by Sasha Riess | 09.02.26. | Wellbeing
A stuffy nose in dogs often worries owners, but it is important to understand that this symptom can actually be the body’s way of trying to correct an internal imbalance. When a dog breathes heavily or seems congested, the most common cause is allergies. These can be triggered by dust, pollen, detergents, or inappropriate food.
Everything a dog inhales, eats, or absorbs through the skin must be processed into energy. When the body fails to recognize certain substances, it reacts, and that reaction appears as an allergy.
Allergies in Dogs – How to Recognize Them
In some dogs, allergic reactions appear externally through the skin, with itching, redness, or rashes. This is actually a positive sign because it shows the body is able to expel what is bothering it.
However, when the reaction is not visible externally, the problem may appear in the respiratory system. The dog may breathe with difficulty or have a constantly stuffy nose in dogs. These are called internal allergies and can be triggered by food, parasites, or stress.
Allergies and the Respiratory Tract
When allergies affect the respiratory organs, the dog may snort, breathe heavily, or have nasal discharge. It is important not to ignore this symptom because it may indicate that the body is unable to fight off toxins on its own.

Careful care and a natural approach help a dog breathe easier.
Parasites – The Hidden Cause of a Stuffy Nose
Parasite larvae sometimes travel through the bloodstream to the sinuses, as nasal passages provide a favorable environment for them to settle. For this reason, it is helpful to occasionally carry out a natural parasite cleanse.
A combination of green black walnut, wormwood, parsley, and clove works effectively against adult parasites and their larvae. This approach not only helps breathing but also strengthens the dog’s immune system and supports overall detoxification.
When the Problem Persists
In rare cases, a stuffy nose in dogs may indicate the presence of growths in the sinuses, which can be benign or malignant. If the problem persists for a longer period, a veterinary examination is necessary to check the condition of the respiratory tract.
A Holistic Approach to a Dog’s Health and Breathing
It is also important to pay attention to everyday habits, such as what you use to wash your dog’s bed, which detergents you apply, and what kinds of treats you offer. Often, it is these small details that trigger allergic reactions.
A holistic approach means looking at the bigger picture, including what the dog breathes in, what it eats, and what kind of energy it feels at home. Only then can a dog truly breathe freely and feel calm, both physically and emotionally.
At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we believe that every physical symptom is a message. Understanding these signals and addressing them through a holistic lens is at the heart of everything we teach to ensure the well-being of every dog in our care.
by Sasha Riess | 09.02.26. | Emotions
Why a Dog Comes When the Soul Is Ready
A dog doesn’t enter our life when we decide we’re ready, but when the time is right. It is a time that we often fail to recognize until it passes, until we look back and realize that its arrival was a quiet introduction to something greater, something that changes the course of our life, and sometimes even our identity.
In our homes, but even more in our destinies, dogs appear precisely at the moment when a crack begins to open, when the old life ends, and the new one hasn’t yet taken form.
The Perfect Timing of Transitional Phases
Where the ground shifts, a dog arrives—quietly, without questions, without doubt, but with purpose. They manifest in our lives during profound transitions:
A dog enters our life as a messenger, preparing us for what we cannot face alone. They hold space for us when we simply need someone to be there without words, thoughts, or expectations. Sometimes a dog comes to show us what we don’t want to see, teaching us that love is something we allow to awaken within us—something primal and uniquely our own.

A dog feels what words cannot express.
How to Know When Your Soul Is Ready: My Story with Heni
Three months before my mother passed away, I began to feel an inner call to bring a dog into my life again. After years of working in the United States, where there was little room for new commitments, the thought appeared on its own, like a quiet sign of change. The seed was planted.
After my mother’s death, the emptiness was immeasurable. But three months later, Heni entered my life and brought a different dimension to that pain. His presence reminded me of the comfort my mother had given me during moments of fear. Sometimes, Heni would lie quietly beside me, the same way she used to when there was a storm outside. Now, I love storms because they remind me that I am not alone. Through him, she is still here.
Even the small scar on his chest was identical to the one my mother bore after heart surgery—a quiet sign of a bond that transcends physical presence.

