Optimal Performance Program for Dogs

The relaxation-based training program for dogs who need more than obedience

Help your dog become calmer, healthier, easier to live with, and deeply connected to you — by teaching the skill that changes everything: conscious relaxation.

Most dog training focuses on controlling behavior.

  • Sit.

  • Stay.

  • Come.

  • Stop barking.

  • Walk nicely.

  • Do this. Don’t do that.

But for many dogs, the real problem is not that they do not know what we want.

The real problem is that they are too tense, too excited, too anxious, too overwhelmed, or too disconnected from their own body to respond naturally.

That is why so many dogs can behave well in training — and then lose everything in real life.

  • At home they bark.

  • In the car they panic (or won't enter the car at all)

  • At the vet they freeze or fight.

  • On the leash they pull.

  • Around other dogs they explode.

  • When left alone they cannot settle.

  • During grooming they become stressed.

  • When food appears they lose control.

Traditional training tries to add more commands, more cues, more conditioning, and more control.

The Optimal Performance Program for Dogs takes a completely different path.

We do not begin with obedience.

We begin with relaxation.

Because when the dog learns how to consciously relax, everything changes.

A completely different approach to dog training

Not based on reinforcement. Based on relaxation.

The Optimal Performance Program is a new kind of dog training program.

  • It is not built around clicker training.

  • It is not built around reinforcement.

  • It is not built around correcting unwanted behavior.

  • It is not built around constantly conditioning the dog to perform commands.

It is based on something much deeper:

Conscious relaxation.

This means that your dog learns how to relax intentionally — not only when everything is calm and easy, but also in real-life situations where dogs usually become tense, excited, afraid, or reactive.

This is the foundation of the entire program.

Once the dog understands relaxation as a skill, we can begin using it in the situations that matter most:

  • Eating.

  • Walking.

  • Waiting.

  • Being alone.

  • Travelling by car.

  • Meeting other dogs.

  • Living with other animals.

  • Going to the vet.

  • Being groomed.

  • Hearing noises.

  • Hearing other dogs bark.

  • Entering new places.

  • Staying calm in daily life.

This is why the program is called Optimal Performance.

Because the goal is not only a dog who “obeys.”

The goal is a dog who functions better.

A dog who feels better.

A dog who thinks better.

A dog who connects better.

A dog who can live in the modern human world with more calmness, confidence, and emotional stability.

Why modern dogs need a new kind of training

Dogs today live in a very different world than dogs lived in for hundreds of years.

In the past, many dogs lived outside. They guarded houses, worked with animals, moved freely, and had jobs that matched their instincts.

Today, we ask dogs to live in apartments, cities, busy neighborhoods, family homes, cars, cafés, elevators, grooming salons, veterinary clinics, and crowded streets.

We expect them to be quiet when neighbors are close.

Calm when left alone.

Friendly with other dogs.

Safe around children.

Polite on the leash.

Relaxed in the car.

Still during grooming.

Patient at the vet.

Emotionally stable in situations that are not natural for them.

This is a much bigger expectation than most people realize.

And it cannot be solved only by teaching commands.

Because the dog does not only need to know what to do.

The dog needs to feel safe enough, relaxed enough, and connected enough to do it.

That is what this program teaches.

The problem with reinforcement-based training

Reinforcement-based training can be useful for teaching simple behaviors.

But it has a serious limitation.

It usually works by conditioning the dog to perform a behavior in response to a cue or situation.

  • You say “sit,” and the dog is conditioned to sit.

  • You say “come,” and the dog is conditioned to come.

  • You say “wait,” and the dog is conditioned to wait.

But real life is not a clean training session.

  • Real life has stress.

  • Noise.

  • Other dogs.

  • New smells.

  • Fear.

  • Excitement.

  • Physical discomfort.

  • Separation.

  • Travel.

  • Veterinary procedures.

  • Unexpected situations.

And in those moments, the conditioned response often becomes too weak.

The dog may “know” the cue, but cannot access the behavior.

