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Obedience

My Dog Listens at Home But Ignores Me Everywhere Else

July 6, 2026

My Dog Listens at Home But Ignores Me Everywhere Else

"He knows the commands. He just doesn't listen." Thirteen Las Vegas owners told us a version of this in the past month — about dogs from 8-week-old shepherd puppies to a 2.5-year-old Bernedoodle.

Here's the truth: your dog isn't blowing you off. Your dog was never actually taught the thing you think you taught.

Dogs don't generalize

"Sit" in your quiet kitchen and "sit" at a packed dog park are two different skills. Dogs learn commands bundled with the environment they learned them in — same room, same person, same treat pouch. Change the setting, add a squirrel, and you've changed the question entirely.

The reward math problem

Outside, you're competing with the most interesting show on earth. A treat can't outbid a rabbit at Red Rock. This is why our system is built on attention first — a dog that's genuinely tuned in to you doesn't have to choose between you and the environment, because you're not background noise anymore.

What real-world training looks like

This is the heart of our high-distraction obedience work: the same command, proofed under escalating real-life distraction — other dogs, people, noise — until it holds everywhere. It's the difference between a trick and obedience. And it matters most for recall: a "come" that works 80% of the time is a suggestion, and around open desert and busy streets, the missing 20% is where dogs get hurt. Off-leash reliability isn't a bonus feature of our training. It's the point — it's literally what "sit means sit" means.

Bring your selective listener to a free evaluation. We'll show you the difference between knowing a command and obeying it.

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