My personal moment: when Heni arrived
A Bridge Between Loss and Life
A dog doesn’t come to comfort us in the way we think; it comes to open the door to the grief we don’t know how to express. Dogs don’t run from sadness—they live it with us.
In moments of loss, families often freeze emotionally. A dog, as a being that communicates through energy rather than words, awakens what has been frozen. Its gaze, its breathing, and its presence bring a heartbeat back to where it has stopped. It brings life, not from outside, but from within. They take on the role of a bridge between what no longer exists and what is yet to be born.
Dogs Often Arrive Before the Storm
There are times when people say, “Everything changed after the dog came,” or “I didn’t know why I adopted him, but now I understand he was preparing me.” That is not coincidence.
The dog doesn’t just witness the unraveling; it accelerates it. Its presence exposes what no longer works. It doesn’t enter our story to decorate it, but to draw back the curtain and let light fall on what we try to hide from others, and from ourselves. Sometimes, a dog’s arrival speeds up the end, but that end is, in truth, a beginning. No matter how painful it feels, the dog never makes a mistake. Its timing is always perfect.

A moment of silence between a human and a dog where the soul recognizes itself.
A Dog Doesn’t Come to Comfort, but to Awaken
A dog doesn’t arrive to make things easier, but to bring movement where stagnation has taken hold. Just as the birth of a child stirs old wounds, a dog feels this too. When it “misbehaves,” it is asking us to wake up and be present—for the child, for ourselves, and for life.
Their presence becomes therapy, helping parents become people their child can follow with love. People who breathe, who feel, who live.
It’s Not Coincidence, It’s Spiritual Order
In all these stories, there is an invisible thread. It’s not, “I was bored,” or “My child wanted one.” It is radiant. At that precise moment, through a silent crack, a ray of light illuminated what had been hidden in the dark.
Reason offers excuses, but the soul recognizes order. Dogs don’t come to fill emptiness; they come to make us face it, to uncover what we’ve buried, so that we may finally make space for ourselves. When a dog enters your life, don’t ask what you’re giving, ask what it’s illuminating.
A dog arrives exactly when light is most needed for truth to be seen.
At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we believe that understanding this energetic and spiritual bond is essential for any true caregiver. This presence is at the heart of everything we teach.
by Sasha Riess | 09.02.26. | Behaviour
The moment you start asking yourself why your dog seems restless, sad, or anxious, remember one thing: A dog would never do what we do to ourselves every single day. This is exactly why a dog so clearly feels every inner lie, every fracture, and every self-betrayal.
A Dog Feels Your Energetic Signature
To a dog, everything matters. They don’t hear your words; they feel the energetic signature of your decisions. They watch you as you:
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Go to a job you hate.
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Stay in a marriage where there is no love, only habit or fear.
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Attend social events with people you dislike, wearing a mask of politeness.
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Sacrifice your peace just to „show respect“ or maintain appearances.
The dog sees all of it. Reads all of it. Feels all of it.
Animals Live in Harmony; Humans Live in Conflict
No animal in nature would ever live against itself. A dog would never:
An animal lives in harmony with its own being. A human, however, often lives in a constant state of internal conflict.

