Category Archives: General

Great Session – Lucia and Lily

A wonderful update from our trainer in Austin!

“Hi Laurie!

I had another great session with Lucia and Lily. We met at a Petco for this session to work on basic heeling and training with distractions. Lucia worked hard this week on progressing Lily’s heeling and she did so great today! I noticed wonderful progress! Petco was a great challenge for Lily; she made some great success with little animals around such as fish, turtles, birds and the main animal, CATS. At first, when she saw the cats, she went nuts! So we worked with her at a distance, desensitized her to the cats and she kept getting closer and closer, while Lucia was treating her for not whining or reacting when she looked at the cats. Throughout this time, Lily’s eye contact became stronger as Lucia reinforced her for not going after the cats! It was an amazing turn around!!!


We also worked on leave it with squeaky toys, which is a weakness for Lily. She LOVES squeaky toys! This was a much tougher task but no worries, I have full faith that Lily will overcome and be able to have self control as Lucia continues to work on “Leave it” with her!

This was another great session and made my day!”

SUPER JOB, LUCIA AND LILY!!! WE ARE SO PROUD OF YOU!!!! KEEP THAT CHIN UP! LOOK AT THAT EYE CONTACT. LILY LOVES YOU SO MUCH!

Update from Catherine

A wonderful update from Catherine, in VA, who is doing the basics with her pup, Baron, to prepare him to be a Service Dog someday with the guidance of SDE and trainer Shannon!

Hey Laurie!

I have GREAT news for you! Baron’s training is going so well and for being so young, he is so smart and talented. I truly believe he was born to be a service dog. His Sit is impeccable and he is doing Sit/Stay for longer and longer. He also is a master of Down, though we have not progressed to Down/Stay yet. He responds to his name and “here” every time, even when in distracting situations. We are working on heel, but he is improving more and more every day. Ignoring people is the hardest part for him since he just wants to be friends with everyone!! But he’s getting so much better each time we go out and about.

He came with me to CVS and the grocery store yesterday and did FANTASTICALLY. He stayed focused on me (and the wealth of treats in my hands haha) and walked beside me so nicely. Today, I took him to work with me and he stayed under my desk with a bone for 5 hours, quietly only whining when he needed to go outside at one point.

I am in shock, he is so great!!! At only 4 months old, he is doing so incredibly well!! We still have lots of work to do, but since he’s still a puppy, we keep the training sessions short and spend most of our time enjoying puppyhood!:

In the last photo, that was after the day at work lol he was exhausted on the car ride home!!

Have a great day!
Catherine”

WHAT A WONDERFUL JOB YOU TWO ARE DOING, CATHERINE! I DO BELIEVE, TOO, THAT BARON WILL GROW TO BE A WONDERFUL SERVICE DOG! KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK!!! BARON IS SOOOOOOOOOOOOO ADORABLE!!!!

Training Socialization

From our wonderful trainer, Candace, in Ft. Worth, who is holding pre-approved group training classes as well as individual instruction for her clients to help with socialization:

“The group session with the Bates, Singhania and Ward families was outstanding this past Sunday! We started out at the Heritage Botanical Garden to work on commands. We focused on loose-lead walking, along with a more formal “heel.” We also worked on “cover,” “under,” and “dropping the leash”. All of the SDiTs are improving greatly. After a long walk (nicely) around the main part of the garden, we headed off to a nationally known chain store to practice public manners. All SDiTs are still showing no startle reaction and were all successful at a particularly difficult “leave it” challenge! The day ended with everyone standing in line (as it usually happens) and the entire group did wonderful. Boomer is booming less, Simba is coming out of his shell, and Buddy is learning to read his handler better. I have high hopes for these families and their SDITs!”

WONDERFUL WORK TO ALL FAMILIES AND THEIR SDITS!service dog socialization

Lucia and Lily at Home Depot

YAY for our trainer in Austin! She’s been working hard! Here is her latest update on dear, wonderful Lucia, who suffers from PTSD, and her SDIT, Lily!

“Hi Laurie!

I had a GREAT session with Lucia and Lily at Home Depot tonight! We wanted to work on Lily heeling with distractions around and Lily did AWESOME job! I also had Lucia work on her loose-leash walking and no leash – just walking by her side! Lily did so great, a few times she would forge ahead but Lucia would call her back into a close and continue heeling! Even without the leash!!! She has great recalls now! I am so proud of them!!!

We also worked on sit/stays and down/stays as well and Lily can hold them for about eight feet and then breaks them but it’s great progress!!!


They are getting real close to taking the PAT! This was ONE of the BEST sessions we have had so far!

