 Don't face, don't face, naturally and their nature is to grab and shake, okay? That is their nature. That is their passion. That is how they hunt in nature. When they grab animals, small animals, wolves, dogs, they grab them, especially smaller ones than them, than their size, rabbit, cat, you know, possum, anything like that. They grab and shake it, right, until they kill it. So it's the death shake, right? So the purpose of that is when they grab and they start shaking, the animal has no way of balancing itself out to be able to get out and run away or fight back, okay? If you've been in a suit before, like I have all day with all our protection dogs that we teach that, that really gets you off balance to the point with a powerful dog and they're shaking that you will go down, right? So the shaking, again with animal, it keeps them off balance, the animal doing this, he cannot get his senses and get any grip or mental balance, right? And then the dog will put after the shaking and put more pressure and dig in and crush, right? And see if he can crush it and end it. If not, the animals moving still, they crush and they shake, shake, shake, shake, right? This is nature. Dogs built this way. So in protection, my emphasis, after getting good, hard, solid, deep bites, I want shaking and passion as well. Whoa! That was crazy, okay? Because that's how you tear things, right? It is damaging. All right, he's got my arm now. Hi, look, oh, ow, he's got my arm. All right, let it go. Should I see if you can suck it? How was that? Through the sleeve? Wow! His teeth went through the sleeve, just so you know. So if you want a real protection dog, you want a dog that's going to fend for you, your life, your family's life, I'm going to show you here. This is a Shudson seminar, IPO, one of the top Shudson IPO trainers in the world, right? This is nothing against the trainer. He's fantastic. I respect him. But he's teaching people about the Shudson bite and the holding, okay? So you're going to see a pit bull being worked here because in Shudson IPO sport, you're not a dog's not supposed to come in and shake, right? He's not supposed to do real protection, real aggression. They want to be calm, steady, and go and get the bite and stay there and calm. That is anti-dog's nature. So I'm going to show you a clip here of the Shudson IPO seminar where they are trying to take away the natural aggressive instinct of this pit bull, okay? And the pit bull's got game, right? This is a great dog. For me, I would love this dog, right? So when you see him here, you're going to see the pit bull grab the sleeve and start shaking it all over. And you can tell in the beginning, it's hard to keep your balance when he's doing that, which is what we were talking about there in the beginning of when dogs go and grab their prey and shake it to keep it off balance so that they can have their way with that animal. It's all about getting the animal off balance mentally and physically, right? To have the advantage. Same thing in bite work. So when you see this pit bull here going and grabbing and shaking that sleeve, you can tell the guy is like this and if he wouldn't have a line on him and holding him, trying to pull him in steady on a line so he can control them, he'd be all over the place that would be very difficult to deal with that dog with that massive shaking he's got. So here you're going to see the trainer trying to control the pit bull and take away his natural aggressive instincts, right? So he's going to hold, he's got a leash with the prong collar, got an electric collar there too just in case he needs it, and the moment the pit bull starts shaking, he puts consequence on him and starts jerking the prong collar and jerking him to stop him from thrashing, okay? So trying to calm him down and get focused on the bite and stay still and relax into the bite, taking away all aggressive natural tendencies, okay? And that pit bull, Scott Gabe, right? I'd be one of those looking at him going, man, that's an awesome dog. He gets in there, he thrashes, that's the kind of dog I want in protection, okay? Because that dog's going to put it on you. And when the dog's doing that and you have no equipment, it's hard to fight them because they'll switch, they'll come off there, they'll switch, they'll go, if a dog is taught to hold there all the time, right? So what the sport is doing, I don't understand how this is not seen that something has to change somewhere in the sport. And sports, cross the board, that you are going against and teaching a dog to be more passive and not truly do bite work and true protection work. And this is how you see to with the aggression and all of that, what a dog is really made of, right? So in shots, you can't tell in the sport how good that dog is off the field because he's doing pre-work and not real protection work in aggressive state. He's not showing it on the field if he has it, you won't know unless you know him off the field. Because they all competing, have to go and hold on, they're just going to chase their toy, they're in pre-drive. So 99% of shots and dogs are pre-driven dogs. And if you want to win in shots and you better have pre-drive, it's all about these days, pre-drive, not defense drive. Defense drive is real dog, a defense drive is one who really wants to fight you and who's going to really put it on