Michael B

Paul McCartney was on the radio recently. He's turning 80, and getting ready to release an album, "Paul McCartney III." It's also the 40th anniversary of John Lennon's death. Paul was asked what he was doing to memorialize John. He said he thought about him all the time. He would just sit and remember the things they did together... Like the time they went hitch hiking together and ended up in Paris. That was a fun trip.

Mike lived in many places and got to interact with lots of people he loved.

If you have the time, please add something to any or all of these:

All of these should be open for anyone to add things. Please forward the link for this page to anyone who might want to add something: https://mbstrope.blogspot.com/2020/12/michael-b.html

Thanks for spending time with Mike. I'm sure he loved that. Thanks for any contributions here. -Brian

Comments

Brian Patrick said…
I remember when I was about 3 or 4, and he took me on a trip to see his mom in Malta, and we went by train. The train was amazing. I remember walking with him through the flexible parts that join the cars of the train. It was so loud and moving all around. It was a great trip.
Brian Patrick said…
There was a Christmas about 10 years ago or so, when his sister Patricia was with us at my parent's house. It was a feast, and my mom was cooking all day. My Dad was the consummate host, taking care of the room, keeping all of us smiling and laughing, pouring the wine. Then the sink backed up from potato peels. He and Darren talked about chemistry for a second, and then he quickly/magically cleared the clog. He moved on to carving the turkey, and never missed a beat.
Brian Patrick said…
I remember deer hunting with my Dad. It was cold. I might have been 10 or so. It was nice to be out walking with him, sitting next to him, saying something once in a while, but mostly just being there, together. We were waiting in a place where the deer would eventually come. It was very still, almost no breeze, so we had to be quiet. Eventually, we heard the leaves rustle. Far away, and then a little closer. Maybe footsteps. Chi. Chi chi chi. ... Definitely footsteps. After 5-10 more tense moments of waiting and building expectations, we finally saw the squirrel and laughed.
Brian Patrick said…
When he turned 40, we was stationed in Nurnberg, Germany. A close friend, Sally Bussey, had bumper stickers made, white, with blue letters, saying: Mike Strope is 40. She put them up everywhere. I must have been 15. I thought it was hysterical.
Nikki Strope said…
I even found one of those afore mentioned bumper stickers stuck inside the door of the ladies' restroom in the Army PX!
Brian Patrick said…
In 1972, my parents got their second BMW. It was a beautiful "Bavaria" that would have been called a 3.0S, or something like that, in Europe. When he bought it, he sold his red '65 Mustang with a 289 small-block v8 through the Kansas City paper, before most people woke up in the morning. We got calls for at least a week. I only got to ride in the Mustang, but years later, the BMW would become mostly my high school car. It was incredible, and my dad took great care of it. It had an inline 6 and dual carbs that he would tweak to get just right. It an had an amazing jump from 3000 to 6000 rpm, in any gear.

It looked like a conservative sedan. It was a wolf in sheep's clothing.
Unknown said…
Brian: your father was a kind man - when last we went skiing in Colorado, he said that it looked as if he and I were about at the same level when as we started downhill. I'd fallen four times by the end of the run and he not at all. He didn't need to but it was fortunate he stayed with me as I needed help getting up.
Peter Gregory said…
I am willing to identify myself as the skier with the tendency to spend much of my time on the ground.
Brian Patrick said…
In 1983, my parents bought their first house. I'm sure it was stressful for both of them. It was on Fordham Road in Manhattan Kansas. It was a split-level house on a hill that had 3 bedrooms upstairs and a 1/3 finished basement. My dad spent something like a year finishing most of the rest of it, including a bathroom and a shower. We all helped a little, and I remember working on some of the wiring and finishing. Sheetrock is an art. It took forever.

I hated leaving Germany, and my girlfriend, Laura. It was a shock to come to Kansas at 16. My dad's persistence with that project stayed with me.

