 Behavioral traps. Ah, it's a trap. Literally, that's what you're trying to do here. You're trying to set a trap for a behavior. The key with a behavioral trap is this. You need somebody to engage in a behavior that they already have in their skill set, a really simple behavior. Like, think of it as this. Open the door. Open the door, little person. Open the door, dare you. Watch what happens when you open the door, right? So it sounds kind of naughty, right? But they're gonna open that door, which is really easy to do. And inside, it's all their friends and all their toys and all these different things that they can play with. Those different things, right? They lock on to that kiddo. They lock on to whatever behaviors are associated with it, okay? So you set this trap. So you ask the kiddo or the adult, whatever it is, to do something that then opens the door for a whole bunch of other reinforcers to be interconnected and maintain social behaviors, academic behaviors, all sorts of things. Like, I don't know, maybe smoking? What? Smoking's a behavioral trap? Sure. It's easy. I guess that's how you smoke a cigarette is like a gun. I mean, similar. Your cigarettes are funny. No, I might have funny cigarettes. Well, that would be like this. We are in Washington, folks. Anyway, so smoking a cigarette, really easy response to inhale, right? That's not a challenging response. It's really easy to do. And it opens the door for a whole bunch of reinforcers. This sounds really bad because, but anyway, it's cigarette smoking. But anyway, think about it. You get to escape work when no one else does. You get to have social reinforcement with other smokers. You get all sorts of these with the nicotine itself. So that's, smoking is kind of like a behavioral trap. And just think about this. Now that you know what's involved in smoking and the reinforcers that are present, you can start to break those darn reinforcers to get rid of that nasty habit. Behavioral traps.