Want personalised guidance? Book your FREE CALL now, and let our expert trainers create a plan tailored to you and your dog: ycaonline.co.uk/training-with-instinct? Transform Your Dog’s Life - Get your FREE YCA Dog Reactivity Guide now: mailchi.mp/yorkshirecanineacademy/ytreactivityguide
OH,PLEASE! Stop with the fake constant camera tricks BS. It's very annoying. I'm just going to unsub if it continues. YOU DO NOT NEED THAT BS frantic camera nonsense. It makes anything you say part of NONSENSE presentation.
@@thankmelater1254mate, just unsubscribe. I’ve grown 10k subs in a month since applying this new style, obviously somethings going right. Calm down ya odd ball
@@jacobmorgan3120 Of course it's to grow your interest. You aren't inputting thousands of manipulations for no reason. The stutters for example, every other second...what is the reason for them? It's to affect the brain of the viewer. Your ethics are in the toilet.
@@jacobmorgan3120 "I’ve grown 10k subs in a month since applying this new style, obviously somethings going right" Can you explain the brain responses that the techniques are to stimulate or damp? These techniques are not done for no reason and there is a scientific explanation. Do you know the effects on the brain of the viewer?
What I really liked about this video was reasonableness. I'm able to say 'yeah that's how real life works' with these situations. From what I've heard from people, neutering indeed can both worsen or help aggression, for example. And yes, I agree it's important to try understand the psychological process the dog is going through, it's a creature seeking truths in this world as much as you are. That's what is truly remarkable about us. Often the original problem about us is not paying attention, or being fixated to only some truths.
I absolutely love how you present such a holistic approach to dog training. You've quickly become one of my favorite UA-cam channels! Keep up the amazing work. Cheers from Mexico!
Spot on! My first dog trainer was just positive reinforcement, which turned my malinois Betty into a monster. 9 days with you turned her into a pet and training me gave me the tools to carry on the good work. A year on Betty is now amazing, thankyou so much🐶😀
I agree with a lot of this. However, I’m probably much more against the regular use of treats and clickers than you are. I wholeheartedly believe that learning how to correct your dog (like a dog) is key. If we look at how dogs communicate with each other and correct each other, it’s rarely pretty, and there sure is never any treats involved. In essence, treats and rewards should never be used in conjunction with bad behaviors. Bad behaviors should only be corrected, and you can’t be afraid of physically correcting your dog. This doesn’t mean hurting your dog, by the way, for any fools out there. It usually means a physical bump, moving in front of your dog, or grabbing their neck scruff. None of this hurts your dog. Not even remotely. This should also be combined with a specific verbal correction that you’ve decided on. Lower your tone, be firm and confident, and deliver it with an abruptiveness. If you learn how to growl as well, then you get a gold star. Using treats and other reward tools are ok, ONLY if you’re teaching them something new, like a trick. Not during or after correcting a behavior. This only leads to confusion. Moreover, the best reward for your dog will always be you and your love. Exude happiness, goluckyness, increase the pitch of your voice, play with them briefly. Etc, etc. Ultimately, learn to be like a dog, and be a clear leader to your dog. This means correcting your dog (like a dog), and being your dog’s best friend and favorite person in the world when they’re behaving. Also, never correct with emotion. That is not going to help anything. Correct with confidence and firmness. Be aware of your inner emotional state and work on that. Good luck.
I think the saying 'Your dog trains you' is true. You can teach many dogs the same thing, but each learn differently and you have to learn the way that works best for them. If you learn while they learn, you are going to be a pretty solid team. I still do commands with my dog, but no treats are used anymore. She has learned and we are just honing those skills. Repetition is key. Your pitch, hand signals, body language should all trump the treat rewards.
“Impulse control and arousal management”🎉🎉 The very first thing I teach my dogs is impulse control… Without that any progress is slowed… It’s just so simple and so overlooked! I love this video! Thank you!
Loving your channel mate, lots of good advice for people struggling with high energy, high drive dogs (like me). You explain things very clearly and logically.
