TORONTO -- Hayley Wickenheiser hasn't had a lot of time to reflect.
The Canadian women's hockey star -- a quadruple Olympic gold medalist and seven-time world champion -- retired in January 2017 and enrolled in medical school.
As if there wasn't enough on her plate already, she then took on the role as assistant director of player development for the Toronto Maple Leafs in August 2018.
Wickenheiser got a chance to look back at her standout playing career on Monday night.
The 41-year-old was among six inductees enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame, joining three-time Stanley Cup winner Guy Carbonneau, offensive blue-line dynamo Sergei Zubov and Czech great Vaclav Nedomansky in the players' category.
Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Jim Rutherford and longtime Boston College coach Jerry York went into the hall as builders.
"It was not a common thing as a little girl to want to play hockey in the small town where I came from," Wickenheiser said during her speech. "But my mom and dad believed that a girl could do anything that a boy could."
Wickenheiser recounted sleeping in a closet for a week just so she could attend an all-boys hockey camp.
"I wanted to play the game so bad, I didn't care what I had to endure," she said.