Why?

Because the dog’s body is already full of tension.

The dog is not calmly choosing.
The dog is reacting.

This is why many owners say:

“He knows this at home, but outside he ignores me.”

Or:

“She is trained, but at the vet she becomes impossible.”

Or:

“He can do it in class, but not when there are other dogs.”

This is not because the dog is bad.

It is because the training did not address the deeper cause.

The Optimal Performance Program works at that deeper level.

The missing mechanism: tension

Many unwanted behaviors are not simply “bad habits.”

They are expressions of tension.

A tense dog may bark.
A tense dog may pull.
A tense dog may panic.
A tense dog may avoid.
A tense dog may become overexcited.
A tense dog may struggle to rest.
A tense dog may become reactive.
A tense dog may resist grooming or handling.
A tense dog may lose connection with the human.

When training only focuses on behavior, it often tries to put another behavior on top of the existing tension.

But tension does not disappear because we add a cue.

It remains in the body.

The Optimal Performance Program uses relaxation to reduce the tension behind the behavior.

This is why the approach is more general, more flexible, and often more powerful in daily life.

We are not trying to condition a separate answer for every possible situation.

We are teaching the dog a core life skill:

“I can relax here. I can relax now. I can stay connected.”

Once the dog has this skill, daily life becomes easier.

What makes this program different

Most training asks:

“How do we make the dog do what we want?”

The Optimal Performance Program asks a different question:

“What is preventing the dog from naturally cooperating with us?”

This distinction changes everything.

We assume that a relaxed, connected dog naturally wants to follow, cooperate, and live in harmony with humans.

The problem is not that the dog must be forced, bribed, or endlessly conditioned into cooperation.

The problem is that tension, fear, anxiety, overexcitement, or discomfort blocks the dog from doing what would otherwise be natural.

So instead of adding more control, we remove what blocks cooperation.

This creates a completely different relationship.

Less pressure.
Less conflict.
Less frustration.
Less emotional struggle.

More calm.
More trust.
More connection.
More natural cooperation.

Example: Leash Training

A dog trained only through conditioning may follow you beautifully at home and in known places.

But then you go to the park, or walk in the city and everything falls apart.

There are other dogs.
Strange smells.
Loud noises.
Unfamiliar people.
Cars, bikes, children running.
Dogs barking and runnig.
Stress in the body.

The owner wants the dog to walk on the loose leash.

But the dog cannot follow it.

Not because the dog doesn’t want to go on the loose leash.

But because the dog is now in a completely different internal state.

The conditioned behavior is not strong enough to overcome the fear, excitement and tension.

With relaxation-based training, the situation is different.

The dog has learned that staying close to the owner is not only a position.

It is also a moment of relaxation.

The dog has learned how to return to relaxation in more difficult contexts.

So when the dog enters the new, challenging environment, the training does not depend only on obedience.

It activates the deeper skill:

Relax.
Reconnect.
Settle the body.
Then respond.

This is a very different kind of training.

Example: Meeting Other Dogs

Many dogs do not truly know how to meet another dog calmly.

They become fixated.

They bark.

They shake in fear.

They show aggressive, controlling, or dominance-like behaviours.

And very often, people think the problem is simply that the dog “doesn’t like other dogs” or “needs more socialisation”

But the real issue is not only the other dog.

The real issue is the emotional state the dog enters when another dog appears.

If every meeting becomes excitement, pressure, barking, running, tension, or emotional overwhelm, the dog starts to build a very powerful association:

other dogs = high arousal
other dogs = excitement
other dogs = loss of control
other dogs = emotional chaos

And then, very quickly, meeting any other dog can trigger the same loop again.

The dog sees another dog, and the body already knows what to do:

fixate
tense
rush
bark
explode
or try to control the situation

Traditional training may try to teach the dog to “behave” around other dogs or “resign” from behaviours for the treat or toy.

But behaviour is not the whole problem.

The deeper question is:

Can the dog stay soft inside the presence of another dog?