The realtor's husband, Cecil Best, was a professor of civil engineering at K-state. He and my dad became close friends, mostly fishing together. Cecil was unusually smart with a dry wit. My god they were funny together.
Karen and John Armbrust said…
As Strope’s neighbors for 25 years, we enjoyed many Mike antics! One reoccurring event involved Mike taking inventory of our “wine rack” each time he was asked to watch our house while we were on vacation. How many bottles walked home in his pockets we will never know but according to Mike - enough bottles to satisfy his needs!! A great ongoing joke!
Dylan Johnson said…
Not only am I fortunate enough to have grandparents that have taken us on annual spring break ski trips for as long as I can remember, but they've been in such great health that I've even been able to enjoy skiing alongside them - quite often with Gram, but only once that I can remember with Grandad (he never seemed quite as aggressive as my double-diamond-going, cliff-jumping Gram.) Just the two of us skied slowly all morning on the greens of Copper Mountain. Even at an impatient teenage age when I always preferred to ski the bumps and bowls with my cool uncles instead of dragging along on the catwalks rest of my family, I remember feeling peaceful and content that morning, even savoring it since it as such a rare opportunity. I recall being impressed by his grace on the skis and pensive to his bits of shared wisdom on the chairlifts.

When it came time for lunch, I pulled my money out to pay for my overpriced meal at the ski lodge only to hear the low tone behind me, "save your money kid, I'm loaded." :)

Sometimes I find myself saying this jokingly with friends or family when I treat, and it often comes with a "my Grandad used to say that," even if it may have been just this once :')
Nikki Strope said…
This morning, Ken Burger shared with me that he remembers a fishing trip in Germany with Mike where they drove down the autobahn over 100mph and then smoked cigars while fishing. Ken was about 12 years old.
Nikki Strope said…
Oh, and Ken, Mike, who wasn't a smoker, was still known to smoke a few cigars with your mom on our sailing trips, too!
Brian Patrick said…
My dad commuted by bike long before it was cool. In the 60s he bought 2 gold raleigh bikes, and his looked like this.

At West Point, in the 70s, he rode through the military cemetary to get to his office. There was a 15 mile an hour speed limit, with an occasional military police officer watching traffic. He said he'd try to go as fast as he could right by the MP, in hopes of one day getting a speeding ticket that he'd frame. I don't think they ever obliged.

In Nurnberg, in the 80s, he rode the same bike 5 miles or so along the canal (main-donau, I think). I was around 13 at the time, and I remember doing the commute one day to go see a doctor. It took forever, but it was a beautiful ride. I remember being surprised that my Dad did that ride everyday. A normal year in Germany is about as much rain as an 'El Nino' year in the Bay Area, and about 15 degrees cooler. My memory of his rain gear was a shower-cap like thingy that went over his military dress hat. He just got on the bike and rode it.
Nikki Strope said…
He rode the same bicycle to work later in Frankfurt through the back fields of Bad Vilbel, avoiding all the bumper to bumper traffic otherwise.
Brian Patrick said…
My dad loved skiing trips, but I don't think he liked the actual skiing part. Or more specifically, he didn't like the heights part of it: chairlifts above the trees, and more treacherously, a drop off in the ski run itself, where he couldn't see what's next. I think he had a considerable fear of heights. And still he loved the family trips. Maybe it was the mountains, or the snow. Maybe it was getting away. Maybe it was being happy together.

One time in the early '80s, we were getting off the top of the lift in Zell am See (I think) in Austria, and it was clear, calm and gorgeous (I'm sure). We could see the lake in the valley below the mountain, and all the other mountains around the lake. He said, let's take a minute. We stared. It was gorgeous. (Maybe like this.) And then he said something like, it's hard having to move all the time, but we get to see some amazing things.

I didn't get it then, but it was, and we did.
Brian Patrick said…
My Dad was unusually helpful with money. It was mostly by modeling healthy habits. He liked to say, 'pay yourself first.' It was a confusing comment, but he meant that savings isn't about leftovers. Most expenses are for temporary things that go away. Paying yourself, by building your savings, stays with you. Do that first, and then figure out where the rest goes.

I was on a consumer panel at a conference for financial advisors, and I had to come up with an opening comment. I said money is like sex. Both are really important, and nobody teaches us anything about either.

It was a provocative comment and only partially true. He'd taught me plenty, and early. And I knew how sadly uncommon and helpful that experience was. It's the topic of a book that I've started outlining.
Brian Patrick said…
I remember playing catch with my Dad, when I was young. Years later, at the lake of the Ozarks, he said something like, taking care of the kids was my mom's thing, and that he mostly tried to stay out of the way, until the kids were 12 or so. I don't remember the words, but he described it as of course that's how it's done.

It was a sad expectation, and it was a lot more fun to be a dad in my generation.

Even with those expectations, we played catch, a lot. Usually a football, but sometimes a baseball, and later a frisbee. We didn't talk much, but it was relaxing. Probably for both of us.

Years later, at college, friends started playing hacky sack almost daily. It had a similar rhythm to playing catch with my dad. It's just a thing to do to connect. And it felt good.
Nikki Strope said…
Adding to Brian's comment about money. In the military we got periodic cost of living "raises" in pay, and Mike ironically marveled one day how the infinite wisdom of the military knew just exactly what we needed to "get by" that month. From that time forward, any COLA monies automatically went into our saving, as did raises in pay/promotion. That's paying yourself first!
Hellen said…
Mike had a penchant for shenanigans for sure. I had the privilege of being his ortho assistant during his assignment to Fort Riley in the mid 80’s. Every day I would make myself a cup tea and leave it in his office that was next to the operatory so that I could grab a quick sip between patients. One day I took a sip only to have something bump into my lip. Of course I shrieked since I have no idea what was in my cup. About that time I heard a chuckle from Mike. He had placed a rubber fishing lure frog in my tea and he thought it was just hilarious! From that day on it became quite a game to sneak that silly frog into each others drink. For Christmas that year he gave me a little 2 inch brass frog to commemorate our silliness. That brass frog is still proudly displayed on a table in my living room to this day.❤️
Hellen said…
I was in my early 20’s when I worked as Mike’s ortho assistant. It was December and his daughter Kelly was coming home from college for Christmas break. He thought Kelly and I would hit it off so he said, “why don’t you give my daughter a call the next time you go out to Aggieville.” So either that night, or maybe the next that I called and asked Kelly if she would like to go out. She thanked me and said she wasn’t up to it. I then heard Mike say something to Kelly but I could only hear muffled voices since Kelly had placed her hand over the phone. A moment later Mike came on the line and said, “she’ll be ready in a few, come on over.” Mike was right, Kelly and I hit it off indeed! That night, 36 years ago, was the beginning our close friendship. ❤️
Kelly said…
My dad had beautiful hands, strong and elegant. I remember feeling so secure as a child when he would hold my hand. I often found myself looking at his hands and admiring them. He always took good care of his hands as well. They were clean and his nails always trimmed at the same length. A couple years ago, clipping his nails became something he could no longer do. My mom was struggling a bit with the task. I volunteered to try and he liked the job. So, from that day on I clipped his nails whenever they needed it. Each time I admired his hands and each time he thanked me over and over also saying what a great job I did. It was my pleasure and I will miss this small task.
Brian Patrick said…
In my parent's first time in Germany in the 60s, they made me, and met Arthur and Bea Curtis. Those events were probably related. Arthur went by Curt. A dollar would get you 4 marks in those days. It sounds like they had a lot of fun together.

I got to know Curt a little better in the 80s, during my parent's next time in Germany. They'd both "light up" the room when they were together. And they'd laugh. And they'd talk/orate some more. And laugh. And the Remy Martin VSOP was always close by. It's been years, and I'm sure the smell would bring me back to Zeppelinheim.

It meant a lot to see my dad so happy around his friend. It took me awhile before I realized how unusual it was for close friends, who hold each other in such high regard, to tell other people about it.

