 The easiest mistake to make in sticky elements is that you just forgot to specify the inset or something like top, left, right, and bottom. So without it, you run into the same issue that you might run into when you need position relative. The element has no sticky target offset to observe and actually stick to, so it'll sit in the flow of the DOM as it would by default. So you can fix this by just making sure that you have an inset specified. That's the first thing to check. Shakespeare itself, I put position sticky but didn't put top. I think that people also don't realize this because we talk about this a lot with position absolute inside of a relatively positioned element. That's something that we come up against a lot but I think sticky is just used a little bit less often and so people don't realize that you still have to apply your positioning when you are using sticky. Yeah, sticky is still fun to say.