All good advice, and just to add a little to it, you might try looking further ahead down the road.
At the risk of trying to teach you (or some; others?) to suck eggs, & regardless of what sort of vehicle you drive/ride...

Many drivers/riders never look past the back of the vehicle immediately ahead when they're driving in traffic, so we tend to easily get fixated on the bumps & potholes etc immediately in front of us, then trying to correct for the bumps & bounces or hazards we see only once it's
right there ahead of us & we're about to run over it/them, which is
faaaarrrr too late for smooth steering inputs - doing that's a sure way to be bobbing & weaving all over the place! :barf: So instead of focussing close in, keep your head up & cast your eye waaaaaay out down the road ahead; as far as you can see where the road goes; then scan all the way back down to the front of your vehicle, checking where & what all the vehicles ahead are doing & developing an idea of the path you want your vehicle to travel & where you want your wheels to go. You should practice this all the time, make it part of every couple of seconds scan that you do of the road ahead, vehicles ahead, potential hazards, instruments, mirrors, vehicles around, vehicles behind, speed & spatial awareness, etc, etc, etc! :thumbup:
If you get into the practice of doing this continual scan out ahead & planning wheel placement/where you want to go etc well before you actually come right up to any specific pothole or hazard, it will become a whole lot easier to gently guide your vehicle down that path - and you might get to the stage of considering alternative paths just in case something turns to custard ahead of you; maybe planning an escape route if that tosser speeding in on a side road doesn't stop; or what evasive manoeuvre you can take besides simply jamming on the brakes & suddenly becoming a mangled bonnet ornament for the Peterbilt that's tailgating right up your clacker if/when someone runs the red light that they hafta have now cos yours just turned green!! :shocked:
Doing this 'scan ahead' thing is particularly helpful on our Spyders/Rykers because of their tendency to be very reactive to the slightest steering input, but if you always scan ahead; plan your path; settle into your seat; engage your core; drop & relax your shoulders & elbows; keep a loose grip on the bars; and gently guide your ryde down the road, you'll very quickly smooth out your steering input & make the whole ryde thing a lot more enjoyable & probably safer too!

hyea:
Just putting it out there. :cheers: