My Story

My way of training dogs is deeply connected to the way I perceive the world.

I have always been sensitive to input. I notice a lot. Sometimes too much and very intensely. For me, the challenge has never been lack of information — it has been learning how to sort all that input into something useful. What is noise? What is signal? What actually matters?

This has made me a great developer of pattern-based systems. Originally built for myself to regulate my own nervous system.

This is also the place where my compassion for dogs has grown.

For the stressed, the anxious, and the over-aroused dogs. The dogs who are excited, intense, sensitive, fast, or misunderstood. I relate to that. I see dogs who are taking in a lot of information without enough stable direction to efficiently convert that into meaningful action.

My training is built on that understanding. I am trying to make the world clearer for them by building systems to contain input and create focus for action.

That is why details matter so much in my training.

They help create predictable patterns. To me, those details are not perfectionism. They are regulatory tools to lower cognitive load. They create a training world where the dog can sort signal from noise and make confident choices.

Lowering cognitive load is the end goal,

Its also why im being restrictive in my training, i aim for first try succes in environments building understanding befor adding noise, so that focus can lock on the task before external noise.

add something about agility and the navigation system

This course is not a collection of exercises to copy. It is intended to help you learn to observe, understand, and train with purpose. I want to share how I see dogs process information, how patterns form, how we can refine them, how small details shape confidence, and how training can become a language both dog and handler can trust.

Many dogs do not need to be pushed harder, they need the world to make more sense.