Massive sub matey! The last bit about training a dog to do nothing is what I've been trying to explain to the wife for the last 6 months with our 11 month old Parson Russell. She keeps saying he needs more exercise and he gets an hour a day, everyday come rain or shine. I come from a dog family though and this is her first so I can't complain. She's better with him than me.🤣
Some great points, especially re the neutering and exercise. We had a Standard Poodle who was trained to Olympic athlete level. Three hours running around the ski slopes in summer, a little nap, and he's ready for tug and fetch. We could have loaned him out to people as a weight-loss aid 😂
Brilliant video and I was in the same boat as you four years ago when I first started out my company. You can never underestimate the power of marking, which you demonstrated in the R+ subtle as it was to the untrained eye. The other thing that I quickly learnt was if you cannot communicate with people you will never succeed in dog training. You have to be able to improvise in a split second to each individual scenario. Great videos as always
Training a dog is like raising a child. Love them rewarded them but they should know the rules and that they can’t do whatever they want whenever they want. Great video man
From the beginning you should teach a marker word for correct behavior (i did "yes") and getting a food reward, and keep increasing the time from marker word to reward. So you can still let your dog know it's doing something correctly, even if you have no food.
Great vid, very... balanced!! Love the importance to learn your dog the art of boredom, it's indeed essential they get used to do absolutely nothing (not all day long, of course)
You mentioned lead pressure and while I somewhat understand the concept, when I search for training methods to this I get nothing. Can you do a video where you go through the structure of training leash pressure? It might seem obvious to some, but even for me that understands the idea/concept of the result, have a hard time incorporating the process in my training and walks.
I'm a dog trainer from the Netherlands. Pressure & Release This technique teaches your dog that leash pressure/tension will always release when the dog follows the direction. (- Give a verbal cue) - Apply appropriate tension to the leash , preferably steering the neck of the dog where you want it to go. - As soon as your dog moves to the desired direction or position, release the pressure. This teaches your dog that moving in the direction of the leash pressure, brings comfort, and a release of tension.
@@canine_coach It might seem like a small thing, but I didn't realise that the verbal cue was part of it, because on the videoes I have seen, they just show how the leash pressure works. Thank you!
I have never used food to reinforce a good behaviour ..I have had rescue dogs all my life I’m now 60+…dogs respond to loving gestures of I love you and hugs …your so brave !,,,what a clever dog you are!….etc..and as for garden behaviour ..the more you try to get them in the more they will ignore you.unless you join them in the garden and tell them it’s time to go in..no nonsense..if they persist..I put dog on the lead and lead indoors with no praise…it’s going with your intuition..poop!! to a lot of dog trainers.matrix trained.. ..
I have a genuine question about anchoring as you called it. Is letting dog out to the balcony a good way to teach her do nothing ? For now whenever i let her out, she just lay down and watch pepople passing by. And she can lay there sometimes for 15 min and somtimes for a straight hour or two basically chilling. Is it a good thing for her or i should rather put her on leash and just wait for her to chill out near my desk or iin the kitchen ?
From the beginning you should teach a marker word for correct behavior (i did "yes") and getting a food reward, and keep increasing the time from marker word to reward. So you can still let your dog know it's doing something correctly, even if you have zero treats.
You are absolutely right, but I think the presenter is trying to teach the very first fundament - as before you become efficient with how you use rewards you must understand how they stimulate the dog.
Food is not the right reward for every dog and every training situation. Some dogs become too energetic in the presence of food and it actually slows learning. Each dog is different and i use food, play, different types of touch or voice, depending on the excitablity and attention span of the individual dog and even the individual day.
I wish instead of removing dogs reproduction though spaying and neutering, would involve vasectomies with males, and OSS with females. I think testosterone and estrogen are extremely important to the overall everyday health of the dog. I know there can be a few complications with OSS but with enough skilled Veterinarians, both procedures could be common practice, probably wishful thinking on my part 😎😎😎
You talk about neutering and give great advice for male dogs but what about female dogs? I have a un-nutrered chihuahua who is reactive to my new bulldog puppy. I’m wanting to get both neutered. I was hopefully it would help with the Chihuahua reactions. Do you have any advice for the pros and cons of neutering females?
The whole neutering thing is what ALL vets should be telling people. I've been told in the past that taking their nads off can make fear/aggression/nervousness a lot worse and they will refuse to operate until that dog has been to a trainer. It can also go the other way. I have a coworker who neutered his dog that had a "perfect" temperament and after a few weeks, he became highly aggressive towards other dogs and fearful of his owner. Because of the aggression, that guys wife refuses to go into the kennel where they keep 3 of their 5 dogs just in case that 1 dog attacks her.
