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Mother dogs may show brief signs of stress or loss when their puppies are removed, but most adjust quickly and do not experience prolonged sadness.
The bond between mother dogs and puppies is strong, rooted in hormonal cues and scent, and provides nourishment, protection, and essential behavioral lessons during the early weeks. As puppies mature, this bond naturally evolves, allowing for healthy independence.
Dogs understand love through positive associations, so expressing 'I love you' means using consistent affection, praise, touch, and bonding activities.
The 3-3-3 rule for dogs refers to a guideline for acclimating adopted dogs: 3 days to decompress, 3 weeks to learn the routine, and 3 months to feel at home.
You show a dog you love them by building positive associations through affection, consistent care, praise, and emotionally meaningful experiences.
The 3-3-3 rule refers to the general adjustment timeline for adopted dogs: 3 days to decompress, 3 weeks to start learning routines, and 3 months to fully settle in.
You say "I love you" in dog language through consistent affection, positive reinforcement, gentle tone, body language, scent familiarity, and shared experiences over time.
The 3-3-3 rule for dogs outlines the adjustment period in three phases: 3 days to decompress, 3 weeks to learn routines, and 3 months to feel fully at home.
Dogs do not remember yesterday in the same way humans do, but they form lasting associations through experiences and repetition, allowing them to recall people, routines, and emotional events over time.
While dogs do not perceive time the same way humans do, their associative and long-term memory allows them to sense routine and anticipate events, making one hour feel longer especially in anticipation or separation.

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