 And it was something I was watching Adrian talk to Kale about a second ago. We can mix and match a lot of these skills, right? I just kind of saw it out of the corner of my eye, but using some of this scramble technique and then combining it with baseline defense technique, right? And just angle step, hip pulling and crunching, and then if he tries to lift right here, just starting to slide my hips back, okay? Again, anytime I can take a part of a scramble technique and part of a baseline defense technique and kind of mesh them together and it works, that's all we're trying to do. I mean, the shortest distance between A to B is a straight line, right? The most efficient way to get there. Same thing with technique, right? I'm thinking this guy's got me beat, head position. I don't want to wait till I'm here as he's circling to try to wrestle in this position. Now, we're going to talk about this position in a second, all right? But I don't want, this is like plan X, right? I don't want to wait, I don't want to wait that far down the list to try to start making a reaction. But I can be thinking scramble here and then as he tries to lift, if I can get some weight back on his head to this position, kind of like he was talking about, that's perfect. Because this is where we really want to be. We don't ever, that's the thing, we don't want to have to scramble, right? Scramble means my baseline defense isn't working. That means he's better than my baseline defense or he beat it, all right? But if I can go scramble back to baseline defense, that's all we want to do. So as you're wrestling and as you're moving around, just like the question he just asked, absolutely. And then play with it, mess around in there, work with it. Now, I want to talk about this position if we start getting beat on this low single attack. And we're going to step, essentially, we're going to step all the way over his head to this position, all right? But what's going to happen is I've got to make a decision, all right? He beats me on the low single and he starts to circle and collect. Now, when he gets here, he's going to start trying to collect my legs. Once his kind of flagpole arm comes up, I'm stuck here, all right? So as he beats me and starts to circle and I get to my hand, I'm thinking about before this arm comes up, just swinging this leg over. And again, we're just going down the list. And this is not plan A, B, or C. What position am I in right now? Just scramble. Talk to me. Spin out. Somebody other than a coach. Spin out. Single leg, spin out, right here. Boom. So I started out low single defense, right? He starts beating my low single defense. I just kind of adjust to the next available position. Again, I'm evaluating risk factor, but I'm also thinking, okay, what's next? What's available for me to use other than just going to my hip and belly and down? So he shoots that low single. All right, again, ankle step, hip pull. But he beats me before I can even get here, okay? Or get my dive and rip over the top. He beats me, starts to circle, post, high leg over. This hand immediately attacks the head, okay? Then I'm looking 90 degrees, hook the hip, turn and rip, okay? So now he attacks a low single. We turn it into a single leg spin out. And again, some of this stuff might happen once, twice in your career. But we got it in the toolbox in case we need it. We're building tendencies and reactions to continue to defend. That's more of a mindset than it is actual technique a lot of times. Does that make sense to everybody? Anybody need to see it again? So again, this is a little bit abstract and off the charts. But again, our only other option was we get taken down, all right? So he can start to circle, start to circle, post, post. See my hips never hit the mat. Big high leg over. Make sure it's head to the outside. And then I'm just hitting my single leg spin out from here. Hooking the hip, driving off the free foot, right back to work. Go. Let's get it. Just going to continue to explore off the ladder. Let's go.