The 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo helped to change the conversation around mental health. 

Four-time Olympic gold medalist Simone Biles led the charge in speaking publicly about the challenges that athletes face and the difficulty in overcoming those moments on the world’s biggest stage. 

Simone Biles prepares

United States' Simone Biles prepares to compete on the beam during Women's Qualifications at the Artistic Gymnastics World Championships in Antwerp, Belgium, Sunday, October 1, 2023. (AP Photo/Virginia Mayo)

Speaking to Fox News Digital, American fencer Elizabeth Tartakovsky, who will be representing Team USA for the first time in Paris this summer, spoke about her own mental health journey and just how important it is that the topic now has visibility. 

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"I think it's really great that right now we're speaking so openly about mental health."

"I reached success at a young age," the 23-year-old New Jersey native recalled. "And then, once I started to get a little bit more mature, the field started to get more competitive, I realized that it's a grind." 

"You have to lose more than you win, to learn, and have to learn to be resilient."

Elizabeth Tartakovsky before a match

Elizabeth Tartakovsky of Team USA prepares to fence against Team Poland during the Junior Team Women's Sabre Event at the Junior and Cadet World Fencing Championships on April 9, 2017, at the Plovdiv International Fair in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. (Devin Manky/Getty Images)

Tartakovsky comes from fencing royalty. Her great uncle, famed Olympic fencing coach and U.S. Hall of Famer Yury Gelman, was her introduction into the sport. She watched from home as he coached the men’s Sabre team to the silver medal at the 2008 Summer Olympics. 

Tartakovsky said she was "captivated" by the sport.

"I had never seen anything like it."

SIMONE BILES RECALLS FEARING THE WORST AFTER SUFFERING ‘TWISTIES’ IN 2020 OLYMPICS: ‘AMERICA HATES ME’

In a sport where mental focus and quick thinking are everything, seeing success from such a young age added another layer of difficulty. 

"I started working with a sports psychologist, maybe in high school, just to learn how to deal with all these different emotions, the pressure, expectations and also just learning how to perform well under stress," Tartakovsky said.

"If you watch a fencing match, every point happens in two seconds. So, I had to learn how to emotionally and mentally prepare myself, how to recover in between losses, during rough patches in my fencing."

Elizabeth Tartakovsky fences

Elizabeth Tartakovsky of Harvard fences against Maia Chamberlain of Princeton during the first Saber semifinal during the Division I Womens Fencing Championship held at the Castellan Family Fencing Center on March 25, 2022, in Notre Dame, Indiana. (Marc Lebryk/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

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Tartakovsky, the 2022 NCAA Women’s Sabre national champion, will be 24 when she arrives in Paris for the 2024 Summer Games in what will be her Olympic debut. The goal is always gold, but Tartakovsky says she doesn’t want her experience to be "defined by the result." She also recognizes that it’s anyone’s game.

"If it were just about who trains the hardest and who is the most athletic, then we would see the same person win every time, but that's not the case. It's really about who can show up on that day and be the most mentally dominant as well."

She continued, "I think it's great that there's been a lot of visibility into that aspect of sports. And, it's something that I've had to learn to deal with and kind of went on a journey of my own of learning about myself."

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