 So recently I am teaching a rifle class and I'm talking about shooting in a very even manner, right? Just one, two, three, four, five. Not like one, two, one, two, one, right? Like just one, two, three, four, five. One, two, three, four, five. One, two, three, four, five. And being able to hit that cadence in a quick manner when you need to and being able to have even splits and how that's important to deliver shots in a precise and quick manner. And I'm going off and I'm talking about this. I'm talking about how I, of course, shoot in that way, right? You're not going to hear me screw it up because, you know, I shoot in even cadence and I practice this and blah, blah, blah. You can see where this is going. So it comes time to do the demo because, of course, you know, I like to put my money where my mouth is and I totally just botched the demo, right? I mean, I get one, two, three, one, two, and I kind of laughed afterward. And that's when I realized it's probably time to go back to the metronome. Hello, everyone. Dylan Schumacher, Citadel Defense. Just a quick little tip here. I, years ago, and I haven't done it in a long time until recently, I used to listen to a metronome from time to time. It was some random thing that I picked up from Travis Haley at the time. But I try to listen to a metronome. And if you want to, you know, get a quick cadence, you can set it on like 200 beats per minute, something like that. And I just tap my finger along to the metronome. And that's how I've been able to, by and large, even out my shooting and even out my splits. And by and large, my splits have decreased and they're pretty even when I shoot fast. And listening to a metronome was probably the single best thing I ever did in order to accomplish that. So if you haven't ever just put on a metronome, you can just Google, you know, online metronome, or you can get an app on your phone or whatever. And just while you're at work, while you're doing something, turn on the metronome and just start tapping your finger and beat with the metronome. If you do that for an hour a week or something like that, and I'm not talking about like a solid hour, right? I'm talking about like five minutes here, five minutes there, 10 minutes here, whatever. And just get used to that cadence and that beat and tapping along with that. Next time you go to the range, and I know this sounds crazy, but next time you go to the range and you start to pick up the pace and you try to shoot fast, it is going to even out your splits. It really does. It evens out your splits and you'll probably find that they've decreased a little bit. And if not, then just speed up that metronome and tap faster, right? And I'm just tapping on my chest because I can't tap on a table in front of you. But you get my point. Tap and beat with that metronome and you are going to find that your splits get better and your shots get more even and you're able to deliver quicker shots with less trigger freeze and more consistency. So I hope that's helpful. If you think I'm crazy, try it out. I promise you, you're going to benefit. Do brave deeds and endure.