 To me, I want to catch that nose and keep that shoulder stood up and then when I open it kind of comes through, it's like riding a bicycle I guess, you know, you've got to keep this stood up and I want to get that nose there to where it's soft and then let it come through. So later on as we all get going, all I've got to do is just grab it there and everything's going to come through with it. You know, so like I said, it's like riding a bicycle, you've got the handlebars right here and you just turn it like that, you know. So I mean a lot of it, like on them younger horses, now I've got a little correction on this horse, a lot on them two-year-olds, I'm going to have a snaffle and I'm going to pull back here a lot, I'm going to pull to my hip, drop to my knee, like so when I trot them around here, I'll leave and do it now because I think this is a really good exercise. You pull to your hip, get them to where they're soft, trotting around, drop it to your knee, pull it to your hip, that way you want to take his head away, just keep him to where he's here. Change this way, pull it to your hip, drop it to your knee, pull it to your hip, drop it to your knee. You know what I mean, just to wear that horse and now he's wanting to trot around and he's staying behind the bridle to where, when he's behind, when he's bridled up and soft like that, he has everything through here soft. He's back, he's back is around, he can get, okay, so this horse is being pretty good right here, so I'm just going to kind of let him have that care, let him work it there, he jumped off a little bit, I'm just going to draw him back. Like I said, I want to create them to want to do it, only when he gets in trouble am I going to help him. Right there, he kind of bounced that stop a little bit, just going to forget it even happened, because he's done a lot more good moves.