@lindsay9678-l8l I think be was either 2 or 3 at the time which is a bad age for getting them done. I've heard that you have better luck neutering boys as puppies. I won't even get my 15 month old Labrador neutered because he became a nervous wreck overnight shortly after he turned 6 months old. The vet said "yeah, that can happen", so now I'm stuck with a dog that is constantly on edge whenever I walk him 🤦🏼♂️. I'm hoping that it's just a fear period and not something that'll be lifelong because he used to be really confident.
@@_--____--______--___ For small dogs getting them done younger is OK but for larger dogs it's best to wait until they're about 2 anyway because development is slower. When it comes to vets advice on neutering I'd take it with a pinch of salt tbh. My boy had complications which is common for his breed but I wasn't told that until after it happened, prior to that I was told complications were rare and it's unlikely he'll be affected because he's strong and healthy. Temperament wise he hasn't changed, we already worked on his behaviour tho. Do your research specifically for labs and weight up pros/ cons for neutering, I was naive and took the vets words at face value. My others boys were never neutered and I had no problems with them.
I love you content, but i live in the US and im getting a borboel, i think ill need to do a in person training. Do you have any recommendations for US trainers??
In one of your videos you mentioned that if you could go back in time you would only use kibble as a training reward, and to your point I get different types of treats every once in a while, and my dog always seems to get over them after a while. My dog (5 mo old Retriever) has a resource guarding issue, even with high reward treats (sausage, meat, etc) it takes some time to get him away from what he is hoarding (most of the time socks and napkins). What is your overall advice with dealing with resource hoarding? And can I help him get over it with only kibble?
I have no problem with agression but with too much excitement. same procedure? really need help. dog is a two years old lagotto + besides that well trained. searching dog. anyone any ideas?
Heads-up 😂 i don't know if you have seen the channel k9Tay has done a video on you! I stopped listening after 30 seconds and the mention of Zak George 😂
Also, define nothing. I routinely reward with (attention and praise) my dogs for being in a settled state of mind or for being on “place”. That looks a lot like “rewarding for nothing” to people who don’t train dogs for a living. In fact i want more of the exact behaviour I’m rewarding. I have very calm, non anxious dogs because i am rewarding the subtle behaviour of calm. Most anxious, reactive and aggressive dogs are inadvertently getting reinforcement for being in those negative states. Example: A whining dog gets a calming “you’re okay” and a cuddle from the owner. That is literally rewarding the behaviour you don’t want! Happens constantly!!
Why is it different, if you have a reactive dog then you should be going back to basics and if the dog doesn’t have a marker such as the clicker then that’s where you start. You’ve got to take things right back to the basics and slowly build the exposure
Who hates the constant flicking from scene to scene and within a scene for absolutely no reason, for example, just to make stutters in the view, many times per minute of viewing? It's not as smart as the dummy in charge thinks it is. It's repulsive once it sinks in.
@@janejackson4509 It's not good for mental health at all, especially if you do not know what is going on. do you believe that all the work of cutting and cutting and re-sizing is done for no reason or for fun? It is not. I do not just scroll by things that are wrong to do to people.
I wonder why the dog community is so strict on positive reinforcement only. It seems to be they think corrections are animal cruelty and as a large dog owner ive never felt my corrections caused pain, they just snapped my dog out of it. Yet when i say this i am treated like an imbecile. I would love to know where this brainwashing began.
@@Aidllorca I don't take kindly to abuse of viewers by putting out that kind of assault on the brain. Neither would I gladly put up with subliminal message flashing or any other such trash measures. But to each/own. You could enjoy it, for all I know. I dislike it very much. I finally felt what they are doing, heavily done on this video. It made me aware of the ethics of these people,
Want personalised guidance? Book your FREE CALL now, and let our expert trainers create a plan tailored to you and your dog: ycaonline.co.uk/training-with-instinct?
Transform Your Dog’s Life - Get your FREE YCA Dog Reactivity Guide now:
mailchi.mp/yorkshirecanineacademy/ytreactivityguide
OH,PLEASE! Stop with the fake constant camera tricks BS. It's very annoying. I'm just going to unsub if it continues. YOU DO NOT NEED THAT BS frantic camera nonsense. It makes anything you say part of NONSENSE presentation.
@@thankmelater1254mate, just unsubscribe. I’ve grown 10k subs in a month since applying this new style, obviously somethings going right. Calm down ya odd ball
@@jacobmorgan3120 Of course it's to grow your interest. You aren't inputting thousands of manipulations for no reason. The stutters for example, every other second...what is the reason for them? It's to affect the brain of the viewer.
Your ethics are in the toilet.
