 See, see, as soon as I put that leg in there, it shapes that body. She feels that and she shapes that body around. But we're still driving with that hip. This rain controls this side of the body. This leg controls that horse pushing out that circle. One fluid move. And one of the reasons I wanted to do this video, I've had a lot of different guys come the last couple months and bring their colts and stuff. And it seems like everyone, that horse is just here and just bound up. And you know, guys are doing a good job and trying to do a good job, but they're their own worst enemy. And I know that because I've been there and I fought with the horses and scratched my head, banged my head up against the wall and tried to figure out what I'm doing. And I was the one that was making them in a bind and making them where they couldn't do what I really wanted them to do. So you have to think about that horse and think about what I want to get across and what's the easiest way for me to get across what I need to get across. And you can see right there, there's, I mean, you do it at a walk or whatever, but you get that front end moving. That is the whole key. You've got to get that front end moving. That's the turnaround. And if a horse is turning around like that, everything takes care of itself. The horse automatically is rocking back. The horse automatically is bringing that nose. His nose has to follow that leg. And it's all one motion where you take that back, back, back, back, back. Then we pull through and there's no flow there with that cow at all. If a horse is stepping with that front leg, they're automatically rocking back. They have to be. And that's ultimately all we want a horse to do. I mean, we don't, when we're showing the horses and stuff, they don't have to back up before they turn around. They can't, they don't have time. They hit that stop, they load up, rock back, and they get through that turn.