 All right, everyone, next up in our handstand prep progression, we're gonna take some of those scissor kick variations that we have been practicing over the last few days and we're gonna try to just shoot for doing an actual float and handstand. So I'm gonna preface this with, I'm not that good at this. So you might not see what a perfect one looks like here. So we're gonna describe it first. As I come in and I do that scissor kick, I lead one leg back this way and the other leg stays back this way. And I can kind of manipulate where they are until I find my balance point, okay? And I just bring one foot further away, that pulls me this way. And if that's too much, I can bring it back up and I can bring the other one this way. And if that's too much, I can kind of correct. And you just sit there and try to figure out your balance. It's kind of creepy when you do it the first time because you feel kind of, I don't know, everything's backwards, right? Gravity's pulling me the other way. So I will try a couple for you. Again, I do like starting this with the pike variations where I just kind of let a one foot come over and then I learn my balance point. But now we can use this to try to kick up into it a little more dynamically. Try not to hit any TVs. Let's just flip here. That's a little longer. It's wicked fun until it hurts, then it's not fun anymore. One more, it's pretty good. So I like to try that until it feels like my wrists and my shoulders just can't take it anymore. I'll notice them start to bend and then I'm just trying to muscle myself up. And it's not really the goal. That is the, what did we call this? The pike handstand scissor float. The idea is I'm floating in the air as long as I can, okay? And if you get it, then you can just straighten your hands or straighten your legs up, your hands straighten your legs up and just do a handstand.