Photo: Patrik Giardino

Olympic diving legendGreg Louganiswas rummaging through his dresser one afternoon not long ago when he stumbled upon an old Speedo he’d last worn decades earlier for a promotional poster for the swimwear company.
“I tried it on,” recalls the four-time gold medalist in this week’s issue of PEOPLE, “and I was like, ‘Oh my god, it fits … I’m not doing too bad for someone about to turn 60.’ ”
A few weeks later Louganis was standing on the same diving board in Mission Viejo, California, where the original photo was taken, determined to recreate an updated version of his iconic poster from 1989.
His only worry was that the 30-year-old red, white and blue lycra swimsuit would disintegrate once it hit the heavily chlorinated pool water. “I can’t get this suit wet,” he told the photographer. “I want this to be a G-rated shoot.”
The fact that Louganis looks like he’s barely aged comes despite the twisting highs and “tough” lows his life has taken over the years.
Now on the verge of turning 60 on Jan. 29, the one-time superstar athlete — who became one of the first high-profile athletes to come out as gay in 1994, six years after being diagnosed with HIV — is too busy to spend much time dwelling on the past.
“Been there, done that,” Louganis says he tells himself every time he hears someone describe him as the “greatest male diver” of all time. “Whenever I hear that, I think, ‘OK, but now what are you going to do with your life?’ ”

Turns out, Louganis — who has beenhappily marriedto paralegal Johnny Chaillot, 58, since 2013 — has done plenty since becoming the first diver to win gold in both the springboard and platform events in the 1984 and 1988 Olympics.
Most importantly, he’s happy to be alive and healthy after nearly dying from a fungal infection in the early 1990s.
“My T cells are higher than they have ever been and it’s been that way for awhile now,” says Louganis, whose doctor recently began reducing the number of medications he takes each day to combat the disease.
“Some of the treatments I’ve had to go through are pretty harsh,” recalls Louganis, who insists that dogs have gotten him through some of his toughest times. “And when I felt most scared or insecure, my dogs have been there for me.”

“We’re working on trying to figure out boundaries and how to navigate them,” says Louganis.
For more of Greg Louganis’ story, pick up a copy of PEOPLE, on newsstands Wednesday.
source: people.com