@@jacobmorgan3120 "I’ve grown 10k subs in a month since applying this new style, obviously somethings going right" Can you explain the brain responses that the techniques are to stimulate or damp? These techniques are not done for no reason and there is a scientific explanation. Do you know the effects on the brain of the viewer?
@@jacobmorgan3120 Have you inserted subliminal signalling frames into your videos?
What I really liked about this video was reasonableness. I'm able to say 'yeah that's how real life works' with these situations. From what I've heard from people, neutering indeed can both worsen or help aggression, for example. And yes, I agree it's important to try understand the psychological process the dog is going through, it's a creature seeking truths in this world as much as you are. That's what is truly remarkable about us. Often the original problem about us is not paying attention, or being fixated to only some truths.
I absolutely love how you present such a holistic approach to dog training. You've quickly become one of my favorite UA-cam channels! Keep up the amazing work. Cheers from Mexico!
Spot on! My first dog trainer was just positive reinforcement, which turned my malinois Betty into a monster. 9 days with you turned her into a pet and training me gave me the tools to carry on the good work. A year on Betty is now amazing, thankyou so much🐶😀
❤
I agree with a lot of this.
However, I’m probably much more against the regular use of treats and clickers than you are.
I wholeheartedly believe that learning how to correct your dog (like a dog) is key.
If we look at how dogs communicate with each other and correct each other, it’s rarely pretty, and there sure is never any treats involved.
In essence, treats and rewards should never be used in conjunction with bad behaviors. Bad behaviors should only be corrected, and you can’t be afraid of physically correcting your dog. This doesn’t mean hurting your dog, by the way, for any fools out there. It usually means a physical bump, moving in front of your dog, or grabbing their neck scruff. None of this hurts your dog. Not even remotely. This should also be combined with a specific verbal correction that you’ve decided on. Lower your tone, be firm and confident, and deliver it with an abruptiveness. If you learn how to growl as well, then you get a gold star.
Using treats and other reward tools are ok, ONLY if you’re teaching them something new, like a trick. Not during or after correcting a behavior. This only leads to confusion.
Moreover, the best reward for your dog will always be you and your love. Exude happiness, goluckyness, increase the pitch of your voice, play with them briefly. Etc, etc.
Ultimately, learn to be like a dog, and be a clear leader to your dog. This means correcting your dog (like a dog), and being your dog’s best friend and favorite person in the world when they’re behaving.
Also, never correct with emotion. That is not going to help anything. Correct with confidence and firmness. Be aware of your inner emotional state and work on that.
Good luck.
I think the saying 'Your dog trains you' is true. You can teach many dogs the same thing, but each learn differently and you have to learn the way that works best for them. If you learn while they learn, you are going to be a pretty solid team. I still do commands with my dog, but no treats are used anymore. She has learned and we are just honing those skills. Repetition is key. Your pitch, hand signals, body language should all trump the treat rewards.
“Impulse control and arousal management”🎉🎉 The very first thing I teach my dogs is impulse control… Without that any progress is slowed… It’s just so simple and so overlooked! I love this video! Thank you!
Loving your channel mate, lots of good advice for people struggling with high energy, high drive dogs (like me). You explain things very clearly and logically.
Massive sub matey! The last bit about training a dog to do nothing is what I've been trying to explain to the wife for the last 6 months with our 11 month old Parson Russell. She keeps saying he needs more exercise and he gets an hour a day, everyday come rain or shine. I come from a dog family though and this is her first so I can't complain. She's better with him than me.🤣
Some great points, especially re the neutering and exercise. We had a Standard Poodle who was trained to Olympic athlete level. Three hours running around the ski slopes in summer, a little nap, and he's ready for tug and fetch. We could have loaned him out to people as a weight-loss aid 😂
Brilliant video and I was in the same boat as you four years ago when I first started out my company. You can never underestimate the power of marking, which you demonstrated in the R+ subtle as it was to the untrained eye. The other thing that I quickly learnt was if you cannot communicate with people you will never succeed in dog training. You have to be able to improvise in a split second to each individual scenario. Great videos as always
A good and cheerful channel with a good sense of narrative.
Training a dog is like raising a child. Love them rewarded them but they should know the rules and that they can’t do whatever they want whenever they want. Great video man
"The greatest teacher, failure is." - Yoda
From the beginning you should teach a marker word for correct behavior (i did "yes") and getting a food reward, and keep increasing the time from marker word to reward. So you can still let your dog know it's doing something correctly, even if you have no food.
