What a glorious night it was on Wednesday. I have not stopped smiling since.
Tottenham Hotspur - so often the reason for bad moods and disappointments in my life - finally gave me and every other Spurs supporter one of those incredible memories that will live with us forever.
Winning the UEFA Europa League at the end of the season Tottenham have had, was something else.
It was clear to see, months ago, that the European campaign was the focus for Spurs. The Premier League was put to one side, in dreadful fashion, in favour of chasing Europa League glory.
And it paid off.
In 20 years' time, no one is going to remember where Spurs finished in the Premier League, but winning in Europe will be remembered forever.
Ange Postecoglou is a major reason behind that. And it may well lead to him be given more time to impart his wisdom onto this squad for a bit longer.
The Australian still has two years left on his Tottenham contract, although there has been plenty of talk surrounding his future because of the domestic form.
After the final Premier League game of the campaign on Sunday there is bound to be a meeting between Postecoglou and chairman Daniel Levy.
Levy does not suffer fools gladly and many incumbents of the head coach position before Postecoglou have been relieved of their duties for significantly better campaigns in the English top flight.
None of them have produced what Postecoglou has, however - a European trophy. And with it Champions League football. Postecoglou has delivered on his promise, has done what so few managers have managed to do in the Tottenham hotseat and has brought Champions League football and all the riches that brings for Levy, back to N17.
It doesn't matter how he did it, he did it.
Now Levy has a big decision to make. A number of people thought, ahead of the final in Bilbao, that Postecoglou would depart the club no matter the result.
Speaking beforehand, the Australian revealed he had no intention of throwing in the towel, however. "No, because I don't think my job is done here," he admitted. "I really feel like we're building something and what a trophy does is hopefully accelerates that.
"I still think there's a lot of work to be done. The challenges we've had this year are well chronicled, but there's been some reasoning in that and there's also been growth I'd like to see through, but whether that happens or not is not that important right now.
"I think this job is far from finished. There's some growth there to take this club where it needs to be."
That means if he is to go he will have to be pushed. And that's a big call to make of a man who has given Spurs and Levy what they have always craved.
I have thought for a long time that Postecoglou should go at the end of the season. But a trophy changes things. Emotions then come into it, the emotions that the man at the heart of it has given you one of the most joyous nights ever.
My main gripe around Postecoglou was his stubbornness. His way was the right way, the only way and there was no deviation from that.
However, in the last few rounds of the Europa League - particularly away from home at Eintracht Frankfurt and Bodo/Glimt - and in the final itself, Postecoglou showed a different side.
Send your messages of congratulations after Tottenham's Europa League triumph here
The final may not have been pretty, but does anyone care? We've won a trophy for goodness sake.
He has shown a more pragmatic side, a desire to dig deep, get men behind the ball and be a rigid outift that is difficult to break down, while being a threat on the counter attack.
And it has worked, time and again.
The focus has been on the Europa League, but if he can adopt that pragmatic side in the Premier League too next season, changing his ways depending on the opposition and the situation, there's no reason why Spurs cannot push up the table - the only way is up from 17th.
There's another condition to him staying, but that relies on Levy and Johan Lange. Injuries left the club woefully short this season. He needs a bigger and better squad and that relies on effective work in the summer transfer window.
Postecoglou admitted that if the club had not gone deep in the Carabao Cup and the Europa League their Premier League form would have been better. Next year there's the Champions League to consider and we cannot have another season of putting all our eggs in one basket.
He needs a squad capable of competing on multiple fronts and needs to be backed in the transfer market with the players he wants.
There is a huge financial benefit to being in the Champions League and Levy knows it. But that financial aid must go on the squad.
Levy may choose to sack his head coach and start all over again and the Spurs managerial merry-go-round would start revolving once more. However, he could now back his head coach and if he does, he needs to show him just how much his backing means by showing him the money.