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"To Capture What Others Cannot See"

Impressionism
Art

Step into the world of Edward Lawrence, where extraordinary Art meets inspiring creativity, "Impressionistic Art". Our gallery showcases a curated collection of stunning "Works of Art" by Edward Lawrence. Inviting you to experience the beauty and emotion of each piece.

Mission

"To Capture What Others Cannot See"

Vision

To show others, there is a part of history, that we have forgotten. And that, there is another way. That women can get along, with each other and live with one man. If he is worthy 

-Polygyny. 

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Get to Know Us

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Here’s a clear, accurate, modern explanation of “Alpha Behavior” in Wolves, based on what biologists now understand (which is very different from the old “Dominance” myth). 

Alpha Behavior in Wolves (Modern Scientific Understanding) 

For decades, people believed Wolf Packs were ruled by an “Alpha Male” and “Alpha Female” who fought their way to the top. 
This idea is outdated and incorrect. 

Modern Wolf Science—especially the work of Wolf expert Dr. David Mech—has shown that: 

1. “Alpha” Wolves are actually parents—not dominant tyrants 

Wild Wolf Packs are family units: 

  • The “Alpha Male” is simply the father of the pack. 

  • The “Alpha Female” is the mother. 

  • Other pack members are usually their offspring from one or more years. 

So, the so‑called “Alpha Pair” are not leaders by force but by parenthood and experience. 

They guide the pack the way human parents' guide a family. 

2. Wolves rarely fight for dominance inside the pack 

Inside a Natural Wolf Family: 

  • Serious fights are extremely rare. 

  • Members know their roles naturally because it’s a Family Hierarchy. 

  • Cooperation, not aggression, is the norm. 

  • Wolves focus on survival: raising pups, hunting, traveling, defending territory. 

Dominance fights mostly occur in captivity, where unrelated wolves are forced together—something that does not reflect wild behavior. 

3. “Alpha Behavior” looks like "Leadership", not Domination 

Parent Wolves show leadership through: 

✔ Decision-Making 

They decide when to: 

  • Move 

  • Hunt 

  • Rest 

  • Change territory 

✔ Teaching 

They train the pups: 

  • How to hunt 

  • How to communicate 

  • How to read danger 

✔ Protection 

They defend the pack from outside threats, not from each other. 

✔ Conflict Resolution 

They maintain harmony with body language, gentle corrections, or leading by example—not fear. 

4. Communication, not force, maintains order 

Wolves use: 

  • Body posture 

  • Ear position 

  • Tail signals 

  • Vocalizations (howls, whines, growls) 

These signals prevent conflict, not provoke it. 
This is very different from the older misconception of Wolves constantly fighting for rank. 

5. When a young Wolf leaves, it starts its own pack 

Young adults eventually: 

  • Leave the family 

  • Find a mate 

  • Establish their own territory 

  • Become the “Alpha Pair” of their own new family 

So “Alpha Status” is not earned by dominance—it’s earned by Reproduction and Survival. 

In short: 

Alpha Behavior in Wolves is really "Parental Behavior". 
They are leaders because they are the adults, not because they fight for power. 

This is a beautiful example of nature using cooperation over conflict. 

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