 Make them travel into it, make them travel into it, travel into it, pull them down tight, take my right leg now and push them across. And everybody's got a million ways that they want one broke. I think if you kind of stick to that, kind of trot in those circles, getting that horse's body broke, shortening them down and pushing them around with that off foot, it'll make the transition of going to one hand a lot easier. Like when I want to go like this, now when I lay that off rain, that horse steps across. Take them the other direction, use that off rain, step that horse across. And kind of these simple mechanics apply going into this, asking for that stop right there. That's the kind of stop I like really like. I'm not asking this, you know, kind of two-year-old that's had 45 days to just break his hawks, you know. A pet peeve that I have or something that bothers me is when I see somebody break a two-year-old down to a stop like this, you know, that's not what I really want. I want to see them ride that horse forward enough and get that horse's body broken up to where that stop is just natural, like it's just a float like that. You know, that's where we need to start with the stop. You know, I think so much of it is we don't want these horses like a John Wayne movie where when you lay the rain across your neck, their head hangs up in there, but there is a certain amount of that that comes in handy. There's a certain amount of having that horse, like you can have that horse so broke to where, and I've done it myself, that's how I know to work on it. There's a certain amount of that where when you run your off-side rain across that horse's neck to turn to the right, especially me, you know, mine nine times out of ten are going to hang their head up like this. I call it getting the horse so broke you can't steer them. You know, so I'm constantly working on getting the horse broke to where it's effective broke. You know, it's something I could use type of a broke. If I've just got them just that noodley and that broke to where I can move every leg the way where I want it, it almost works against that. So to me, you really can't skip this process with them because everything that you do to a really good horse that's very responsive, it matters very much. So if you don't have them broke enough to turn around and you drive them up there that cow and that cow scares them and they run off and that's the first thing in their mind that's the first thing they learn. You've already taught them something that you're gonna have hell getting off of them because that horse, if it's good, is that responsive and that smart it's already figured out a bad habit. So, you know, to me that's that's why this process is not to be rushed.