Alyssa Healy is back home in Sydney and talking to the BBC Stumped podcast after pressure washing her back yard.
"Back to reality", she says with a broad smile, relishing the normality of a bit of home maintenance.
"The innings hasn't really changed me or my life too much, which is probably a good thing. It's my job, after all. I guess I can tick the box and say that I did a good job."
Healy did much more than a good job. It is typical of her humble and grounded nature that she regards her record-breaking 170 from 138 balls - the highest individual score made in a men's or women's World Cup final - as the equivalent of a good day at the office. It will go down as one of the greatest one-day international innings of all time.
Had she realised what an incredible knock she was playing at the time though, it might not have lasted so long for the wicketkeeper-batter.
"This is going to sound a bit silly, but it never felt special at any point, which is probably a good thing," she says. "It meant it never really clicked in my mind what was happening.
"I was a little bit worried about heading out there and facing the new ball, knowing their attack.
"Once we got through that little tricky period, it was put the foot down and consolidate. It was one of those days where everything seemed to come off, so I was pretty lucky in the end."
The luck extended to being dropped on 41 after Australia had been asked to bat first.
However, the skill and game awareness to build her innings, to accelerate, to manipulate fields and execute shots like the ramp - which is not a shot she finds naturally comfortable to play - and the lofted cover drive ("sometimes I get a little bit amazed at how I can hit the ball over cover") was all about talent and aptitude, not chance.
"I don't know where it comes from," she says of her ability to clear the off side boundary.
"I've played a lot of hockey in my life, so there's that natural bat swing. I play a lot of golf too. But I love the ability to hit over the off side. I think it's such a natural cricket shot.
"I get to watch [Australia captain] Meg Lanning do it quite a lot in our team. Any time you hit a six over mid-off or cover, it's pretty special."