Keep it tiny
Handling practice is about comfort, not restraint. Start with a body area your dog already accepts. Touch briefly, mark calm acceptance, reward, and pause.
Good signs
- The dog can take food normally.
- Body stays soft.
- The dog returns for another rep.
- Breathing stays steady.
- Avoidance does not increase.
When to stop
Stop if the dog freezes, flinches repeatedly, hardens, hides, growls, or tries to leave. Make the next session easier, and involve a veterinarian or qualified behavior professional when handling is a serious struggle.
Bokedex outputs are best treated as context for owner decisions. For health concerns,
safety concerns, panic, biting risk, or sudden behavior change, involve a veterinarian,
certified trainer, or qualified behavior professional.