Education for Modern Pet Professionals

“We can provide better handling — and dogs deserve that we do.” — Ashley Hanvey

“We can provide better handling — and dogs deserve that we do.” — Ashley Hanvey

A woman with glasses, colorful bow, and casual clothing standing with one hand on her shoulder and smiling at the camera.

Respect Centered Handling

The art of Connecting to the Dogs on our Grooming Tables

Coming in Q4 2026

Respect the Dog in Front of You

Dogs do not arrive on our tables as blank slates.

They arrive with nervous systems shaped by genetics, gestation, early handling, fear periods, hormones, health, and lived experience.

Respect-Centered Handling is not strictly a “Handling style.”

It is a professional responsibility.

If we want safer grooming, better outcomes, fewer injuries, fewer headlines, and dogs who can tolerate care across their lifetime, we must commit to handling that is developmentally informed, emotionally aware, and ethically grounded.

A happy white dog with curly fur and a colorful patterned bandana around its neck, sitting and looking at the camera with its tongue out. There is a logo that reads "MEG The Traveling Groomer" on its side.
A brown and tan dog with wiry fur, sitting and looking at the camera.
A small dog with light-colored fur and large, dark eyes, wearing a purple bow as a collar, standing and looking at the camera. The image includes a logo that says 'MEG The Traveling Groomer' near the dog's front leg.

What is the Respect Centered Handling Program about?

First we start with the “WHY”:

Then we can learn the “HOW”:

Piqued your curiosity?

Sign up to join the waitlist!