got this.” Then real life shows up and your dog looks at you like you’ve never met. Sound familiar? Here’s the thing: that moment is not a failure. It’s not evidence that you’re doing it wrong or that your dog is broken. It’s just really good information. In this episode, Allie and Emily unpack why training that looks solid in sessions doesn’t always transfer to real-world contexts. That gap is completely normal, even expected, and still incredibly frustrating. They talk about “Antecedent Pictures,” explain why dogs learn in sensory maps rather than abstract rules, and walk through what it actually looks like to troubleshoot when things fall apart in context. For behavior professionals navigating imposter syndrome when a client says “it didn’t work,” this episode offers both the framework and the permission to shift out of self-blame and into curious, compassionate problem-solving. TLDL (too long, didn’t listen): 3 Key Takeaways  1️⃣  Dogs learn in sensory maps, not abstract rules — The Antecedent Picture explains why behavior that’s solid in one context can fall apart in another 2️⃣  Generalization must be taught, not assumed — Transfer across contexts is a learnable skill, and practicing it in more places makes it easier, not harder 3️⃣  “It didn’t work” is data, not a verdict — For pet parents and pros alike, real-world feedback is an invitation to troubleshoot, not evidence of failure For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    39 min
  6. #158 - Why Dogs Need Skills, Not Just Feelings

    17 MAR

    #158 - Why Dogs Need Skills, Not Just Feelings

    There’s a quiet assumption that runs through a lot of behavior work: if we can just change how an animal feels about something, the problem will resolve. Counterconditioning is a powerful tool, and Emily and Allie aren’t here to take it away from you. But in this episode, we’re talking about limitations. What happens when the feelings improve, and the behavior doesn’t? What happens when the emotions shift back? What happens when the world throws something at your learner that you never had a chance to train for? This episode is about completeness. It’s about understanding that emotional safety tools and behavioral skills are partners. And it’s about building learners (and training plans) that are actually robust enough to survive real life: crows dropping chicken bones in the park, paramedics banging down the door at 2am, and all the other things no one puts in a training protocol. TLDL (too long, didn’t listen):  1️⃣  Feelings and skills are not the same thing — Changing emotional associations is necessary but not sufficient. Learners also need to know what to do. 2️⃣  Resilience is built on skill — Trading, disengaging, tolerating delayed reinforcement, predictable response patterns: these are the skills that let learners navigate an unscripted world. 3️⃣  When a plan isn’t working, that’s information, not indictment — Regression and spontaneous recovery aren’t failures of the dog, the handler, or the technique. They’re signals to expand the toolbox. For the full episode show notes, including the resources mentioned in this episode, go here. More from Pet Harmony Pet Parents: enrichment ideas and practical behavior tips 📸 Instagram & Facebook: @petharmonytraining Pet Pros: relatable moments and support for your work with pets and their people 📸 Instagram & TikTok: @petharmonypro 📬 Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://petharmonytraining.com/join/ Subscribe & Review If this episode resonated with you, please take a moment to subscribe and review. It helps more pet parents and pros find us—and makes our tails wag every time. Thanks for being here! 💛

    43 min

About

You've dedicated your life to helping animals- just like us.  Emily Strong was training praying mantids at 7.  Allie Bender was telling her neighbor to refill their bird feeder because the birds were hungry at 2.  You're an animal person; you get it.  We've always been animal people. We've been wanting to better animals' lives since forever, so we made a podcast for people like us.  Join Emily and Allie, the authors of Canine Enrichment for the Real World, for everything animal care- from meeting animals' needs to assessing goals to filling our own cups as caregivers and guardians. 

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