 He can then go beyond his point of shoulder. I'll take that and then over here, that's easier. He likes left. Have you noticed that with him? Even under saddle. Oh, there we go. I'm gonna walk away for that. I hope you're all okay with this, but something to think about is he's got a lot of life, right? So the first thing that I'm gonna do with him is just what I call cut an angle, arc or cut an angle. There he's looking and chewing a little bit. But what I'm doing is I'm sort of moving my feet fairly fast, but notice how I cut and he crosses his left hind leg under or I cut to the right and he crosses his right hind leg under. Now I didn't tell you to do this. So you didn't know that you weren't able to do that, but notice how I'm always in front of this horse. Like if he, and this is like your question too, if he were to creep up, I'd just go over here. And he crossed his hind legs a little, didn't he? He offset, he offsetted the haunch. So now he starts to go, well, there's no sense. Yeah, see now there, he stopped. When I want to cut an angle, he stopped his feet. He's like, I'm just gonna stand because I don't need to get in front of you. You're always in front of me. So now I'm further away. So now just momentarily, nose between the shoulders is really important now. Momentarily stop, there, nose between the shoulder and I better walk forward because otherwise I'm not gonna make them stand. My, yeah, it's fuel on the fire right now. Now, there's another thing to think about with halting. When we ask our horses to halt, they need to give you two eyes when you're in front of them, unless you say otherwise. What I mean by that is a lot of horses, when they halt, they think that's their chance to look around. And they'll look right over the top of us sometimes. You ever notice that? So in motion, he focuses. At the halt, he tends to go up left with, and for me, he tends to look up, up into the left there. Now, he was straight that time. And that was a, now if I lose him, if the nose goes past the point of shoulder, you're gonna lose the horse mentally, if you're in front. So the width of his shoulder, he's got wide shoulders, right? His nose can be in this box, this wide, but if he goes beyond, we need to be there. We'd like him to run into the rope and think he did it to himself, that he ran into that rope, ideally. Now, if I ask him to put his nose past his shoulder, that's different. Now, he's a sensitive guy, so if I were to say to him, look, I want you to look over here, and I don't want him to walk off, but he could then go beyond his point of shoulder. I'll take that, and then over here, that's easier. He likes left. Have you noticed that with him? Even under saddle. Oh, there we go. I'm gonna walk away for that. That was interesting. Now, because he's sensitive, sensitivity's a gift. Sometimes. Yeah, yeah, exactly. So, nose between the shoulder. So he's used to maybe, yep, and now I want this way. He picks up on things really like, oh, yeah, he's super, there we go. So I'm just gonna see if I can get him to look a little further to his right. A little more. I'm trying to be really, and I can see why you don't look at, now that I work with him, he's training you to not look at his face because he is sensitive, and eye contact can be a little, for some horses, it's reassuring. For some, it's intimidating. You know what, though? It's the whole person, my whole being. So he's gonna learn, it's cool if Jack looks at me in the eye. In fact, Jack lets me stop sometime. Jack asked me to settle when he looks at me in the eye. A little further. I'm waiting here for another big, I think I'm gonna get another big change. Now, right there, he was unclear. He was ready to, see, he's ready to walk forward, and he's perceptive, so I'm gonna say, no, stay where you're at, stay straight, I'm gonna try to back off a little bit. I know right here, I'm kind of putting a little more, there, a little more pressure on him. I'm not gonna get greedy, there, now I'm gonna walk. Cause if I stayed there any longer, I was gonna, I was gonna overdo. You could see I was getting close, I was getting greedy. Ready? Yeah, I'm gonna make myself more interesting. Now, the other thing is as we move more, we move and halt, watch that life, this is a good horse to see like the life coming up and down. Now, when I trot, you know, I call this trotting, I know I'm jogging, but I like to think about when I jog with my horse and my upright, and how would I, if I were riding your horse right now, how would I be sitting? Would I be like this, or would I be like this? So, that posture, it's really important that we can get that now. I'm gonna do a little more, bringing that life up, and let's just see, I'm more interesting to him now. Now, I didn't get him, I didn't get him amazing, but you'll get him. And, but it did, I did give him more space, didn't I? More room. Do you mind if-