I'm sure the Remy Martin helped, but however they did, they found some magic together.
Kelly said…
When I was five years old, my Dad took me to New York City (just the two of us). We were in the process of moving back to the States from Germany. Our car had been shipped to New York City and needed to be picked up. My mom flew with my brother, Brian, to stay with a friend of hers while my dad and I went to get the car. I remember feeling real grow up being a part of this important job. It was a very special trip. I had never been alone with my dad for that long. I remember eating out which was such a treat because we didn't do that very often. We must have been eating breakfast in the hotel or somewhere. We sat at a small table across from each other. Again, I felt very grown up and watched my dad. He always read the paper while we ate and I remember picking up a section and deciding I should at least pretend to read as well. The first morning of that trip, my dad tried to do my hair. My mom always had my hair done in a pony tail or pig tails or half up or something. Usually bows were also in the picture. My dad was struggling, but kept at it for quite sometime. Finally, he said something like "How about we just leave your hair down today?". I was thrilled and that's what we did the rest of the trip. He took me to the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade and put me on his shoulders. He also took me to the top of the Empire State building because I so badly wanted to go. He was less than thrilled as he never liked heights. Again, I remember his strong hand holding very tightly on to mine.
Kelly said…
My dad loved cookies! He could eat them and he could make them! Baking cookies with my dad was something I did often when I was young, and something he continued to do with his grandchildren. It was always fun with him. We would eat some of the dough and lick the beaters(luckily we never got sick). One time, Brian and I were staying with my Grandmother(my dad's mom) after my mom was in a serious car accident. She suggested we make cookies and I was thrilled. It turned out to be much different then making cookies with my dad. We didn't lick anything or laugh. We had to use two spoons to drop the cookies on the pan. We didn't touch the batter. With my dad, we used our index finger to scoop the dough off the spoon and probably licked our finger every now and then. Staying at my Grandmother's house during that time was hard. I missed my parents and was so worried about my mom. I remember missing my dad so much while making those cookies. As I got older, I was out most evenings with my friends. I loved the nights I would come home to the house smelling like cookies. Even though he had gone to bed, my dad would leave cookies out on the counter for us.
Nikki Strope said…
Kelly mentioned Mike's hands. I think I fell in love with Mike's hands even before I knew much about Mike. I was sixteen, he was seventeen, and he had taken me to the final dance after a music festival at Montana University. Holding my hand in his as he walked me from the dance, I felt so safe and secure. I told everyone I had met the "man I was going to marry!" I would willingly place myself "in his hands."
Nikki Strope said…
Kelly's hair story reminds me of another: I started cutting Mike's hair after he retired in 2004. He loved to tell everyone how he used to have hair before I started cutting it.
Brian Patrick said…
At West Point, in the 70s, in our second house there, we lived close to the elementary school. Between our house and the school, there was a large field that was big enough for a baseball practice diamond and a soccer field. My dad would jog around the field, and sometimes I'd join him. It was a time to hang out, and maybe talk a little.

One time I noticed when he started, that he picked up a small twig and broke it into a few pieces. It seemed intentional, almost religious, so I asked what it was for. He said that as he jogged, he'd get lost in thought, and would forget how many times he'd gone around. So he broke a small twig into the right number of pieces, and each time he got close to the end, he'd drop a piece. He was done when he ran out of sticks.

Cool. Three things struck me: it's okay to get lost in thought, and even to plan for it; he could accept things as they were, even about himself; and he liked simple and elegant solutions.

He'd also found a way to be intentional when things can feel random and accidental. Later I remember my mom saying, your dad would have been a great Jew. I think she was right, and maybe that's one of the reasons why. He didn't know it, but he was also teaching me how to program a computer.