Great vid, very... balanced!! Love the importance to learn your dog the art of boredom, it's indeed essential they get used to do absolutely nothing (not all day long, of course)
Absolutely right.... I've been sick for 5 days, my Springer is bored but putting up with it..... she amuses her self with toys or sleeps.
Beautiful dogs! Thanks for the helpful advice.
You mentioned lead pressure and while I somewhat understand the concept, when I search for training methods to this I get nothing. Can you do a video where you go through the structure of training leash pressure? It might seem obvious to some, but even for me that understands the idea/concept of the result, have a hard time incorporating the process in my training and walks.
I'm a dog trainer from the Netherlands.
Pressure & Release
This technique teaches your dog that leash pressure/tension will always release when the dog follows the direction.
(- Give a verbal cue)
- Apply appropriate tension to the leash , preferably steering the neck of the dog where you want it to go.
- As soon as your dog moves to the desired direction or position, release the pressure.
This teaches your dog that moving in the direction of the leash pressure, brings comfort, and a release of tension.
@@canine_coach It might seem like a small thing, but I didn't realise that the verbal cue was part of it, because on the videoes I have seen, they just show how the leash pressure works.
Thank you!
I have never used food to reinforce a good behaviour ..I have had rescue dogs all my life I’m now 60+…dogs respond to loving gestures of I love you and hugs …your so brave !,,,what a clever dog you are!….etc..and as for garden behaviour ..the more you try to get them in the more they will ignore you.unless you join them in the garden and tell them it’s time to go in..no nonsense..if they persist..I put dog on the lead and lead indoors with no praise…it’s going with your intuition..poop!! to a lot of dog trainers.matrix trained.. ..
I have a genuine question about anchoring as you called it. Is letting dog out to the balcony a good way to teach her do nothing ? For now whenever i let her out, she just lay down and watch pepople passing by. And she can lay there sometimes for 15 min and somtimes for a straight hour or two basically chilling. Is it a good thing for her or i should rather put her on leash and just wait for her to chill out near my desk or iin the kitchen ?
Finally someone gets real!
From the beginning you should teach a marker word for correct behavior (i did "yes") and getting a food reward, and keep increasing the time from marker word to reward. So you can still let your dog know it's doing something correctly, even if you have zero treats.
You are absolutely right, but I think the presenter is trying to teach the very first fundament - as before you become efficient with how you use rewards you must understand how they stimulate the dog.
Food is not the right reward for every dog and every training situation. Some dogs become too energetic in the presence of food and it actually slows learning. Each dog is different and i use food, play, different types of touch or voice, depending on the excitablity and attention span of the individual dog and even the individual day.
Thanks great info 👍
Solid advice, cheers.
Very helpful video
I wish instead of removing dogs reproduction though spaying and neutering, would involve vasectomies with males, and OSS with females. I think testosterone and estrogen are extremely important to the overall everyday health of the dog. I know there can be a few complications with OSS but with enough skilled Veterinarians, both procedures could be common practice, probably wishful thinking on my part 😎😎😎
You talk about neutering and give great advice for male dogs but what about female dogs? I have a un-nutrered chihuahua who is reactive to my new bulldog puppy. I’m wanting to get both neutered. I was hopefully it would help with the Chihuahua reactions. Do you have any advice for the pros and cons of neutering females?
The whole neutering thing is what ALL vets should be telling people. I've been told in the past that taking their nads off can make fear/aggression/nervousness a lot worse and they will refuse to operate until that dog has been to a trainer.
It can also go the other way. I have a coworker who neutered his dog that had a "perfect" temperament and after a few weeks, he became highly aggressive towards other dogs and fearful of his owner. Because of the aggression, that guys wife refuses to go into the kennel where they keep 3 of their 5 dogs just in case that 1 dog attacks her.
Age of dog when neutering contributes
@lindsay9678-l8l I think be was either 2 or 3 at the time which is a bad age for getting them done. I've heard that you have better luck neutering boys as puppies.
I won't even get my 15 month old Labrador neutered because he became a nervous wreck overnight shortly after he turned 6 months old.
The vet said "yeah, that can happen", so now I'm stuck with a dog that is constantly on edge whenever I walk him 🤦🏼♂️. I'm hoping that it's just a fear period and not something that'll be lifelong because he used to be really confident.
@@_--____--______--___
For small dogs getting them done younger is OK but for larger dogs it's best to wait until they're about 2 anyway because development is slower. When it comes to vets advice on neutering I'd take it with a pinch of salt tbh. My boy had complications which is common for his breed but I wasn't told that until after it happened, prior to that I was told complications were rare and it's unlikely he'll be affected because he's strong and healthy. Temperament wise he hasn't changed, we already worked on his behaviour tho. Do your research specifically for labs and weight up pros/ cons for neutering, I was naive and took the vets words at face value. My others boys were never neutered and I had no problems with them.
I love you content, but i live in the US and im getting a borboel, i think ill need to do a in person training. Do you have any recommendations for US trainers??
Miracle k9
Amazing Video
What type of collar is being used
Prong
In one of your videos you mentioned that if you could go back in time you would only use kibble as a training reward, and to your point I get different types of treats every once in a while, and my dog always seems to get over them after a while. My dog (5 mo old Retriever) has a resource guarding issue, even with high reward treats (sausage, meat, etc) it takes some time to get him away from what he is hoarding (most of the time socks and napkins). What is your overall advice with dealing with resource hoarding? And can I help him get over it with only kibble?
Try feeding your dog by hand for a week or 2. Don’t let him eat anything unless it’s out of your hand. Good luck
Nice one
In my experience orange cats come out from nowhere thinking they are badassss.
I have no problem with agression but with too much excitement.
same procedure?
really need help.
dog is a two years old lagotto + besides that well trained.
searching dog.
anyone any ideas?
😮sausage dawgs😂❤
Stark is tiny for a Mali is he not a bull herder?
Leave my receding hairline alone nob ed 😆
What about spaying??😅
Heads-up 😂 i don't know if you have seen the channel k9Tay has done a video on you! I stopped listening after 30 seconds and the mention of Zak George 😂
❤
Less talk and more visual demonstration is best .
Ahhh…..that’s 6 dogs lol
Should you reward your dog for doing nothing?
Define reward?
Also, define nothing. I routinely reward with (attention and praise) my dogs for being in a settled state of mind or for being on “place”. That looks a lot like “rewarding for nothing” to people who don’t train dogs for a living. In fact i want more of the exact behaviour I’m rewarding. I have very calm, non anxious dogs because i am rewarding the subtle behaviour of calm. Most anxious, reactive and aggressive dogs are inadvertently getting reinforcement for being in those negative states. Example: A whining dog gets a calming “you’re okay” and a cuddle from the owner. That is literally rewarding the behaviour you don’t want! Happens constantly!!
This dog is clicker trained. VERY different!!
Why is it different, if you have a reactive dog then you should be going back to basics and if the dog doesn’t have a marker such as the clicker then that’s where you start. You’ve got to take things right back to the basics and slowly build the exposure
you can teach this within days, click and reward, probably the easiest thing to teach the dog, same goes with word
I wish you could have left the devil incarnate out of the video.😢
Who hates the constant flicking from scene to scene and within a scene for absolutely no reason, for example, just to make stutters in the view, many times per minute of viewing?
It's not as smart as the dummy in charge thinks it is. It's repulsive once it sinks in.
Aww bless you, I hope your day gets better. Maybe just scroll past things that annoy you as its obviously not good for your mental health.
@@janejackson4509 It's not good for mental health at all, especially if you do not know what is going on. do you believe that all the work of cutting and cutting and re-sizing is done for no reason or for fun? It is not.
I do not just scroll by things that are wrong to do to people.
I wonder why the dog community is so strict on positive reinforcement only. It seems to be they think corrections are animal cruelty and as a large dog owner ive never felt my corrections caused pain, they just snapped my dog out of it. Yet when i say this i am treated like an imbecile. I would love to know where this brainwashing began.
Speaking too fast.
And here's me listening to this at 1.5x speed
You can slow videos down in settings :)
Watch from 10:00 and you see 4 camera stutters for no reason immediately, WHAT AN ANNOYING TRASH PIECE OF WORK.
UNSUBBED. Trash channel. Too bad, not a bad trainer. Just repulsive.
You seem nice
@@Aidllorca I don't take kindly to abuse of viewers by putting out that kind of assault on the brain. Neither would I gladly put up with subliminal message flashing or any other such trash measures.
But to each/own. You could enjoy it, for all I know.
I dislike it very much. I finally felt what they are doing, heavily done on this video. It made me aware of the ethics of these people,
@@thankmelater1254 please get help buddy.
You need to get a life.
These aren't things that you discovered. These are things you shold have learned before you started.
❤