This is a reference to actual dog's behaviour when you don't train it properly. It'll bite you and lick the scar soon after, and what that means is what she's trying to suggest there.
This is a reference to actual dog's behaviour when you don't train it properly. It'll bite you and lick the scar soon after, and what that means is what she's trying to suggest there.
To re-establish his dominance as pack leader, Admiral must flip Hatsuzuki onto her back and hold her by the throat while staring into her eyes until she breaks eye contact and stops struggling.
To re-establish his dominance as pack leader, Admiral must flip Hatsuzuki onto her back and hold her by the throat while staring into her eyes until she breaks eye contact and stops struggling.
Dogs usually don't shoot you though. Usually.
Holy fuck, didn't know this and I did it before.
Story time:
When I was 12 I was playing hide and seek with my neighbors. I went to his enormous backyard to hide myself when his enormous crossbreed dog went for me. He bit me by the hand and grabbed me (a little more of hate by the dog's part and he could ripped my arm off; he actually ripped a small part of my arm where he attacked me). In my panic, I grabbed him by his throat with my left hand and flipped him as you said. I kept him in the ground while he still had my arm in his mouth. I was screaming for help to my friend while keeping eye contact to him because I had the fear the dog could bit me again. I was watching at his mouth and eyes, when he just released my arm and the fight stopped.
Didn't know how, but I felt so safe in that moment that I just stood over him to avoid another attack, releasing softly his throat. The dog didn't looked at me all that time, until my friend came where I was and started to help me (he was more panicked that I was, lol). The dog's mouth was covered in blood as was my right arm. I will never forget that scene. Now that I read that, I'm thinking: would be a instinct the fact that I knew how to subject a dog?
To re-establish his dominance as pack leader, Admiral must flip Hatsuzuki onto her back and hold her by the throat while staring into her eyes until she breaks eye contact and stops struggling.
Dogs usually don't shoot you though. Usually.
And that's a nice Cesar Millan reference you made as a comment.
When I was 12 I was playing hide and seek with my neighbors. I went to his enormous backyard to hide myself when his enormous crossbreed dog went for me. He bit me by the hand and grabbed me (a little more of hate by the dog's part and he could ripped my arm off; he actually ripped a small part of my arm where he attacked me). In my panic, I grabbed him by his throat with my left hand and flipped him as you said. I kept him in the ground while he still had my arm in his mouth. I was screaming for help to my friend while keeping eye contact to him because I had the fear the dog could bit me again. I was watching at his mouth and eyes, when he just released my arm and the fight stopped.
Didn't know how, but I felt so safe in that moment that I just stood over him to avoid another attack, releasing softly his throat. The dog didn't looked at me all that time, until my friend came where I was and started to help me (he was more panicked that I was, lol). The dog's mouth was covered in blood as was my right arm. I will never forget that scene. Now that I read that, I'm thinking: would be a instinct the fact that I knew how to subject a dog?
Don't know. Maybe it is time for you to go to the pound, release all the strays and see if you can forge a pack out of the mongrels without knowing exactly how.