Can the dog notice another dog without losing himself emotionally?

Can the dog remain connected to his body, his breathing, and his inner relaxation while another animal is nearby?

In the Optimal Performance Program, we do not only teach the dog what to do.

We teach the dog how to feel differently inside the situation.

First, we help the dog relax enough to notice the other dog without entering fixation.

Then, we help the dog stay relaxed while the other dog comes closer.

Then, we help both dogs remain soft, regulated, and emotionally available in each other’s presence.

Only then can real social interaction begin. Conscious interaction built on relaxation, safety, body awareness, and choice.

This can completely change the dog’s relationship with other dogs.

Another dog no longer means panic, barking, chasing, rushing, or emotional overwhelm.

Another dog becomes a situation where the dog knows how to stay present, soft, and connected.

And this is where real social confidence begins.

Example: barking when left alone

Here is the text formatted with strategic bold highlights to make the core message scannable and impactful:

Many dogs bark when they are alone. The surface problem is barking.

But the deeper problem is often tension, stress, separation anxiety, or a pre-conditioned reaction to sounds — for example, hearing another dog bark.

A conditioning-based approach may try to suppress the barking or replace it with another behavior. But this can put tension on top of tension.

The Optimal Performance Program works differently.

– First, we teach relaxation with the human.

– Then we teach relaxation at home.

– Then we teach relaxation during separation.

– Then we use relaxation to decondition reactions to triggering sounds, such as other dogs barking or outside noises.

So the dog does not simply learn: “Do not bark.”

The dog learns: “I can remain relaxed when I am alone. I can hear sounds and stay calm. I do not need to react.”

This is a much deeper change.

Who this program is for

The Optimal Performance Program is for people who want more than basic obedience.

It is for ambitious dog owners who want a calmer, happier, more connected dog.

It is for people who feel that standard training does not go deep enough.

It is for owners of dogs who struggle with daily-life issues such as overexcitement, barking, leash tension, separation, grooming stress, car anxiety, or difficulty settling.

It is for dog trainers who want to understand a new method based on relaxation instead of constant conditioning.

It is for promoters — people who are ambitious, serious, and want to become better at working with dogs.

It is for people who want to build a deeper bond with their dog, not only teach commands.

It is for people who believe that a dog should not only behave well, but also feel well.

Who this program is not for

This program is not for people looking for tricks, superficial fixes and training that hides deeper tensions under conditioned obedience

It is not for people who only want to force obedience.

t is not for people who want to suppress symptoms without understanding the cause.

It is not for people who believe that training should be based only on control.

It is not for people who are unwilling to observe the dog’s body, emotions, and relaxation state.

This program is for people who want to go deeper.

Because when we go deeper, the results can be much more meaningful.

What your dog can gain from this program

This program is not only about the dog.

It also changes the human-dog relationship.

You learn how to see what is really happening inside your dog.

You learn how tension appears before unwanted behavior happens.

You learn how to help your dog before the dog loses control.

You learn how to create calm cooperation without constant pressure.

You learn how to build a bond through shared relaxation.

Many people buy dogs because they want companionship, love, and connection.

But they do not always know how to create that bond.

The Optimal Performance Program gives you a practical way to build it.

Not through dominance.
Not through bribery.
Not through endless commands.

But through relaxation, trust, and shared emotional regulation.

What is inside the Optimal Performance Program

The program is built step by step.

First, we teach the foundation.

Then we apply relaxation to real-life situations.

Each part builds on the previous one, so the dog develops a skill that becomes more stable, more useful, and more natural over time.

Part 1: Conscious relaxation

This is the foundation of the whole program.

Your dog learns how to relax intentionally.

This is the first and most important breakthrough.

Once the dog understands conscious relaxation, we can begin using it everywhere.

- At home.
- Outside.
- Around food.
- In the car.
- During grooming.
- When waiting.
- When separated.
- Around other animals.
- Around noises.
- In stressful environments.

This part alone can already create a major change in the dog’s life.