That happened when he was probably 17 years younger than I am now. He grew up faster than I did. I'm hoping Nathan will get even more time.
Nikki Strope said…
Hellen, speaking of gifts that you and Mike exchanged: You once gave him an insolated lunch bag, because he almost always had me pack him a lunch. He used that bag even into his last year alive. He would have lunch with Kelly on Tuesdays, and when she didn't have appropriate leftovers, he'd have me pack a lunch in "Hellen's bag".
Zgadgeter said…
For some hopeful reason I always thought that one day I would be able to tell Mr. Strope what a difference he made in my life. For a while during my youth I was a bit lost, knowing I wanted to achieve something, but not knowing what or how or when. Somehow the picture of meeting him is always of him working on his BMW, with surgical gloves on to keep his hands clean for his "day job". I remember asking him about the gloves and his explanation was so logical that I felt a bit dumb for asking. But, he did not explain it in an uppity way, just simply, and that impressed me too. I'm so often reminded of one trip I was fortunate enough to take with the Strope family in the mentioned BMW. Traveling down the autobahn towards Austria at seemingly high speeds, listening to Willie Nelson "Always on my mind", and thinking "why am I enjoying country music all of a sudden?". I so often listen to that song now when i'm feeling a bit nostalgic all the while  thinking of Mr. Strope and the BMW.I could not say it in person, but Mr. Strope is a big part of the reason that I have achieved many of the things I wanted to.I hope my kids have an opportunity to meet someone like Mr. Strope so they have a similar impression upon them.
Nikki Strope said…
Christmas of about '67, Mike had a very special present under the tree for me. Christmas day I eagerly opened the surprise: a huge .30-06 rifle -- for me, his barely 5'2" wife who never hunted. I got even with him the next Christmas when I presented him with a complete set of sterling silver flatware. This competition reached a finale Christmas 2002, when he surprised me with a brand new Mercedes 320E! Win-win! No more contest!
Brian Patrick said…
My dad worked hard. When most dentists were drafted into the army during Vietnam, they'd do the two years and leave. My dad did 20, and then an extra 5, and got his orthodontic residency along the way. After that, and after turning 50, he essentially started over again, this time taking on a private practice.

I wasn't around for most of the details of that, but I know how hard it is to start new things, especially after 50. I'm sure there were lots of scary moments. He just kept going.

He showed up. And kept showing up.
Brian Patrick said…
I spent a lot of time playing in the woods as a kid. West Point and Nurnberg both had amazing forests kids could play in, or that my parents let me play in, or that I played in without my parents stopping me. I worry it was a much more fun and creative time than kids get today.

In West Point, I was walking with my dad, and he noticed a loose root-like vine thing growing up around an old tree. It was about as thick as a finger, and it felt dry and light with its own bark peeling off. My dad explained that it was "smoke wood." It was dead, and if you break off a bit, about the size of a small cigar, the wood was porous enough that you could draw air through it. Light it, and you could smoke it. Cool.

Mom wasn't impressed, but we spent lots of time after that finding the perfect smoke wood. I remember a picture of our cousins Tim and Cheryl visiting us, and all four of us, including Kelly and me, smoking, quite literally, wooden cigarettes, somewhere in the 10-14 year range.
Nikki Strope said…
Our first Christmas together, we could barely afford the cheapest tree on the lot. Mike bargained for several extra boughs, and, at home, he deftly wired them to our tree. Though it certainly wasn't gorgeous, it was a respectable little "homemade" Christmas tree.
Elaine Whitney said…
Jim and I were saddened to learn of Mike's passing. We had the privilege of being stationed with him in Frankfurt from '87-90. I had just finished my orthodontic residency and Mike and Jim were the senior officers in the clinic. Mike's kindness and patience with me as "a newbie" was apparent. He had so much experience but never made me feel like I was just out of my residency. He loved orthodontics and was always sharing tidbits and his excitement for our field and his patients. Nikki- you and Mike always extended your hospitality and home to us when we were away from ours and overseas. I remember being invited to your home and meeting your 3 children and hoping I had such a nice family in the future. During our time in Frankfurt, we had our twins at the Frankfurt hospital...I remember Mike pitching in to help with my patients, and mornings when we came into the clinic he would take a boley gadge and "measure the bags" under my eyes. Most importantly- I remember his kindness and sense of humor; his ability to find something funny and irreverent in the every day. His (and your memory Nikki) are intertwined with our fond memories of being in Germany. Your friends become your family for that brief time, and we have loved keeping in touch every Christmas. Thinking of you and your family in this time- Much love- Elaine(and Jim)
James LeBron Rankins said…
My deepest condolences to Mrs. Strope, the entire Strope family and all those who knew and loved Mike.

