Daily Structure & Routines

All three cycles use the same daily structure. This consistency is what builds the habit and makes training sustainable.


The Full Daily Schedule

TimeActivityDurationPurposePractice
~4:00 AMWake, Potty #15 minBathroom break-
~4:30 AMBreakfast5 minBowl/scatter/Kong feedBreak (place bed)
~5:00 AMGym60 minYour workout-
~6:00 AMMorning Marker Session5 minQuick marker work, sit/down maintenanceQuick reps
~6:00 AMPotty #2, #35 minBefore work-
6-2pmCrate Time-While at work-
~3:00 PMPotty immediately5 minFirst thing home-
3:00 PMCOURTYARD SESSION10 minMarker + Engagement (THE ANCHOR)Never changes
~3:15 PMDecompression20-30 minCrate/tether/house lead-
~3:45 PMBONUS TRAINING SESSION10-15 minThis week’s game from cheatsheetSkill building
~4:30 PMDinner5 minMeal #2 (scatter/training/Kong)Break (place bed)
~4:30 PMExercise Outlet20-30 minWalk/play/field work + 2-3 check-insCheck-in reps
~5:30 PMPuppy Parking5-10 minSettle work after exerciseSettle/calm
~5:45 PMPotty5 min--
~6:00 PMEvening Session (optional)5 minLight work if energy allows-
~6:15 PMNeutral Time30 minCalm hanging out-
~6:45 PMFinal Potty5 minBefore bed-
7:00 PMLights Out-Crate/bed for night-

The Three Core Sessions

1. The 3PM Courtyard Session (10 Minutes) - THE ANCHOR

This session is the foundation of everything. It happens EVERY SINGLE DAY, no matter what.

Structure:

MinutesActivityWhat You’re Doing
0-4Marker ConditioningRandom YES captures, 15-20 reps, high energy, rapid-fire
4-10Engagement WorkEye contact marking, green circle proximity, sit reps

Marker Conditioning (0-4 minutes)

Goal: Build Pavlovian marker response. She hears “YES” and automatically orients to you.

Protocol:

  • Watch for natural behaviors: glances at you, sniffs your hand, shifts weight toward you
  • Say “YES” the instant it happens
  • Hand to treat bag, drop treat to your side
  • She comes to you for the treat
  • Repeat 15-20 times in 4 minutes (rapid-fire, high energy)

Key: You’re not asking for anything. You’re catching good choices and marking them with YES.

Engagement Work (4-10 minutes)

Goal: Build active choice to check in with you, plus maintain known behaviors.

WhatHowWhy
Eye contact markingWait for her to look at you, excited YES, rewardBuilding active choice to check in
Green circle proximityCalm GOOD when she’s in loose proximity, casual treatTeaching position awareness
Sit reps (5-10)Command once, mark when she sits, rewardMaintenance of known behavior

Key: Sit reps are just maintenance. They should be easy. The real work is the marker conditioning and eye contact.

Why This 10 Minutes Matters

  • Builds bulletproof marker response
  • Creates default handler focus
  • Establishes daily training habit
  • Takes only 10 minutes but compounds over 90 days
  • If this is the ONLY thing you do on a busy day, it’s enough

2. The Bonus Training Session (10-15 Minutes)

This is where you teach the week’s game.

Structure:

MinutesActivityPurpose
0-2Warm-upQuick marker reps, known behavior (get her engaged)
2-12This week’s gameSkill building
12-15Cool-downCalm GOOD markers, settle (end on success)

Principles

  • Keep it short - Brain work is exhausting
  • End on success - Don’t drill to failure
  • High value rewards - This is skill-building, not maintenance
  • If she’s struggling - Make it easier (set her up to win)
  • Track progress - You’ll see it compound over weeks

Weekly Game Schedule

The bonus training session always focuses on that week’s specific game. You’ll find the detailed progression for each game in the cycle pages:


3. Check-Ins During Exercise (2-3 Per Walk)

During walks and exercise, practice 2-3 check-in reps.

StepActionMarker/Reward
1Stop walking-
2Wait for eye contact (don’t ask for it)-
3She looks at youExcited YES
4RewardTreat or brief tug play
5Release and continue walking-

Bonus: If she sees a trigger (dog/cat/squirrel) and checks in with you FIRST → JACKPOT (multiple treats or extended tug session)


Meal Times: Practice Opportunities

Breakfast & Dinner

Use meal times to practice Break (the release cue).

