A professional content writer by the name of Ryan Goodchild contacted me about me posting an article he had written on how to manage stress for dog owners. The title of the article is “How to Manage Stress Naturally with Simple Daily Habits” and you can see the article below. Ryan wrote the article and I provided pictures.






Dogs can calm your nerves as well as cause some stress. Our mini Australian Shepherd Rollo chewing up my shoe. Our Leonberger dog Bronco clears tables with his cone. Our mini Australian Shepherd harassing our Leonberger dog and biting his tail. Our Leonberger and our Pug raiding the kitchen and eating the gingerbread house. Our Japanese Chin Ryu and Pug Daisy staging a protest against us travelling. Our Leonberger dog is trying to sit in my wife’s lap.
How to Manage Stress Naturally with Simple Daily Habits
Busy dog owners who are already juggling work, family schedules, and a million small decisions often find themselves struggling with stress management and hoping things will just calm down a bit. The hard part is that stress rarely comes from one big event; it builds from sources of stress like constant notifications, unresolved conflicts, money worries, or even a packed calendar that never resets. Without recognizing stress triggers, it’s easy to treat the noise instead of the cause, and the stress impact on wellbeing can show up as irritability, poor sleep, or feeling stuck in overdrive. Spotting what actually sets stress off turns a vague problem into something that can be handled.

Try Gentle Stress-Relief Modalities
When you can name what’s contributing to your stress levels, it’s easier to choose the right tool for the moment.
- Breathwork: slow, steady breathing practices that help your body downshift.
- Mindfulness: simple attention training to reduce mental spirals.
- Rhodiola rosea supplements: may help support energy levels, mental focus, and resilience to everyday stress and fatigue.
- Essential oils: calming scents used through diffusion or a personal inhaler (skip skin use unless properly diluted).
- THCa: a hemp-derived option some people explore; if you’re curious, you can read more about a THCa cartridge.

Understanding Your Stress Response
Stress is your body’s built-in alert system, not a personal failure. The Cleveland Clinic calls it a natural reaction to changes or challenges, and it can show up in your thoughts, feelings, and actions. When you learn your early signals, you can separate “I’m stressed” from “something is wrong with me.”
This matters because stress patterns are often predictable. Spotting your common causes of stress and your most frequent symptoms helps you choose the right support faster and recover sooner. It also keeps you from treating every bad day like a character flaw.
Picture a typical morning: a late start, nonstop notifications, and a tense conversation. Your shoulders climb, your patience drops, and you reach for caffeine or scrolling. That’s your cue to connect the trigger and the response, then adjust. The same pattern recognition can help you notice stress signals in your pets, too.

Calm Together: Reduce Stress for You and Your Dog
Once you start noticing how stress shows up in your body and habits, it’s easier to see how it can ripple out to the beings around you, especially your dog. Dogs are keen observers, and a shift in your schedule, voice, or body language can register as “something’s off.” Calm, family-oriented breeds like Leonbergers often mirror the mood of the home, so when you’re rushed, inconsistent, or tense, they may become more clingy, withdrawn, restless, or reactive.
The good news is that the same steady routines that help you feel grounded can help your dog feel safe. Regular walks burn off nervous energy for both of you, and consistent feeding and sleep times make the day more predictable. Add a little quiet bonding time, sitting together, gentle attention, an unhurried presence, and create a calm space where your dog can settle when the house feels busy.

Daily Stress-Soothing Habits You Can Repeat
These habits work because they are simple enough to repeat on busy days, which helps your nervous system learn what “safe and settled” feels like over time. Pick one or two, practice them consistently, and let the routine support both you and your home.
Two-Minute Breath Reset
- What it is: Do six rounds of 30-second deep breathing while sitting comfortably.
- How often: Daily, or before stressful moments.
- Why it helps: Slow breathing lowers body tension and helps your mind re-center.
Light-and-Move Morning Start
- What it is: Get daylight, drink water, and take a 10-minute easy walk.
- How often: Most mornings.
- Why it helps: Movement and light support energy, mood, and calmer focus.
Workday Boundary Check
- What it is: Choose a clear stop time and do a 3-minute tidy reset.
- How often: Weekdays.
- Why it helps: A clean ending reduces rumination and protects your evening.
Stress-Smart Plate
- What it is: Build meals with protein, fiber, and a color, then snack intentionally.
- How often: Daily.
- Why it helps: Stable blood sugar can reduce jitters and irritability.
Screen-Free Wind-Down
- What it is: Put your phone away and do a short stretch or shower.
- How often: Nightly, last 30 minutes.
- Why it helps: Less stimulation helps your body shift toward sleep.

Stress-Relief Questions People Ask Most
Q: How do I choose a relaxation technique that actually works for me?
A: Pick the one you will realistically repeat, not the “perfect” method. Start with something low-friction like slow breathing, a short walk, or gentle stretching, then notice what changes first: sleep, irritability, or focus. If you hate a technique, it is okay to swap it.
Q: Why do I feel worse when I try to relax?
A: This is more common than people realize, especially if you have been running on adrenaline for a long time. Try a lighter version: shorter sessions, eyes open, or movement-based calming like walking. If panic spikes, pause and choose grounding actions like naming five things you see.
Q: When I miss a day, should I start over?
A: No, you are practicing a skill, not passing a test. Restart with the smallest version of your habit and anchor it to something you already do, like after brushing your teeth. Consistency over time matters more than streaks.
Q: When is professional support the safest next step?
A: Reach out if stress is affecting sleep for weeks, causing frequent panic, or leading you to rely on alcohol, drugs, or self-harm thoughts. A clinician can help you build a plan that protects both your body and mind. If you ever feel unsafe, seek urgent help right away.



This was a stressful situation. Our Leonberger dog Bronco, wearing a cast chased our neighbor and his Corgis down the street. He was limping badly but wanted a walk so we took him outside just for a little bit. We did not think he needed a leash in his condition, but it turned out he could run. He was not supposed to bump his cast and not chase neighbors either. Illustrations by Naomi Rosenblatt.
Small Habits, Lasting Calm
Managing stress naturally does not require a complete lifestyle overhaul. By learning to recognize your stress triggers, understanding how your body responds, and building a few simple, repeatable habits into your day, you can create more resilience and balance over time. Whether you find relief through breathwork, mindful routines, supportive supplements, or simply creating calmer rhythms for yourself and your family, consistency matters more than perfection. Small daily actions can add up to meaningful changes, helping you navigate life’s challenges with greater clarity, energy, and peace of mind.