I came to know Col. Strope during my assignment to Frankfurt from 1987-1989, and more when I was transferred to work within the orthodontic clinic. One of my oldest memories of Col. Strope were his words to me following a two mile run we shared one day for physical training, or PT as we called it, which went something like this: "thanks for running with me, now you can go and get in a real run." Running at a slower pace with Col. Strope wasn't a sacrifice at all; he was a man I admired and I enjoyed his company more than he knew.

Later, Mike and Mrs. Strope were to return to the States for a week to attend the wedding of one of their children (Kelly?). Mike asked that I stay at his home with Darren for the week. Darren certainly did not need a babysitter, just an adult in the house - and getting to know Darren was a delight. That request cemented the foundation of what would become a decades-long friendship I will always treasure.

Following my enlistment I kept in touch with Col. Strope through college and grad school. Eventually, Col. Strope became St. Mike and to him I became St. James. During our phone conversations St. Mike was always a steadfast encouraging friend. And though I never met Kelly, Brian, or their families, St. Mike always talked about them with admiring love.

Once, while visiting St. Mike, I had the opportunity to share a commuting experience that is no longer necessary. You see, there had been a flood and the road was impassable. So what does one do when the dip in the road is impassable? If one were St. Mike you utilize the row boat to ferry one's friend to your home! We laughed more about that story after the bridge was built, but what a memory!

I will always remember St. Mike as a wonderful man and friend to me, and most certainly St. Mike's spirit is counted among those I invite to prop me up in challenging times and with whom I celebrate in times of victory.
Brian Patrick said…
My dad loved music. He played baritone in school, and he sang in church, but he also played guitar and piano, and would occasionally sing along with something on the radio. He had a great ear.

My parents often had a piano in their house, and he didn't play many songs, but I remember him playing Tennessee Waltz once in a while. I've since used it to teach people about the pentatonic scale.

One time when I was about 8 or so, he was driving and singing along with something he liked on the radio, and he went into a (precise) falsetto/head voice following the melody of some pop song. I forget the song, but it was the disco era. The man could sing.

When he was stationed in Korea, he ordered a Yamaha acoustic guitar through the military exchange. The guitar had a slightly shorter scale with a smallish body and the lowest action I've ever seen on acoustic guitar. Together that meant the strings were a little looser than they'd be otherwise, and it was incredibly easy to hold and to play. It was a perfect guitar to get me started.

I asked when I was 11, and he knew that I'd bump it around, and he knew that I'd be careful with it. He said something like, have fun.
Brian Patrick said…
My dad loved his dogs, and my parents had some great ones. In Kansas City, in the early 70s, around the time my brother Darren was born, they got Casey, a brittany spaniel.

Casey loved to run, and my dad loved hunting with her. At home we all worried about accidentally letting her out. She seemed to want to run so badly. And out hunting with my dad, she could run free.

My dad had a black and white picture on his wall of a spaniel at the top of a fence with one paw on the fence post, and the others on the fence. The dog was looking at what was next on the other side of the fence. The caption was something like, from this point forward, my own master.

Early on, I saw the dog wanting to be free, and to run. Later I saw my dad wanting to be out on his own, free from the limitations of the military that also supported him so well. Then I saw myself, free from a similar relationship with corporate life.

And now I see my dad again.
Hannah Strange said…
I didn’t get the chance to know Mike for all too long, but I still feel like I got to experience his great personality during my time with him, perhaps in slightly different ways than some.

I first met Mike a few years ago when I would come over to help Darren and Nikki. I would often end up spending my time at their home sitting with Mike and visiting, which I always looked forward to. Mike always had such good stories, and he was so good at telling them, I could almost picture the moments he was describing. (One of my favorites is him telling me about a time his kids accidentally skied into a different country without their passports, not many people can say that!) I was in school at the time, and I always appreciated how Mike would give me bits of encouragement and advice, so to say, about getting through school. I moved back home to finish getting my degree and would often think about the Strope family, but kind of lost touch for a while. When I moved back to Manhattan, Nikki and I reconnected and I started spending quite a bit of time with the two of them, which I feel so fortunate for.

