Remember that your consistency with the method you select is the most important part of
ending jumping behavior.
Not exact matches
It's important to make a distinction between
behaviors (like sitting, staying,
jumping, or demand barking), which animals use to produce consequences; and displays of emotions (like wagging tails, twirling in delight when you come home at the
end of the day, growling or baring teeth), which are responses to various stimuli.
To teach any
behavior, including tricks, means not
jumping directly to the
end result but building understanding one step at a time.
I feel the best way to
end such
behavior would be to have an honest and open discussion in the press so that people understand the issues, and don't just
jump to conclusions.
His bulleted list begins with learning the basic movements — your crouches, walks, and
jumps — and
ends with «knowing which of your fast or long range moves can punish your opponent's unsafe
behavior.»