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Jelly Bean versus Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

Jelly Bean versus Dr. Jekyll & Mr. HydeAuthors: C. W. Meisterfeld, Darlene Perez, Richard Flinn
Publisher: M-R-K Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy Used: $4.00
as of 11/21/2009 18:58 MST details
You Save: $20.95 (84%)



New (7) Used (20) Collectible (6) from $4.00

Seller: SnugAsABug
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 455406

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 176
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 5.8 x 0.7

ISBN: 0960129251
Dewey Decimal Number: 636.7088
EAN: 9780960129256
ASIN: 0960129251

Publication Date: June 1989
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS BOOK

Whether you have a new puppy, a "problem dog", or just want to act properly around dogs, you should read this book. It could save your dog’s life and, at least equally important, save you, innocent children and friends from the horrors of dog bites and from the nightmare of having to put your dog to sleep. The good news is that it will teach you how to reach a positive, mutually satisfactory, happy relationship with your dog without using negative methods in his training, such as intimidation, force, punishment, and pain. Even more amazing it will enable you to do this because you abstain from these negative methods. All other books advocate coercion in one form or another, which can lead to problems and even develop a dangerous dog which then must be destroyed.

The truly different methods explained and described in this book are based on over 35 years of experience in the uniformly successful training of dogs of all breeds and ages. Even more important, in over 25 years of Specializing in rehabilitation of problem dogs, many dogs were saved from death by these methods and returned to their happy owners as safe and well-mannered pets.

So What is the magic pill? The system of physical psychological dog training is based on the unwavering, consistent attention to development of mutual respect and trust between dog and master accomplished with only positive reinforcement.

The word unwavering is the key. Many times harsh discipline, intimidation and physical punishment techniques endorsed by others seem to work and are easier and more satisfying, temporarily. However, in the long run they are detrimental to the pet.

Lets take the simple case of a happy puppy who has spent several carefree weeks frolicking outside in the warm summer sun with his affectionate new family. Autumn comes. He is invited indoors and promptly relieves himself on the new white living room rug. The master, who has read the time-honored remedy in training books, promptly grabs the puppy by the scruff of the neck, rubs his nose in the excrement and tosses him out the front door into the cold rain. It works, the dog does not make that mistake again.

Think of the impact if this procedure were used on a young child. The psychiatrists would have a heyday tracing the effect throughout his life. There is no doubt that a few traumatic experiences like this can change your loving puppy into a dangerous dog later in life. In fact, intimidation, force and physical punishment are the main roots of many of our dogs problems today, as case histories prove. In combination with permissiveness, these negative can produce schizophrenic dogs with Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde personalities. On the other hand, you can have a happy, reliable, loyal dog of any breed by using the system of psychological training with positive reinforcement advocated here.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 19



1 out of 5 stars Weird, trippy, useless   April 20, 2005
H. Houlahan (Pennsylvania, USA)
4 out of 8 found this review helpful

If you are looking for real advice on dealing with an aggressive dog, or sound dog-training advice in general, this is not the place to find it.

Meisterfeld's self-published book is, like the rest of his output, a long advertisement aimed to get people to buy more of his stuff. It's also a straw-man attack on the alleged methods of some very effective authors who DO give sound and clear advice.

Gee-whiz charts -- but they don't mean anything.

I was particularly taken with his use of Nietzschean language to describe dogs. I can just hear the Wagner in the background. I've never tried acid or 'shrooms, but after trying to read this volume, I'm not that curious anymore.

Meisterfeld calls himself a "doctor," but never substantiates -- doctor of WHAT? From what accredited institution of higher learning did he receive a doctorate of what kind?




5 out of 5 stars This is an important book   December 24, 2004
Birdy (San Diego, California USA)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

This book saved my dog's life. we got our dog from the pound as a youngster not a puppy. We quickly found out that she was a biter but had no idea what to do about it. All of the "trainers" we called to help suggested we put her down. I found this book in our library and we transformed her from a shy cowering fear bitter into a wonderful outgoing family pet. Just the concept of eye contact alone was more than worth the price of this book. I am not a natural with dogs, I needed the tools this book provided. This is not a book about what most people might consider basic puppy training, but if you want to understand your dog this is a great book. I am buying a second copy for my grand daughter who just got a puppy for Christmas.


5 out of 5 stars The Truth About Dog Aggression   August 28, 2004
Karyn KT (New Zealand)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Finally a dog book that was written by a professional trainers experience, not by authors/trainers that have copycatted the misconception that dog owners need to mimic the wild wolf and be the Alpha Leader of the Pack (that was originated by a United States Veterinarian in 1972)

Like the Author of Jelly Bean Verses Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde (C.W Meisterfeld), I am sharing my personal experience.

After one of my dogs bit me and my Veterinarian I was advised by a top New Zealand behaviourist to be the top dog leader of the pack and to use a shake can/throw chain. A veterinarian clinic advised my to grab my dog stare him in the eyes and shake him.

The more I tried to be the Alpha Leader of the Pack the worse their behaviour became, in a few days 2 of my dogs started fighting each other and the other 2 became fearful.

Then I located a University who's facility of Veterinary Science offers a course on canine behaviour it was expensive but I though it would be the highest level (scientific facility) of teaching animal behaviour, so I enrolled

I was shocked. Their teaching of being the Alpha Leader was exactly what all the other experts advised.

Jelly Beans rage was not due to genetics claimed by U.S top Veterinarian/behaviourists it was directly due to the alpha/dominance training.

Then I read the chapter HOW NOT TO BE YOUR DOGS BEST FRIEND that Meisterfeld explains the danger of the alpha training, which is why all four of my papillon's developed serous behavioral problems.

There's coloured (before and after) photos of Jelly Bean, Korean Fighting dog, Rhodesian Ridgeback,and unique discrimination safety period clock.

This book saved my dogs from having to live a life of fear and aggression.



1 out of 5 stars hell with teeth   July 28, 2004
Sheri (Canada)
4 out of 8 found this review helpful

I followed this book right to the letter, mutual respect and all. The Pit bull came to me with aggression problems and I tried to correct it according to the book, and ended up having the pit bull put down because it cost me 36 stitches to my arm and leg. Follow this mans' suggestions and you will have problems as well.


3 out of 5 stars Am I Missing Something?   July 9, 2003
8 out of 10 found this review helpful

I was disappointed with this book. True, it does have a lot of interesting information and I totally agree with his method of training with respect and trust, not using force or aggression. But I bought the book expecting to find the answer to an aggression problem I'm having with an adopted dog, who IS being trained only with respect and positive methods. Instead, the book is full of examples of dogs with behavioral problems, and if you find one that correlates with a problem you may be experiencing, as you hurriedly turn the pages to find the solution, instead you read "the dog was brought to me and I retrained him...and now he's a happy faithful friend." No where did I find any information about Mr. Meisterfeld's training program. He admonishes dog owners for causing their dog's behavioral problems by catering to the dog and treating it like a human, not giving it territorial and psychological boundaries, not giving it a job, but again no specifics are given. Just what is his definition of these boundaries? Dog stays outside? Dog is restricted to one room in the house? And psychological boundaries - dog's every move and waking moment are dictated by the owner? What constitutes a job? Are daily obedience lessons enough? I am not new to the breed that I have and my previous dog was obedience titled so I'm quite familiar with training. This new dog was put on the "nothing in life is free" program from the day I got him and it has been very effective in establishing me as his master and setting behavioral boundaries for him. However, an aggression problem is new to me. I was hoping to find the answer in this book but instead am no closer to a solution than before.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 19


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