I have so many fond memories with Mike (and Nikki), and find myself smiling or laughing to myself thinking about them. All moments that I will cherish forever! Here’s one of my favorites- I had been over at Mike and Nikki’s home for Thanksgiving and the next day I was getting ready to leave for my hometown. I leaned down to say goodbye to Mike, saying the usual, “see you later!” He squeezed my hand and said, “See you later apple gator.” He clearly recognized it didn’t come out right, but it made us both giggle. That’s definitely the cutest catchphrase I’ve ever heard and plan to keep using, I think I’ve shared it with most of my friends and family already.

Chelsea Swoyer said…
Posted: 24 Dec 2020 06:22 PM PST
There are several things that come to mind when I remember Grandad.

The first is his dry, witty humor and ornery grin. Half the people in the room or around the table missed his joke altogether - the delivery was so smooth, sharp, and timing was perfect - but if you did get it, you could always catch his eye after and share a sweet moment with him. I'll always remember that look; he was so tickled and pleased.

The second is his sweet tooth. There's a story about Grandad as a little guy, no more than 3 or 4 years old I think, going door to door collecting warm cookies from all the neighborhood ladies. At some point, his mother taped a sheet of paper to his shirt that read, "Don't feed Mikey cookies". That was a long-standing joke in our family as Grandad's sweet tooth carried over well into his adult life. As a kid, I remember he always had a jar labeled "Cookies" on top of the fridge, and we could always count on it being full of homemade cookies. As he got older and baking wasn't as easy for him, I (gladly) began to bake for him, replenishing his supply each Sunday evening when we got together for family dinner. It became something I looked forward to every week: searching for a new recipe he might like, or pulling up an old one he loved, collecting the ingredients, and baking with love, like he taught us. There's something special about baking for a fellow sweet-tooth who truly appreciates and recognizes a delicious treat, and I could always count on Grandad for that :)

My favorite thing - especially in his last years - was to ask grandad about his childhood, or his days as a practicing orthodontist, or trips and adventures he'd taken with family and friends. Something to trigger his memory of earlier days, easier days on his mind and body. He'd light up like a little boy as he told stories with such intricate details and precious memories. Through his stories I saw how much his life and all the people in it meant to him.

Grandad was an avid bird-watcher. We never talked about it, but I think he must have been an avid people-watcher as well. He intuitively picked up on small things; gestures, looks, grins, sighs, masterful in understanding human nature and interaction. I admired his attention to detail, not only in his professional craft but in his personal relationships and way of life.

He had purpose in what he did and what he said. His words never felt like they were chosen lightly. He was so wise and precise.

I am forever thankful that Sam and Jack got to meet, and know, Grandad. Seeing Grandad and Sam connect, sit together and talk, share a laugh, a story, made me happy. I'll always remember when he first held Jack in his arms. I sometimes see Grandad in a look or grin or tilt of the head from Jack. He lives on through his family, and in the resounding impression he continues to make in our lives.
Brian Patrick said…
My dad liked working with wood. Especially finishing wood. There are a few pieces in his house from his mom, that he re-stained and refinished. You'd never notice that they are home projects.

And there's box of silverware I ended up with, that he refinished beautifully.

Like all his work, he took pride in doing these things well too.

But by far, his favorite finishing project was the work he'd done on the stock of a rifle. It was a beautiful hardwood, and he spent so much time getting it smooth, before starting the finishing, he could already see not just a sheen, but the beginnings of a reflection off it. He was making a mirror out of wood.

My mom commented that there were other places for him to put his careful attentions, and he smiled proudly.

And I think he was most proud when he showed it to a local friend who ran a gun shop. His reply was something like, yep, Doc, you done good work here.
Brian Patrick said…
On new year's my parents had a tradition of making each of the kids whatever we wanted for dinner. And we'd all try to stay up until midnight. We'd play board games, and eventually watched more football.

My brother Darren appreciated the magnitude of the offer, and he and my mom would end up with something close to a proper feast, with crab or lobster or something else that I wouldn't have gotten close to at that time.

One year I asked for root beer, eggnog, and hot dogs, roasted over the fire, thank you very much. I had so much that I was asleep on the couch by 10. Yes, my stomach hurt, and yes, it was perfect.

