Australian swimmer Shayna Jack's dream has finally come true.
After so many years of trying, Jack will head to this year's Commonwealth Games as one half of the nation's next sibling swimming act.
Jack secured a spot in Glasgow by touching in 52.96 seconds to finish third in Friday's 100m freestyle at Australia's swimming trials in Sydney.
Five-time Olympic gold medallist Mollie O'Callaghan clocked 52.33 for victory, 0.30 seconds ahead of second-placed Meg Harris.
Jack's younger brother Jamie sealed his maiden Commonwealth Games spot earlier in the week, after finishing second to world record-holder Cameron McEvoy in the men's 50m freestyle.
McEvoy had touched in 21.32 seconds, with the 22-year-old Jack trailing by 0.22 seconds.
The younger Jack was poolside to congratulate his sister on Friday night, with the Paris Olympic gold medallist bursting into tears.
The Jack siblings are the first sister-brother duo to represent Australia since Emma and David McKeon swam at the 2018 Gold Coast Games.
"It's obviously really special when we do achieve those dreams and those goals," an emotional Shayna Jack said.
"For me, tonight it was just honestly like so special to be able to get myself on the team with my brother.
"It's been a long journey, and as I've mentioned, I haven't dealt with a lot of my past traumas, and that's why I probably struggled a lot to come back after Paris.
"I was honestly so proud of myself being here today."
Jack, 27, was part of Australia's gold medal-winning 4x100m and 4x200m freestyle teams in Paris after serving a two-year ban.
The Brisbane product had failed an out-of-competition drug test in 2019 and missed out on the Tokyo Olympics.
After an investigation, the Court of Arbitration for Sport found an accident had led Jack to ingest a banned substance.
The younger Jack competed in the 100m freestyle, but finished sixth.
Shayna Jack will vie for a spot in the 50m freestyle on Saturday, the final day of competition.
Also on Friday, Sam Short blitzed the pack in the men's 1500m freestyle to win by 14 minutes 42.09 seconds - 8.13s ahead of second-placed Matthew Galea.
The 22-year-old inched closer to Grant Hackett's 25-year-old record of 14 minutes 34.56 seconds.
Multi-distance freestyle ace Short at least matched three-time Olympic gold medallist Hackett as the only Australians to win the 200m, 400m, 800m and 1500m races at the same meet.
"It's great domestically, but I'm pretty sure he won the 1500 at the international stage for 11 years in a row or something crazy," Short said.
"To be in the same sentence as him is an honour."
Zac Stubblety-Cook claimed the men's 200m breaststroke event in two minutes 8.92 seconds, while Ella Ramsay touched in two minutes 24.04 for victory in the women's 200m breaststroke race.
Para swimmers Ben Hance (men's 100 backstroke), Maddie McTernan (women's 100 backstroke), Ahmed Kelly (men's 50m breaststroke) and 16-year-old Sahrah Hancock (women's 50m breaststroke) took out multi-class finals.