Just to jump on the memory talk - the Revisionist History podcast has a fascinating episode on memory "Free Brian Williams". I knew that memory was fallible, but I had no idea just how fallible.
I listened to this, too - it was very interesting!
Great discussion on dog (and human) memory. I really do wonder how much they remember, especially for rescue dogs. For Brogan, he always remembered people on our travels much better than I did. For a few years in a row, we spent a month or so in Venice during the winter. He remembered people that we'd seen from previous years, plus he remembered the way to each different apartment we'd lived in. Considering that Venice is a real maze, I found this very impressive.
As someone who has had contact with the dog rescue world. what I find particularly interesting is how dogs' behaviour is affected by what their new humans idea of their past is. Meaning that if a new adopter thinks the dog has had a difficult life, they can ascribe a whole bunch of behaviours to that dog due to what they imagine the dog's past trauma could have been.
I was just talking to a couple friends here in Germany last weekend about some challenges I'm still working on with Carbon, especially his hoovering up of anything edible off the street. "Oh, you can't ever change that in an ex-street dog, it's just what they do." But that's not true at all, because Carbon has made real progress.
It was a real insight into my friends, though, and why they don't try to train their dogs at all... because they had a hard life before their adoptions and you just can't train a dog if the behaviour is rooted in the dog's bad memories of the past. Sure, some dogs may be fearful (or whatever the issue is) due to nature or past experiences, but it's a rare case that you can't work on improvement and help the dog live a fuller life.
Anyway, one of my pet peeves, as it really does a disservice to the potential of a rescue dog.
And as Carbon says, "I can learn nearly anything, as long as there is a cookie involved."
