:agree: . And look out
WAAAAAaaaayyy ahead to plan where you want to be on the road as far ahead as you can see; then scan back to the front of the Spyder plotting your path all the way; and repeat - often & repeatedly!
You should always be scanning with your eyes,
don't look at something you want to avoid, cos that'll almost guarantee that you'll hit it! :banghead: Instead,
look at where you want to go! Much of the '
over-correcting' going on is due to that '
trying to force it to go straight' that Ron mentions above, and we should all know by now
that never works! :bdh: And the bulk of the rest is because you are most likely focussing waaayyy to close in to the front of the machine, trying to avoid bumps or whatever as you run over them...

.
So look up, look waaayy ahead, and relax - your hands, wrists, fore-arms, & shoulders. Let your shoulders relax & drop; keep your elbows soft & loosely in; keep your hands & wrists gentle & relaxed on the controls,
and then gently guide your Spyder where you want it to go rather than forcibly steering it! :lecturef_smilie:
On a Spyder/Ryker, you've got twice the wheels up front that most other motorcycles have, so there is going to be
at least that much extra '
road surface feedback', which as a ryder you'll hafta learn to pretty much ignore so that you don't tense up while trying to respond to each & every twitch, and instead, just get on with relaxing & safely guiding your Spyder/Ryker along your pre-planned path - that path you are looking waaay ahead for & revising/reviewing all the time as you continually scan with your eyes and avoid fixating on the very things you don't want to hit!
Practice, relax, get some ryde time in, and you'll eventually get there! :thumbup:
Then just
Ryde More, and Worry Less! 
hyea: