 And then as I come to this cone he's bending and shaping right. What I'm doing with my legs is the leg closest to the cone is forward and the leg furthest from the cone is back but then in between the cones I end up shifting my legs. So my new inside leg or my new cone leg comes forward and my outside leg comes back. So left leg forward, right leg back. Now I come to this cone and I go right leg forward, left leg back. You'll notice that as I'm doing this my horse is changing his bend in shape as he's coming through and I'm exaggerating this a little bit. So my hands on this circle are moving because my shoulders are moving. So my right shoulder comes back and then my left shoulder comes back. So the shoulder closest to the cone is coming back slightly. That's moving my hands. Now if my horse doesn't respond what I'm going to do is squeeze that ring as though I'm squeezing a sponge to get a little more bend. So I'm going to squeeze that ring. Now it's going to be very important that whatever you take on the inside you are allowing on the outside. So the outside ring needs to come forward to allow your horse to make that shape change or make that bend change. If you're holding on the outside you're going to be creating a lot of resistance and that resistance is going to show up in their head, neck, jaw, shoulders. Now let's talk a little bit about your weight. So your weight is going to the side of the cone. So my weight's a little bit in the right seatbone as my right leg's forward and now my weight's a little bit in the left seatbone as my left leg comes forward. So I'm doing a little shift of my weight. That's real important because if I hold again I'm going to create tension and bracing in their body and I hadn't mentioned that earlier as I was riding this exercise but it would be the same thing when you're weaving. It's a ask in a release, ask in a release. It's got some feel. What I'm going to do is just talk a little bit and we'll finish up for the day. This is an exercise that is going to get you riding every stride. Get one piece at a time and then you can start putting it all together. Okay, have fun with this exercise and until next time, happy riding. Wait, one more thing. Hey, if you're watching this on Facebook please give us a thumbs up. Share it with a friend. Take a friend in the comments below if you think they might get something from it. If you're watching this on YouTube, please like our channel or give the video a thumbs up. We really appreciate that and I love comments. So leave a comment below. Let me know your thoughts. Does this exercise make sense for you and your horses? Is it something you're going to work on next time? Have you tried it? Once you try it, great. Let me know how it worked out for you. Okay, until next time, happy riding.