"Dogs were meant to live outside" is a statement repeated so frequently in India that it has acquired the unearned authority of fact. It is not fact. It is a cultural practice that predates our understanding of dog cognition, social bonding, and welfare — and it causes consistent, documented harm to dogs and to the human-dog relationship.

What Dogs Actually Are: The Science

Dogs are the domesticated descendant of the grey wolf, selectively bred over 15,000–40,000 years for one primary trait: integration with human social groups. A dog kept in isolation from the human family it belongs to is in a state of chronic stress. Studies of cortisol levels in dogs separated from their owners consistently show elevated stress hormones in isolated dogs. The outdoor dog that "seems happy" is often in a state of habituated resignation, not genuine contentment.

The India-Specific Reality

In India, "outside" means temperatures between 8°C and 48°C depending on season and region. An outdoor dog in Delhi in May is in 45°C ambient heat without relief. It also means mosquito exposure year-round, tick exposure without the regular tick checks that only happen through physical contact, stray dog access, and chronic noise and air quality stress stimuli.

The Health Consequences

  • Higher incidence of tick-borne diseases in outdoor dogs
  • Higher heartworm prevalence in outdoor dogs in endemic regions
  • Higher incidence of wounds, infections, and injuries from wildlife and stray dog encounters
  • Chronic stress-related conditions — skin issues, gastrointestinal problems, and immune dysfunction
  • Shorter average lifespan compared to indoor companion dogs

The Behaviour Consequences

An outdoor dog that has limited human contact develops one of two patterns: aggression (under-socialised, fear-reactive) or withdrawal (learned helplessness — appears "calm" but is shut down).

The Practical Compromise for Indian Households

  • Bring the dog inside during extreme weather
  • Daily interaction — at minimum 30 minutes of deliberate, engaged time each day
  • Regular tick checks
  • Vaccination current — outdoor dogs need more diligent vaccine schedules, not less

Related: Apartment dogs India | Tick fever in dogs India | Indie vs breed dogs India

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