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5 Things A Dog Would Do If He Were A Guy To Stop Blushing, Land The Job, And Get The Gir
Meeting new dogs successfully for the first time requires mutual respect and a positive outlook. No self respecting dog would walk into a meeting like a job interview, a loan application, or a date, expecting the worst. He would stay in the now and concentrate on what he hopes to achieve. Then project it with calm, reassuring body language. Head up, shoulders relaxed, tail attitude in the middle position. 2.Judge himself by the energy he attracts If being the new dog makes you feel the need to lunge, or run away and hide, perhaps you are trying to dominate the social situation from a place of weakness. Past rejections can lead to low expectations. Low expectations have a tendency to be fulfilled. Avoidance or attack are two ways a pack of dogs will tell him what signals he is sending. A dog that attracts attack or bores his companions, knows he is nervous and trying to hard. He will relax and focus on what the pack is doing. If he doesn’t like it, he will go off to follow his nose. 3.Accept his place in the pack Every dog has an equal position in the pack, an identity. Accepting this of himself and others, a dog accepts this as a comforting universal truth. This truth helps him accept himself and others on equal footing, and enables them to live in peace and feel good about themselves. And what each of them bring to the pack. Well adjusted dogs don’t care who is smarter, cuter, or have a pedigree. They are OK with who they are. (And they don’t very often blush.) 4.Receive opportunities to mate as they occur Doggie girls are nice to meet, as any doggie boy can tell you. But not all meetings result in sexual chemistry. A doggie boy won’t take this as rejection, and he won’t feel bad about being turned down. He’ll just keep his eyes open for a receptive female, who will respond to him with acceptance. He understands the beauty of mating for life with a doggie girl who really gets him. And when he does see that special girl, he remembers that to be liked, he must be comfortable with himself. And if he does blush a little, the right doggie girl will take it as a compliment. 5.Sniff around for new things to explore You’ve seen him. A broad grin, tail wagging, dog trotting along sniffing for new opportunities to explore. This is the secret of a canine self esteem. A dog takes the world as he finds it, enjoying what he likes and leaving the rest. He accepts himself, others, and opportunities for what they are, enjoying them with gusto. He accepts loss with real emotion, yet leaves sadness when it’s time. He refuses to be self conscious, because he knows life isn’t trying to make him the butt of all jokes. He does all this so he can keep dog trotting through life. Looking for the next big adventure. Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com Steph Bryans; I would like to provide you with tools to implement in your life to help you overcome the challenges you face in dealing with the problem of blushing. I have produced a report, which you can download for FREE and is a result of extensive research which I made in my quest to understand, deal with and overcome my own problem of facial blushing, which I now wish to pass on in the hope it will help fellow sufferers. For Free report visit: www.facialblushingsecretsfree.com |
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