One more thing on this and then I'll leave you alone...
Where you look is where you will go. When you approach a curve, visually sweep the road for problems (gravel, pot holes, etc) then look at the apex (center) of the curve and head your bike that way. When you are appraoching the apex, look out of the curve toward where you want to go. LOOK UP not DOWN.
Straight roads are easy. We tend to do the right thing there. Looking down the road, enjoying the ride. Then a curve comes up. You start to concentrate, worry about the unknown, what if I'm going too fast, what if there are obstacles... next thing you know your eyes are focused about 10' in front of the bike. You either have to slow down or things seem like they are flying at you becasue your field of view is so small. Trust your peripheral vision. It's what tells your braing WHERE things are, and that's what matters when you are riding, right? Your focaal vision tells you WHAT things are. Example: Yu look with your focal vision and see "That is a rock" now look where you want to go to avoid the rock and let you peripheralvision help you avoid the rock. Otherwise if you look at the rock 9 times out of 10 you'll hit it. And when you hit it you'll be looking at the ground not up where you are heading.
Look up, look ahead, lean in, push the way you want to turn.