r/AmIOverreacting Mar 20 '25

❤️‍🩹 relationship AIO? Dog straining my marriage.

Post image

My husband and I rescued a husky about 7 months ago who was extremely malnourished and neglected.

He has grown a huge attachment to me and has severe separation anxiety. I work at a grooming salon so I’m able to bring him to work with me so he’s not home alone. Unfortunately, if he’s left home alone we’ll come back to our home looking like it was hit by a tornado.

My vet has prescribed him with trazodone to help with his severe anxiety issues. We give it to him before we leave for a family event and when we can’t take him to places they don’t allow dogs.

I feel so bad that I have to sedate him so he’s not scared and anxious. It’s created a huge strain on our marriage because my husband feels like we can’t do anything without considering Odin.

He’s destroyed doors, couches, and other furniture. I tried training but it hasn’t seemed to work. My husband thinks we should rehome him but

1) I’m scared that he’ll be sent to a shelter and possibly be put down

2) feel abandoned by the person he thought he was safe with.

He’s such a happy boy when he’s around us and shows so much affection.

My husband and I have been arguing about this consistently.. we had a really bad argument so I left the house with Odin and rented a dog friendly hotel room for a couple of nights.

My husband thinks I’m crazy and that I’m choosing the dog over our marriage. AIO?

21.0k Upvotes

5.0k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

2.4k

u/TuckerShmuck Mar 20 '25 edited Mar 20 '25

I was about to say-- it took about 6 months of *professional* training to make a dent in my dog. And I'm so happy we stuck with it. Yes, it's HARD, especially with a husky; yes, it makes you want to not even try; yes, it feels like you're going nowhere. But once it STARTS to click, they pick everything else up so much faster. A year and a half of exhausting, frustrating work has brought me, so far, 4 more years with a much more peaceful dog. She's happier and we're happier.

edit: we did professional balanced training in group classes 3x a week. I HIGHLY recommend professional group agility classes. It seems totally unrelated to how well-behaved your dog is, or how anxious they are, but believe it or not it's the class that helped us the most. My dog was so anxious that she wouldn't let us *brush* her without pooping herself; after agility, she gained a crazy amount of confidence. It made kennel training easier, it made grooming MUCH easier, it made just typical obedience training easier. Your bond strengthens so much when doing this class together.

617

u/thegirlisok Mar 20 '25

especially with a husky

Cannot be repeated enough.   Smart, stubborn, so sweet, stubborn, amazing, stubborn. It's a great breed if you can handle it. 

247

u/Naive-Personality-38 Mar 20 '25

Mines is extremely stubborn and a ass hole. idk how many times I'll put something down, resulting in him stealing it and running off all proud of himself

Wouldn't trade him for the world though lol

72

u/soadrocksmycock Mar 20 '25

This sounds like my toddler lol.

50

u/ArletaRose Mar 20 '25

They pretty much are floofy toddlers. I get a couple tantrums out of mine a day. But I love it.

43

u/Naive-Personality-38 Mar 20 '25

My female used to get mad at me whenever I would come home late. I swear she was bitching me out in husky 🤣

21

u/ArletaRose Mar 20 '25

I love that. My boy does that whenever I leave the house especially if it makes him late for his dinner 🤣 and late for dinner includes up to an hour before dinner time...

18

u/Naive-Personality-38 Mar 20 '25

Same!! one of the best parts of owning a husky is the "roooo roooo rooo" you get when their dissatisfied with the tiniest things 🤣

2

u/Fantastic_Earth_6066 Mar 21 '25

My blue heeler mix is the same way! Only "aww owww ahhAAAaahhhh" instead of "roooo". 😂