The Paradox of Modern Dogs
There are many dogs who live in million-dollar condos, fancy houses, who are also pacing, pulling, barking, anxious, and stressed. Their nervous system is always ON.
On the outside, they look like they are living their best lives, but in reality they are trapped in an endless state of “not enough”. A state of chronic scarcity.
Scarcity is not poverty, but a felt deep sense of “not enough”, and a constant desperation for more.
It’s a problem that many dog parents have no idea it even exists.
I live in Vancouver, Canada, one of the richest cities in the world, and I see these dogs everywhere, even in the most expensive neighbourhoods.
So this might be your dog. I hope you are open to see which scarcity your dog might be struggling with
Let’s go…
Food Scarcity (Even in Full Bowls)
With the kibbles phenomena, junk treats, and dogs being fed twice a day the same dry food for years!!
Many dogs are nutritionally starving for real nutrition, for food variety, for wholesome food with different textures, colors and flavors.
Their bodies are begging for what it really needs, which they never get.
These poor dogs will gobble food like it’s their last meal – every single meal, steal your food, pick up anything and everything from the ground, resource guard any food they have as if their life depends on it – because it does. Their bodies are starving, so they are doing whatever it takes to fulfill that need.
And it doesn’t stop there, not only that they don’t get a decent variety of fresh clean natural food, but we even make the junk they get a scarcity. A limited measured amount at very particular times.
Junk treats are also a transaction used only for training, and they have to work hard to get. They are never an expression of love.
Those poor dogs are starving 24/7 for real food, and are doing their absolute best to fill the void.
Play Scarcity
Play is every dog birthright, not a luxury. Dogs need unstructured, spontaneous, fun joyful play daily.
No rules, no direction, just total freedom to be themselves
But here’s the sad truth, tug is discouraged, zoomies are punished, fetch is mechanical. every fun action is restricted, redirect and corrected because we think somehow that there is right and wrong way of playing!!! There isn’t.
Spontaneous, messy, silly moments where joy is the only goal – not performance – is what every dog needs because that alone rewires their nervous system for safety, confidence, as well as regulates their energy.
It’s the best workout routine but it can’t follow an agenda or a particular timeframe.
Let them play … their way … their rules … at their time.
Exposure & Adventure Scarcity
Dogs are explorers. Not routine oriented! Without novelty, life gets small – and so do they.
Dogs who walk the same 3 boring blocks, every day, rushed, sniff-blocked and time-crunched.
This is Not a dog walk. It’s just a potty time.
Lack of exposure leads to fear of the world.
Triggers become bigger when the world is smaller.
Sniffing is a primal need, not an “optional” part of a walk. because sniffing is building a giant database of scents, the more exposure, the bigger that database, and the more confident your dog becomes.
A confident dog is bigger and more powerful than any trigger. They are equipped to handle our messy complicated and overwhelming world…and all it takes is some exposure
New neighbourhoods, busier streets, more beaches, more parks, more car rides, the sky is the limit.
Social Scarcity
Dogs are social butterflies – yet many lives in total isolation. They are not given the chance to greet others on their walks, whether it’s another dog or a person.
And when you have guests over, they are usually passive aggressive, they ignore your dog all together, then we complain that our dogs are not friendly with other people!!!
Well. Are other people friendly with your dog?
If they are not, then how do you expect your dog to react differently?!
Dogs crave human attention – that’s not only you, that’s everyone; your friends, your family, your neighbours, even strangers passing by on the street
Your dog needs to greet and interact with as many people and dogs as possible.
They need to see people as friendly. They need to feel loved, seen, and acknowledged. Yet we starve them from all that.
Lack of socialization from an early age leads to loneliness, social anxiety, and even reactivity.
Many Dogs don’t experience mutual relationships, just constant corrections. It’s exhausting!
Remember that your dog is a social butterfly. That’s a need. And should be treated as such.
Dog Friends Scarcity
Socialization with other dogs usually ends in puppy classes or limited to dog parks. Both these 2 options are like constantly going on blind dates. They can’t build friendships with other dogs that way.
Many dogs are trained and even encouraged to ignore other dogs on walks literally. That’s a reactive dog in the making, period.
These poor dogs don’t know what it’s like to spend quality time with another dog. No opportunity to choose friends, or build any healthy lasting relationship with another dog.
Your dog needs to have doggy friends as much as you need to have family & friends.
Freedom Scarcity
Constant control, micromanagement, and restriction lead to nervous system depletion.
Micromanaged walks: heel, sit, look at me, leave it. It’s exhausting!
We literally train our dogs to ignore their instincts, bodies, and boundaries. They can’t.
Dogs are born FREE. They need to feel free to live, explore and to make their own decisions, when it’s safe to do so.
They are not our slaves.
Enrichment Scarcity
Not enough toys, puzzles, or chews unless there’s an occasion. or to distract them while you have people over.
No digging in the yard allowed, don’t roll in the grass, don’t go on the bed, don’t touch your food till I give you a permission to eat. Sit & wait for treats.
Not to mention the extreme overuse of crates or pens to “calm” dogs – when they actually need stimulation. It’s a jail within a jail.
More commands, more rules, more restrictions even in their own homes
Enrichment is not just entertainment, it’s a nervous system nourishment.
Your dog needs to enjoy being at home as much as you do.
Final Thoughts
Let’s look at your dog’s life with fresh eyes. Where might they feel “not enough”? And how can you begin to shift that?
Let’s make every moment count for them, every day is a new adventure, a social practice, a feast.
Let’s flip all those scarcities into abundance of everything, everywhere, at all times
When you do that, it will not only drastically improve your dog’s quality of life, but it will also upgrade yours big time.
If this opened your eyes to what your dog might be missing…
Scarcity is all about unmet needs, limited experiences, and a nervous system stuck in survival mode. In my 1:1 dog behavior breakthrough session, I help dog parents identify where scarcity is quietly shaping their dog’s behavior and how to create a more fulfilled, enriched life without overwhelm or rigid training rules.
I’m a holistic dog trainer based in Vancouver, working with dog parents in person and online to help dogs build confidence and live life to the fullest.
Related Posts:
- Why Your Dog Is Calm at Home but Reactive Outside
- Your Dog Pulls on the Leash Because They are Deprived – The Unmet Needs Dilemma
- The #1 Thing Missing From Dog Training? Your Dog’s Happiness
- Stop Demanding Your Dog’s Attention. Start Earning It. Here’s Why
- Are You Your Dog’s Safe Container?
- Your Dog Isn’t Broken. Your Lens Is




