 Keep pressure on her here, push her up the middle of the pen, but not scare her. And now I'm going to let my horse have her. We just need to be comfortable right here. Fight her off, dial in. This cow's going to try to run me over in this corner if I don't stay accurate with her. Fight her off just like that. Right here, as a helper, this cow's telling us it's a lot. So right here, he's got total control and we're going to build confidence in him, but we can't do a lot of moving. Let him do the controlling. He can step up to that cow and start it himself. And it's like here, I'm just, like I say, I'm filling my horse out. Can I turn her? Can I move her? Placer were to make a good clean cut because this is where the run starts. It's cutting where I can ride her up there and start my cow. See, now I'm back in control. I'm getting my points back that I took away on my first cow. Cow released me. Just wait there. See, I want to keep her, keep her intense with the cow. Hold on me and the cow, not a hold on me. Here we get back in here. Let her think, wait now, wait there. Little pangles off just a skosher up there. So I stick her back. Again, we'll go right back to what we started with is we're trying to build confidence and like knock on wood, all of them. We've been here now for a month or so. About, yeah. And we've worked like this every day and when a lot of us, including us, we work around a lot. So put our cows in the middle. Well, when, you know, of course, we show like this flat. So working like this in this show situation also gets us confident about going.