Breakfast Setup:

  1. Prepare her food
  2. Cue “place” on her bed (she lies down)
  3. Place the bowl on the bed in front of her
  4. Cue “break” when she can eat
  5. She eats

Dinner Setup:

Same as breakfast, plus:

  1. After she eats, practice Break again (she leaves the area)

The Non-Negotiables (Every Single Day)

✅ Sessions

  • 3pm Courtyard Session (10 min) - THE ANCHOR - NEVER SKIP THIS
  • This week’s game (10-15 min) - Based on current cycle
  • Exercise outlet (walk/play/field) with 2-3 check-ins
  • Multiple potty breaks
  • Meals served appropriately
  • Crate time maintained

✅ Practices Woven In

  • Morning marker session (5 min)
  • Break practice at meals (place bed)
  • Check-ins during exercise
  • Optional evening light work if energy allows

Weekly Rhythm

The Same Every Week

The daily schedule never changes. This consistency is powerful.

What Changes Weekly

  • The game you’re teaching in the bonus session
  • Your focus and what you’re watching for
  • Nothing else

This is beautiful. You don’t have to decide daily what to do. You already know.


Flexibility & Modifications

What Stays Non-Negotiable

  • 3pm Courtyard Session - Every single day, all 10 minutes
  • Marker response - Built into every session
  • Handler focus - Always being developed

What Can Flex

  • Bonus game timing - Morning instead of afternoon is fine
  • Walk timing - Early morning or evening works
  • Crate schedule - Adjust around your work if needed
  • Optional evening session - Skip if she’s tired or you’re overwhelmed

During Disruptions (Travel, Sick Days, Etc.)

Keep the 3pm Courtyard Session alive

  • Even if you’re at your parents’ house (Thanksgiving week example)
  • Even if it’s not exactly 3pm
  • Even if it’s shorter (7 minutes instead of 10)
  • This routine is your anchor.

Integration Points

With Teaching Down

If you’re also teaching down:

  • Phase 1-5 practice happens during bonus session
  • Phase 6 (duration) practice happens at meals
  • Maintenance reps happen in courtyard session

With Full Training Timeline

This 90-day program is weeks 1-5 of each cycle in the 150-day integrated timeline. The daily structure remains identical throughout the entire arc.


Weekly Reflection Template

End of Each Week

Avoidant Goal Check (Preventing Problems)

QuestionYes/NoNotes
Did we avoid rehearsing bad patterns?
Did I keep her under threshold?
Did I manage high-arousal situations well?
Is she checking in MORE, not less?
Are recovery times from arousal getting faster?

Aspirational Goal Check (Building Excellence)

QuestionYes/NoNotes
Did we make progress on this week’s game?
Is her marker response getting faster?
Is her engagement improving?
Is she showing toy/tug drive?
Can she problem-solve without giving up?

This Week’s Wins

😊 Handler Focus Wins: (Times she chose you over environment)

😊 Drive Moments: (Times she showed enthusiasm for training/play)

😊 Problem-Solving Wins: (Times she figured something out)

This Week’s Challenges

😬 What Needs Work: (Areas where she struggled or regressed)

Next Week’s Focus

(What to carry forward, what to adjust)


What Makes This Sustainable

  1. No Daily Decisions - You know exactly what to do each day
  2. Only 10 Minutes Required - The courtyard session is the minimum
  3. Flexible Timing - Most activities can shift around your schedule
  4. Clear Progressions - Each week’s game is spelled out
  5. Built-in Reflection - Weekly check-ins prevent overwhelm

Common Questions

”Can I do the 3pm session at a different time?”

Yes, but try to keep it consistent. The goal is building a habit. 3pm just happens to be when most people get home, but if another time works better, that’s fine.

”What if I miss a day?”

One missed day is fine. Two in a row, and you’ve lost the momentum. Try to keep the 3pm anchor daily, even if it’s shorter.

”Can I do longer sessions?”

Sure, but don’t let it interfere with the 3pm anchor. That 10 minutes is sacred.

”What if she’s tired?”

  • Shorten the session
  • Make it just marker conditioning (4 minutes)
  • Rest and try again tomorrow
  • Training should be fun for her, not exhausting

”Can I combine meals with training?”

Yes! In fact, we encourage it. Scatter feeding, meal-based training, all great ways to make training part of daily life.


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