But the best was as we got closer to midnight, my dad would make (actual!) fried doughnuts, usually in a wok, if I remember right. They were hot and fresh, and then he'd put them in a paper bag with cinnamon and sugar and shake them around. They weren't very big, so I think I usually had about 4.

It was the perfect way to start a year.
Brian Patrick said…
My Dad would never proselytize, not even to his kids, but he was very much a regular at church. We'd all put our "church clothes" on, which for him usually meant a sport coat, and often a tie. It's church, and so it's always working at a bunch of different levels, but the "showing up" part was another great lesson. He took pride in it, and I was critical of that. Later I'd see it more as showing up for each other, and even showing up to tell the community that things are worth showing up for.

The point for this story, is that at some level, the presentation part mattered to my dad.

And my dad was funny.

I wish I could remember the joke, but it had been building for a few hours. It was raunchy, and each of us had a come back, stoking the fires, building the scene. We were riffing, slowly adding lines to what someone in the scene would have said. It's right there, I just can't remember it.

Anyhow, we got a good line during one of the readings. It was perfect. Whisper, mutter, mutter, and the scene opened up, and we had to be silent. They were reading the gospel according someone other than St. Mike. Presentation mode. Impossible.

Eventually I looked over, and there it was, a tear. :)
Patrick Johnson said…
Mike (Grandad) was my father-in-law and my friend. We shared many happy times and memories together for 32 years.

We spent many thanksgivings in his downstairs garage cooking the thanksgiving turkey(s) in the deep fat fryer. We would tell stories and laugh and have wonderful conversations about life. Darren would come down and join in and then Brian would show up with his guitar and serenade us while we kept an eye on the turkeys cooking. Great memories and fun times.

Grandad and I made an annual trip to South Dakota to hunt pheasants at my college roommate's farmstead in Kimball, SD. We always had such a great weekend with the Smith family hunting birds, enjoying dinners together, laughing and telling stories over and over.

My folks live in Billing, MT and every year Grandad would make his trip north to Malta, MT to hunt and visit with his high school friend. He would always stop and spend the night with my parents in Billings. My folks always looked forward to his visits each year. I remember my Dad telling me the story about he and Grandad going to breakfast one morning in Billings and they were discussing politics, the news, military (both retired Colonels) ... and when the people sitting behind them in a booth got up to leave, they stopped by their table and told my Dad and Grandad how much they had enjoyed their conversation!

Grandad was a very kind man, wise and witty. He cared about others and was a good listener. He cherished one-on-one time with friends and family. I miss conversing with him and spending time with him. He was a wonderful man and I feel fortunate to have had the privilege to spend so many wonderful years together.

Rosemarie Strope said…
Stropes were stationed in Germany, 1990, when my son Barry died. Unable to attend the Montana services, Mike suggested that my girls and I come to visit in lieu of. That we did, my three girls and I. After processing through customs in Frankfurt, Mike greeted us briefly and asked that we hold out our hands. Into our hands, he placed a whole lot of marks/franks! What an incredibly insightfull welcome to some country folks. Each time I enter a new country, I'd like to think Mike would be there with some local currency.


Nikki Strope said…
Mike’s mischievous humor was especially demonstrated one morning in Dambach, Germany. Sally Bussey, our neighbor up the street, had planted her first garden that Spring. On Easter eve morning, I went to their house and frantically told Sally that I had just chased a big rabbit from our garden, and he was headed toward hers. With fire in her eyes, Sally raced to her backyard with a baseball bat in hand, to be greeted in fact by a giant pink bunny blissfully drinking a beer in her garden! To see that giant pink bunny with his beer, scroll through the photos of Mike and look at the most recently added.
Unknown said…
Hi Nikki.
I send you the biggest hug I can.
Your life with Mike was a gift from God.
I'm thankful you enjoyed each other as long as you did!
Dick and I are humbled. We never know what tomorrow brings.
I celebrate your time with Mike (he was a pretty neat mate!!!
and a pretty neat friend for us!!!)
And I pray for God's love and peace and encouragement for you in the days and weeks and months ahead. Truly.
We are hurting with you Nikki.
Truly.
Love,
Cindy and Dick