Because from this moment, the dog has a new internal tool.

The dog knows how to return to relaxation.

Part 2: Relaxation around food

Food is often one of the first places where tension appears.

Many dogs become excited, impatient, tense, or overstimulated when food appears.

In this part, we teach the dog to stay relaxed around food.

This is important for two reasons.

First, food may be used during the training process, so we do not want food to create overexcitement or tension.

Second, relaxation around food supports a calmer relationship with eating and the digestive process.

The dog learns:

- Food does not mean tension.
- Food does not mean panic.
- Food does not mean losing control.

Food can be connected with calmness.

Part 3: Coming to you through relaxation

Instead of conditioning the dog to come only as a command, we teach coming to you as a relaxed, connected response.

The dog learns to return to the human not from pressure, but from connection.

This creates the foundation for better cooperation in daily life.

Part 4: Relaxation on leash pressure

Leash pressure is one of the biggest daily problems for many dog owners.

Pulling, tension, resistance, and frustration often begin here.

In this part, the dog learns to relax in response to leash pressure.

This helps with walking, guiding, changing direction, entering new places, and managing daily-life situations.

The leash becomes less of a source of conflict and more of a communication channel.

Part 5: Staying and waiting

Waiting is not only obedience.

For many dogs, waiting creates tension.

They may become impatient, anxious, frustrated, or overexcited.

In this part, we teach the dog to stay and wait while remaining relaxed.

This becomes the foundation for many later skills, including separation work.

The dog learns:

- I can wait.
- I can stay.
- I can remain calm.
- Nothing bad is happening.

Part 6: Going in and out of places

Dogs often become tense when entering or leaving spaces.

Doors, cars, rooms, crates, grooming areas, veterinary clinics, elevators, or unfamiliar places can all create stress.

In this part, we teach the dog to go in and out of places with relaxation.

This helps the dog move through the human world with more confidence.

Part 7: Car relaxation and travelling

For dogs who struggle with the car, this part is essential.

We teach the dog to approach the car, enter the car, stay in the car, and travel with more relaxation.

The goal is not only to get the dog into the car.

The goal is to help the dog feel good enough to travel calmly.

Part 8: Grooming, handling, and vet preparation

Every dog needs handling.

- Nail clipping.
- Brushing.
- Cleaning.
- Hair clipping.
- Eye drops.
- Ear care.
- Vet checks.
- Possible injections.
- General body handling.

For many dogs, these experiences are stressful.

In this part, we teach the dog to relax during care procedures.

This is one of the most practical and important parts of the program.

Because a dog should not spend life fighting necessary care.

The goal is for grooming and handling to become calm, safe, and even enjoyable.

Part 9: Meeting and living with other animals

Many dog owners already have another dog, a cat, or other animals at home.

Introducing animals can be stressful.

If the animals fight, avoid each other, or become tense, the whole household suffers.

In this part, we use relaxation to help the dog connect with other animals.

This can help dogs join a group, meet other dogs, or begin living peacefully with other animals.

The goal is not forced socialization.

The goal is relaxed connection.

Part 10: Separation and staying alone

Modern dogs often need to stay alone at home.

But many dogs cannot truly rest when the owner leaves.

- They wait in tension.
- They bark.
- They panic.
- They listen for every sound.
- They cannot sleep deeply.

In this part, we teach relaxation during separation.

The dog learns that being alone does not have to mean stress.

The dog learns how to stay relaxed even when the human is not physically present.

This is one of the most important skills for modern family dogs.

Part 11: Relaxation on noises and barking triggers

Many dogs react strongly to sounds.

- Other dogs barking.
- People in the hallway.
- Cars.
- Doors.
- Street noises.
- Unexpected sounds.

Instead of adding more tension through correction or suppression, we use relaxation to decondition the reaction.

The dog learns to hear sounds without automatically reacting.

This can be life-changing for dogs who bark at noises, react at home, or become stressed by their environment.

