To East St. Louisan Dawn Harper, a gold medal in the 100-meter hurdles at the Beijing Olympics meant a hometown street renamed in her honor, a relatively cavernous two-bedroom apartment compared to the one she and her husband had been scrunched into in Los Angeles, and a simple sense of "look what I can do."
For Mizzou's Christian Cantwell, a silver in the shot put in Beijing represented a seismic psychological breakthrough. Shrugging off the weight of fouling on five of six throws in failing to make the 2004 Athens Olympics despite a world No. 1 ranking, Cantwell rallied from fifth to second on his final throw in Beijing.
Vianney High's Scott Touzinsky says the gold medal he earned as part of a men's volleyball team contending with the stabbing murder in China of his coach's father-in-law "still hasn't sunk in."
While he believes it helped more than double his salary on the professional circuits, Touzinsky, 29, added Thursday, "Half the time I forget I'm an Olympic gold medalist, to tell you the truth."
While Nerinx Hall's Lori Chalupny, who won a gold medal with the women's soccer team in 2008, is not expected to return to the national team because of recurring concussions, the three others with local ties have ambitions of competing in the London Olympics - which begin a year from this Wednesday. Then again ...
"You can only go downhill after your first one," joked Touzinsky, who served in spot duty in Beijing and says he is competing with four others for a place on the national team as it approaches various Olympic qualifiers. "Hopefully, you get that call in the end."
If not, he said, he can live with it. Part of Touzinzky's perspective stems from an outlook that tells him volleyball has been plenty good to him, allowing him to travel all over the world: In the last few years, he has lived in Slovenia, Turkey and Germany and will play this season in Dubai at a salary "in the hundreds" of thousands to go with a fully furnished apartment and car provided by the team. Part of his perspective also comes from having a 10-month old son, Logan, who along with his wife, Angelique, will spend the nine-month season with him abroad.
Cantwell's world view also has evolved with fatherhood.
"My son, Jackson, changed my life 10 times more than winning the silver," Cantwell said a year after Beijing. "I am pretty much the same guy I was before I (won)."
Just the same, Beijing was the beginning of scaling new heights for Cantwell, who was unable to be reached last week as he traveled to Europe for a meet.
Soon after, he won his second world indoor title. A year later, the native of Eldon, Mo., won his first outdoor world championship. In 2010, he claimed his third world indoor gold and entered 2011 ranked No. 1 in the world.
Cantwell, 30, had surgery on his left, non-throwing shoulder in January and hasn't been as dominant this year, but he finished second in the U.S. championships last month and continues to prepare for the world championships next month in South Korea as part of his quest to turn that Beijing silver into London gold. He's competing in Monaco this week.
While Cantwell's success in Beijing was seen as promise at last fulfilled, Harper's gold was a sheer stunner. Injuries had kept her off the radar after her UCLA career, and she only made the Olympic team by 0.007 of a second after lunging across the finish line at trials.
But she kept advancing in China. Her blinders steered her to gold when favorite Lolo Jones smacked a hurdle down the stretch in the final.
Like Cantwell, Harper, 27, largely has prospered since Beijing. She won a national title and world silver in 2009, finished third at the U.S. championships last month and has qualified for South Korea. She, too is running in Monaco this week. As for London, it's probably her last chance for Olympic glory, as it figures to be for Cantwell and Touzinsky.
Make it or not, earn medals there or not, each has an Olympic legacy already.
"Heck, it's all gravy from here on out," Touzinsky said.