Why most people get it wrong in the first 5 seconds
Most people get this wrong in the first few seconds of meeting a German Shepherd.
They see the dog — especially a long-haired one — and they go straight in.
Eye contact. Talking. Reaching. Stepping forward.
To them, it feels friendly.
To the dog, it’s pressure.
A real moment
You’ve seen it. Or you’ve dealt with it.
Someone walks up and says,
“Wow, beautiful dog.”
And before you can say a word, they’re already:
- staring right at the dog
- leaning in slightly
- hand coming out
And the dog changes.
Sometimes it’s obvious. Sometimes it’s not.
- body tightens
- head comes up
- eyes lock
- energy shifts
That’s the moment things start to go sideways.
Not because the dog is bad.
Because the approach is wrong.
The first rule
Don’t apply pressure before you have permission.
That’s the rule.
If you understand that, you’re already ahead of most people.
Pressure looks like:
- direct eye contact
- reaching in
- stepping into space
- talking at the dog
- trying to make something happen too fast
Most people do this automatically.
Why it matters
German Shepherds are always reading what’s in front of them.
Movement.
Posture.
Intent.
Energy.
When someone comes in too fast, the dog has to decide what to do.
That decision might be:
- move away
- hold ground
- push back
- shut down
- or tolerate it and remember it
None of that is the same as being comfortable.
And when it keeps happening, it builds.
This is how behaviour starts to shift — not because something is wrong with the dog, but because the dog keeps getting handled wrong.
What to do instead
Slow it down.
If you’re meeting a German Shepherd:
- stand normally
- turn slightly instead of facing head-on
- don’t lock eyes right away
- let the dog come to you
- keep everything calm and predictable
If the dog approaches, don’t turn it into a moment.
No grabbing.
No sudden movement.
No overdoing it.
Let it build.
What good actually looks like
Most people miss this.
A good interaction with a German Shepherd is usually boring.
The dog:
- comes over
- checks things out
- decides
And that’s it.
No tension. No forcing anything.
That’s success.
Not excitement.
Not instant connection.
Not “he loves me.”
Just calm, neutral acceptance.
Where people mess it up
They rush.
They want the dog to respond like an easygoing, social breed.
They see hesitation and try to fix it instead of respecting it.
So they push.
And the dog answers.
Then suddenly it’s:
“Reactive.”
“Nervous.”
“Protective.”
Most of the time, the dog was just put in a bad spot.
What this means for you
If you own one, this matters.
You’re not just handling your dog.
You’re managing every interaction around your dog.
That means:
- stepping in when people move too fast
- slowing things down before they escalate
- protecting space when needed
- not letting bad reps stack up
Because every interaction is doing one of two things:
- building stability
or - adding friction
The bigger picture
This doesn’t stop at greetings.
This is how behaviour develops over time.
Dogs that deal with constant pressure:
- get more guarded
- more reactive
- more selective
- less tolerant
Dogs that are handled properly:
- stay neutral
- stay stable
- stay predictable
That gap gets bigger faster than people think.
Final thought
A German Shepherd doesn’t need to like everyone.
And they don’t need everyone to like them.
They need to feel:
- understood
- respected
- not pushed
Get that right, and everything else gets easier.
Continue learning
If you want to understand how your dog actually thinks:
👉 The Shepherd Mind (Behaviour Library)
If you’re starting from the beginning: