They can just lose the sense of themselves in space uh and uh and they lose their their sense of gravity. It can be a powerful event. Is there anything that you've heard of that they can do to maybe try and get over these make-or-break moments? Increasingly, what we've seen is these athletes being very proactive on this. Um, a lot of them are working with therapists and sports psychologists coming in. Really, if you're talking these days about a top-tier contender, they almost always have in their team somebody who's working on the mind as much as the body, right? And and you'll see, sometimes you'll hear them like playing really loud music. You'll see them dancing. You'll see them meditating sometimes. And these aren't just quirks. These are practiced things to get the mind to quiet down, right? Those are really important tools and probably a lesson to all of us that there are moments when we need to kind of, you know, work through our system a little bit to to calm our brain. And there's another thing that's really important here is that after the yips hit, there is also a whole kind of playbook for how to help athletes recover, how to help them kind of rebuild. This this Dr. Gupta that I spoke to said the experience of going through an event like this is really like grief. They're suffering a loss event. It's very baffling in the moment that all of that work, four years of work, implodes in a single moment. And so there's a really important time for these athletes after they fumble, after they fall short, uh, where they need support, they need help. And and I'll say the hopeful really cool thing on the back end of this, A, is that if they use those techniques often after they do that kind of collapse, they come back stronger. You'll remember Nathan Chen, the great figure skater, uh absolutely uh fell apart uh in South Korea, came back in China and triumphed. Same thing for Simone Biles, the gymnast. Fell apart in Tokyo, uh had the twisties so bad she had to withdraw from competition. Four years later in Paris, she was the great star of the Paris Olympics. And so a lot of these people we're seeing struggle here uh in Milan Cortina. These are going to be the great athletes we're going to see in another four years. Yeah. And Malinin, to his credit, when it was over, he answered everyone's questions. He stood there and took the heat and just admitted that he blew it. Admitted that he may have been too confident and handled it with a lot of poise. Um, yeah. So, I mean, that's, if that's the first step toward recovery after a huge disappointment, he at least is certainly on his way. NPR's Brian Mann. Brian, thanks a lot. Thanks, A. The Olympics are about more than medals. They're about the stories, the sacrifices, and those rare moments that bring everyone together. NPR is covering the wins, the heartbreaks, and everything in between. From first-time athletes to history-makers, if you're enjoying the ride, support the coverage by hitting the blue donate button. Thanks for being part of the team.