YAY FOR LUCIA AND LILY!!! I SIMPLY LOVE THESE TWO! LUCIA IS ONE OF THE SWEETEST PEOPLE I’VE EVER KNOWN, AND HER WORK WITH LILY IS SO CONSISTENT IT ALMOST BRINGS ME TO TEARS!! AGAIN, WONDERFUL TRAINING FROM OUR AUSTIN TRAINER!!!

“You are so lucky!”

From the husband of a handler with a Guide Dog. I found this moving. Can apply to all people with Service Dogs.

“You are so lucky!”
We hear it frequently. And it always makes me cringe.
Many times when I am out and about with my wife and her guide dog, people comment about how ‘lucky’ she is. I like to think it is because she is married to me, but after a few years of hearing it, I now know better.


It is because of her guide dog.

The comments are, for the most part, innocently made because of the general public’s misunderstanding of just exactly how being blind can impact a person’s day-to-day living. They do not see the barriers, both physical and mental, which must be overcome in order to do the same things that so-called “normal” people do every day and seemingly take for granted. Things like getting safely from one place to the next, not bumping into other people and things when walking, noticing hazards that can trip someone easily and possibly cause an injury, and even simply walking across the street without being hit by an inattentive driver. These are some of the reasons she has her guide dog with her, not because she is ‘lucky’. And yet we hear it all the time: “You are so lucky that you can have your dog come with you. I wish I could take my dog with me everywhere I go.” They never see the real reason behind having the guide dog; all they see is the dog.

And it is not just guide dog users that hear the ‘lucky’ platitude. The general public sees a person with any kind of disability who uses any kind of service dog and automatically uses THEIR OWN interpretation of THEIR OWN life to come to the conclusion that somehow being able to have the service dog “along for the ride” makes the person with the disability ‘lucky’, because, after all, “you get to take your special friend along everywhere you go”.

The sentiment is genuine, but the understanding is lacking.

So, was my wife ‘lucky’ that she was shaken as an infant, causing her retinas to detach? Was she ‘lucky’ to have the scars on the inside of her brain caused by the shaking to swell, press on her brain stem, and initiate her seizures? Is she also ‘lucky’ that the visual cortex in her brain was so damaged by the shaking that there is no type of medical treatment or procedure which will ever allow her to see ‘normally’?

She will never do the simple things that others with ‘normal’ vision do. She adapts by using special programs on her computer to ‘read’ the text on the screen. She adapts by using a portable GPS device because she can’t read the street signs. She adapts by using an Audio Description service when we go to the movies or a live performance play. She adapts by using specially marked knobs on the stove, washer, dryer, dishwasher, and with marked shelves in the pantry and kitchen. She adapts by walking or taking the bus or train because she cannot drive. She adapts when shopping by using a UPC scanner to read what the items are. And yes, she adapts in her travels by using a guide dog because she can’t see you and your shopping cart, automobile, stroller, or anything else. Is that what makes her ‘lucky’?

I can honestly tell you that my wife would turn her guide dog into a pet dog in a New York minute if doing so meant that she could see like every ‘normal’ person and not have to constantly be gawked at, questioned, bullied, and made to feel inferior simply because of the type of mitigating device she uses to try and compensate for her blindness. Would she still be ‘lucky’ then?

The whole ‘lucky’ bit comes from those who are dog lovers and would like to be able to take their pet dog places with them. That’s all they see when they see a service dog working for a person with a disability: being able to take a dog places. Their thought patterns are all about them and their own desires; not about what is going on in the real world of those with disabilities. It is kind of like saying this to a person in a wheelchair: “You are so lucky that you get to sit down all the time.”

Using a service dog is a lot of work. It’s expensive. It’s time consuming. The logistics are mind numbing. One has to prepare many things in advance just to take a ‘quick’ trip to the store. The dog has to be brushed, relieved, have all the gear in place, special leashes, and many other things which differ depending on what the dog needs to do. And when it comes to trips that are overnight or longer, there is a lot more which needs to be considered such as food, bowls, clean up supplies, crates or sleeping mats, vaccination records, and other things. But for many service dog handlers, a wheelchair or white cane simply cannot do what needs to be done efficiently or quickly, and many times cannot give the personal confidence and reassurance that handling a properly trained service dog can bring.

When one truly has an understanding of what the day-to-day life of a person with a disability who uses a service dog is, one is in a better position to see that it isn’t ‘luck’; it’s adaptability. It’s overcoming. It’s finding a way to get things done in spite of the challenges one faces. In the simplest term: It’s doing what works best to be as independent as possible. There is no ‘luck’ involved.