you. Not go hold on and hang on there and just stay steady and calm while he holds there, right? The dogs that I've taught, we get them on those suits, you see people throwing the suits off in pain, crying, right? Because we don't do here, we always end up here because one shot and one tiny little shot will make you cry, up here, right? Just like this. I'm back trying, back. Oh, I got you good? I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Oh, damn. Oh, he got you good. Oh, damn. Come on. Come on. Let's try to hold on there. Good. Oh, he got you. Because again, I've said this in many other videos of protection work and to people who come and train with me, to be trainers. This whole thing in calm grip puts the dog at disadvantage, okay? So if I have an object and he just holds there and he won't let go, but he's not shaking me, I can punch him in the eye, right? There was years ago, a police officer went into a bar with a big German shepherd. The guy in the bar refused and gave mouth off to the officer and engaged with the officer in conflict. The shepherd was sent, bites him in the arm. The guy beats the daylights out of the dog and the dog squeals and cries after about five, six shots in his eye. Let's go and takes off back to the officer and that was the end of his fight, right? So when you teach a dog to go and hold on here and stay steady and just stay there, no matter what, you are doing your protection dog a disservice, right? I've always said that and that's why I only do sleeve work in the preliminaries. When teaching a dog beginner bite work, it's just pre-stage. To me, a sleeve is just pre-stage. Here you see Mao Puppey Khaleesi, I think she's nine, ten weeks old here. You automatically write genetics, but a genetic dog that has fight game, right? So you hear that defensive as a puppy shaking, right? As a young puppy, natural, natural fight drive, aggression, what we're seeking when we pick dogs for personal protection work or police work, not necessarily sport work, right? Especially Shotson, right? So they want dogs that are going to play nicer, not go after the decoys for real. It's not for you. And here, just show you two of my Malawa puppies, had a little problem with each other and look at this aggression and how they tried to work it out naturally. Ready? Yep. Yes. I mean, that's crazy fight, right? That's nasty stuff. And it was grab and shake each other. That's the nature, natural instinct. Here you see a Rottweiler that we were working with. This is a leg bite. And this is the example that I'm saying, here you're going to see we were working with this Rottweiler and not in protection. This dog, we were trying to cure his aggression because he was out of his mind when to bite everybody, anything, dogs, everybody, right? And you're going to see him just grab the back of my other trainer right in the calf and naturally shake, right? Because he wanted to kill us, this guy. So he just grabbed the back of the pant leg and started shaking my guy. And I had the camera, you see me going, wow, I was trying to help him and stop him from falling because he did fall, right? You got shaking in the leg and there he went. He couldn't hold his balance and he went and hit face first on the floor. But I caught as he was standing with the camera as he was starting to fall because I moved the camera and I tried to help him to stop him from falling on the floor because I didn't want the dog to jump on top of him and maul him, right? Because this is a serious dog, right? But you see the natural shaking, natural and took him down by the back of his calf. This is what we're talking about. He immobilized Moshe, the trainer here and when Moshe went down, the rottweiler clamped on the back of that calf and dug in and shook and it was the most painful, excruciating that Moshe, the trainer, has ever been through in his life, right? Because with those kind of guys, were they that aggressive, that shake and digging deep and he pinned the calf against the floor and shook and dug in natural aggression, flares, right? That shaking, that is what we want and it took him right down. Advantage to dog when dog can flail and shake, right? And we had to have the owner grab and pry him off so that the dog didn't move from the calf up to the back of his head. Dangerous, dangerous territory and if Moshe wouldn't have the protection suit on, he would not have a calf today. No joke, not even kidding. The power that this rottweiler has, I mean you're talking serious, serious power and he was not playing so that flailing rips muscle tissue. So he would have dug in there and ripped that muscle right off, crazy, crazy stuff but just examples of that shake and the advantage the dog has and bringing out that true aggression and the passion, let them flow naturally and enhance it, give reward for it, okay? Because then you know if you ever need the dog, they know how to take care of business. That shaking is going to do that dog a good service because they go and shake somebody that breaks in the house like that, it is very difficult to get yourself together to try to fight the dog. I mean it is not easy when a dog is shaking you all over the place like that and not have a suit on, it's your flesh, right? So you're, oh, it is hurting and you're trying and the dog is, right? So that is real protection. Till next time, Miami Dog Whisperer.