Austin Smeenk has a tattoo on his arm that reads "dream, desire, do." And at the Paris Paralympics, the Canadian wheelchair sprinter got it done — he returned with gold and bronze medals.
Speaking back home at his parents' house on Saturday in Shanty Bay, Ont., about 125 kilometres north ot Toronto, Smeenk said his accomplishments still haven't quite sunk in, but that it feels "amazing" coming home with hardware for the first time at his third Games. "It feels fantastic.
A lot of hard work went into it. So it feels, I don't know, like riding a snowmobile in perfect conditions — except everybody cares," Smeenk said.
Indeed, the 27-year-old Smeenk enjoyed hordes of support both in Paris and back home. On Saturday, they all came together in one place as friends, family and Oro-Medonte, Ont., mayor Randy Greenlaw gathered on a sunny September day to celebrate not only Smeenk's accomplishments, but also welcome back Paralympic discus silver medallist Jesse Zesseu of Toronto; runner Zachary Gingras, of Markham, Ont., who placed fifth in the T38 400m; and thrower Charlotte Bolton, of Tillsonburg, Ont., who earned two top-10 finishes in Paris.