Cesar Millan
Cesar Millan
Cesar Millan,is a Mexican-American self-taught dog behaviorist. He is widely known for his television series Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan, broadcast in more than eighty countries worldwide from 2004 to 2012. Prior to The Dog Whisperer series, Millan focused on rehabilitating severely aggressive dogs and founded the Dog Psychology Center in South Los Angeles. In 2009, the Dog Psychology Center moved to Santa Clarita, California. Millan also opened an East Coast clinic at the Country Inn Pet Resort in Davie,...
NationalityMexican
ProfessionReality Star
Date of Birth27 August 1969
CityCuliacan, Mexico
CountryMexico
Dogs and other animals we bring into our homes serve as one of our most important links to Mother Nature. We may not think about it consciously, but they are our lifelines to a part of ourselves that we are at the brink of losing altogether.
When a dog is balanced, you are going to enjoy a true friend.
What keeps a nation strong is really the community. It is about people helping each other.
Humans will always tell you the story. Dogs can only tell you the truth. Trust your instincts and listen your dog.
Dogs experience the world as it is, without judgement. When we learn to do the same, we make the world a better place.
I believe in integrity. Dogs have it. Humans are sometimes lacking it.
There are a lot of things that people are doing unconsciously wrong.
The dog can only become what's in your bubble. The dog is imitating the energy that is in your bubble. You are the source, the feast of energy. If you feel anxious, the dog becomes anxious with you. If you become nervous, the dog wakes up nervous with you.
Dogs help you to appreciate the world around you. They smell the ground so intensely. They look at the trees as though they are seeing them for the first time. It helps us to remember the wonders that we take for granted.
The thing about discipline is that people misunderstand the word discipline. People think discipline in the dog world is punishment. Discipline is how you achieve what you want to achieve in life. You have to be very focused, very disciplined, very consistent, very diligent. All of those things.
A lot of times in parks the large dogs and little dogs separate. That creates the opposite of social. Sometimes dogs run back in forth with a fence dividing them so it is fence fighting with social interaction.
There is no such thing as a problem breed. However, there is no shortage of 'problem owners'....
You don't always get the dog you want, but you get the dog that you need.