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This is Jane Adamo's original presentation of her
method of Forced Socialization.
"The Forced Socialization Method"
by Jane Adamo, Reprinted with Permission
(Email
Jane Adamo)
Every day, take the problem rat out of the cage and spend one continuous
20-minute period handling him/her. NO SHORTCUTS! TIME IT! Mix it up:
let them sit on your lap/shoulder, let them walk on you, pet them, don’t
pet them, hold them, scratch them, massage them, put them in your
shirt. You can walk around, you can watch TV - just don’t let the rat
get away from you for 20 minutes. Talk to him/her: "Relaaaaax. Good
girl! No, no - stay here." etc. Just make sure you HANDLE them: 20
minutes of the rat sitting on your shoulder won't accomplish anything.
This method gets fast results: the rat's fear can't sustain itself for
20 minutes and it just burns itself out. The whole process will probably
take only a few sessions.
If you're afraid of getting nipped, wear a pair of cotton gardening
gloves: the ones with the rubber dots.
During the few days of the socialization period, keep the cage clear
enough that you can always easily and quickly get to the rat. The rat
should never think that they can GET AWAY from you. They should be under
the impression that no matter where they go, YOU can get to them. Again,
if the rat seems frightened enough to bite when you reach in to get him,
wear the gloves. But please try to see things from the rat's point of
view: in the wild, rats are very wary of "danger from above" - an owl
or hawk swooping down to grab them. And that's what your hand looks
like! So be a kind, gentle, loving and reassuring giant.
This method works great with domesticated Norways but it will also work
with wild Ship Rats.
EVEN FASTER if you promise to take them to McDonalds afterward.
**Additional helpful comment:
"Forced Socialization involves simply holding the rat for 20 minutes, even
against his will. Don't squeeze, of course. If the rat wants to move,
let him run through your hands. Just keep your hands on him for 20
minutes. At first they'll be afraid, and they might struggle or squeak.
But after a time they'll lose their fear - they just can't keep it up after
that long. This exercise works because of rat psychology - rats trust rats
who can dominate them yet not hurt them, and that's exactly what you're
doing when you restrain them. This technique REALLY WORKS, and it works
almost immediately. Do it for a week or so on your rats and see what happens."