Part 12: Walk with me

The final block brings the method into everyday walks.

Walking is not only about leash manners.

It is about moving through the world together.

In this part, we work on relaxed walking, street situations, meeting people, meeting dogs, and staying connected when life becomes more stimulating.

The dog learns to walk with the human in a calmer, more cooperative, more relaxed way.

The deeper result: a dog who can live better

This program is not only about solving one problem.

It is about changing the dog’s foundation.

A dog who can relax can learn better.

A dog who can relax can connect better.

A dog who can relax can handle stress better.

A dog who can relax can rest better.

A dog who can relax can cooperate better.

A dog who can relax can enjoy life more.

This is why relaxation is not a small training technique.

It is a central life skill.

Why this is a premium program

The Optimal Performance Program is not a simple obedience course.

  • It is a complete system for transforming the dog’s daily life through relaxation.

  • It gives you a new way to understand your dog.

  • It gives you a new way to work with behavior.

  • It gives you a new way to build connection.

  • It gives your dog a skill that can be used again and again, in many situations, for the rest of life.

This is why the program is for serious owners, ambitious amateurs, promoters, and trainers who want more than standard dog training.

It is for people who want a dog who does not only perform behaviors, but truly feels better.

Frequently asked questions

No.

The program is excellent for dogs with daily-life challenges, but it is also valuable for dogs who are already doing well.

Relaxation improves the foundation of the dog’s life.

Even a “normal” dog can become calmer, more connected, easier to handle, and more emotionally balanced.

No.

The program is suitable for ambitious dog owners, even if they do not have professional experience.

You will learn step by step.

Many people without deep dog-training experience can learn the method quickly when they follow the process carefully.

Yes.

The program is especially valuable for trainers who feel that standard reinforcement-based training does not solve the deeper issues they see in dogs.

It gives trainers a new framework for working with tension, relaxation, daily-life behavior, and the human-dog bond.

No.

This is much deeper.

We are not simply trying to make the dog tired or quiet.

We are teaching the dog conscious relaxation as a repeatable skill.

The dog learns how to access relaxation in many contexts.

The program changes the foundation under obedience.

When the dog is relaxed and connected, many behaviors become easier.

Instead of constantly adding more commands, we build the internal state that allows cooperation to happen more naturally.

Yes, barking is one of the areas addressed in the program, especially barking connected with separation, noises, and hearing other dogs.

The method does not focus on suppressing barking.

It works by reducing the tension and pre-conditioned reactions behind the barking.

Yes.

Relaxation during separation is one of the core parts of the program.

The dog learns how to remain relaxed when the human leaves and how to rest more peacefully when alone.

Yes.

The program includes grooming, handling, and vet preparation.

The goal is to help the dog relax during necessary care procedures, instead of experiencing them as stressful or threatening.

Yes.

The program includes car relaxation and travelling.

The dog learns to approach, enter, stay in, and travel by car with more relaxation.

This program is for you if…

You want a calmer dog.

You want a deeper bond.

You want your dog to feel better, not only behave better.

You are tired of methods that only teach commands but do not solve the deeper problem.

You want to understand your dog’s tension, emotions, and reactions.

You want better daily life at home, outside, in the car, at the vet, and around other animals.

You want a serious, premium training system based on relaxation.

You want to help your dog become a better companion in modern life.

The invitation

Your dog does not need more pressure.

Your dog needs a skill that changes everything.

The skill of relaxation.

When a dog learns how to relax consciously, the whole life of the dog can improve.

Behavior improves because the dog is less tense.
Connection improves because the dog feels safer.
Daily life improves because the dog can settle.
Training improves because the dog can think.
The relationship improves because you are no longer fighting symptoms.

You are working with the real foundation.

The Optimal Performance Program for Dogs gives you this foundation.

It is a new way to train.

A new way to connect.

A new way to live with your dog.

JOIN THE REVOLUTION

Optimal Performance Program for Dogs

Original price was: $787.25.Current price is: $646.25.
Select your currency