A dog does not hear your words; it feels the energy of your decisions.
Your Dog Feels Your Inner Dishonesty
When you finally turn toward your own life and ask:
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How honest am I with myself?
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How honest am I with those I love?
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Who am I pretending to be?
You will realize that the greatest suffering doesn’t come from the outside, but from the betrayal of your own truth. Your dog suffers with you not because you are „bad,“ but because the dog sees what you are trying to hide.
A mask can deceive people, and makeup can hide a sleepless night—but a dog can never be deceived.
This profound connection between human integrity and canine well-being is the foundation of our work. At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we teach you how to achieve the systemic balance that allows both you and your dog to live authentically and healthily.
by Sasha Riess | 08.02.26. | Behaviour
Can training be traumatic for dogs? The answer is yes. Training becomes traumatic not only when physical force is used, but also when a dog is punished through reward withdrawal, pressure, or manipulation.
Any method that uses fear, pain, or a loss of safety creates long-term behavioral change through trauma, not through understanding. When force produces a “result,” it is only by pushing the dog’s body into a state of shock—the brain registers danger, and the dog adapts out of fear.
What Falls Under Traumatic Dog Training?
Trauma is not just about physical hitting. It is created through various forms of pressure where the dog loses its sense of safety:
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Pulling the leash and choking.
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Using slip collars and prong collars.
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Electronic shock collars.
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Withholding rewards when the dog “fails to perform.”
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Any situation where the dog loses the power of choice.
Both physical punishment and reward withdrawal affect the dog’s nervous system in the same way: as a total loss of control.
Why Does Trauma Appear “Effective”?
Trauma works quickly because the body remembers. The dog stops the “undesired” behavior not because it learned a better way, but because it learned what must not be done to survive. This is adaptation to fear, not true learning.

Trauma creates adaptation to fear, not true understanding.
The Consequences of Fear-Based Training
Methods that rely on shock or coercion create a dog that:
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Constantly assesses danger instead of relaxing.
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Reacts from a state of chronic tension.
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Lacks a stable, trusting relationship with the owner.
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Loses the ability to make independent, calm decisions.
Structure Without Coercion: The Alternative
Avoiding traumatic training does not mean a lack of structure or rules. On the contrary, a dog needs a clear framework—but one built without threat or pain.
Stable behavior does not come from shock; it comes from safety, consistency, and understanding the language of dogs. If we want a reliable companion, we must stop using methods that function only because they produce fear.
This understanding of a dog’s emotional state is at the heart of everything we do. At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we teach people how to apply these principles of safety and care, helping create calm, healthy, and happy results without trauma.
by Sasha Riess | 08.02.26. | Emotions
There is an ancient teaching that says meeting a black or white dog is a sign of respect. This isn’t because these dogs are biologically different, but because dogs as a species have always been closest to humans. This is where a topic begins that is rarely spoken about openly: Black Dog Syndrome.
What Is Black Dog Syndrome?
Black Dog Syndrome is a term used worldwide to describe a heartbreaking phenomenon: black dogs are adopted less often, end up in shelters more frequently, and are more easily abandoned or euthanized.
A black dog is often the first to be left on the street and the hardest to find a home for. This has nothing to do with the dog’s character; it is entirely about human projections, fears, and the symbolism we attach to color.
Black and White: Same Essence, Different Perception
In nature, black and white have equal value. A dog does not know whether it is black or white; it only knows whether it belongs or does not belong.

A dog does not know its color – it only knows whether it belongs.
The problem begins with human perception:
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Viewing black dogs as „more dangerous.“
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Believing they are harder to train.
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Considering them „less photogenic.“
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Projecting personal fears onto the color of their coat.
The Responsibility of Those Who Choose Black Dogs
Caring for a black dog carries a greater responsibility. Not because the dog is problematic, but because society’s attitude toward them is. Choosing a black dog is a conscious decision not to participate in collective rejection.
The Dog as a Mirror of Humanity
There is no animal that has suffered so much because of humans, nor one that has given us such unconditional closeness. The way we choose dogs says more about us than it does about them.
Every dog, regardless of color, seeks the same things: belonging, safety, and peace. A black dog is not a symbol of darkness; it is often a victim of the human fear of our own reflection.
This understanding of a dog’s emotional and physical state is at the heart of everything we do. At Integrative and Holistic Grooming Education, we teach people how to apply these principles of stability and care in their everyday lives with their dogs, helping create calm, healthy, and happy results.