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Steve ‘Mongo’ McMichael is suddenly in a vicious fight against ALS. ‘This ain’t ever how I envisioned this was going to end,’ the Chicago Bears great says.

  • Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets a kiss from...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets a kiss from his wife Misty on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home.

  • Former Bears player and Romeoville mayoral candidate Steve McMichael waits...

    Anthony Souffle / Chicago Tribune

    Former Bears player and Romeoville mayoral candidate Steve McMichael waits to give a TV interview moments after giving a concession speech after losing to incumbent John Noak on April 9, 2013.

  • 1985 Chicago Bear, offensive lineman, Tom Thayer and his family.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    1985 Chicago Bear, offensive lineman, Tom Thayer and his family.

  • Steve McMichael salutes the fans during the 6th Annual Bears...

    Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael salutes the fans during the 6th Annual Bears Fan Convention at the Hilton Towers on Feb. 21, 2003.

  • Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton (34) is grabbed from...

    Ed Wagner Jr./Chicago Tribune

    Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton (34) is grabbed from behind during a game against the Green Bay Packers at Soldier Field on Oct. 17, 1985.

  • 1985 Chicago Bear linebacker Otis Wilson.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    1985 Chicago Bear linebacker Otis Wilson.

  • 1985 Bear defensive back Dave Duerson.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune/Chicago Tribune

    1985 Bear defensive back Dave Duerson.

  • Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets help from his...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets help from his wife Misty while eating lunch on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home. McMichael recently lost use of his arms after being diagnosed with ALS. The new ramp to the garage behind them was built by former teammate Dan Hampton.

  • Bears' lineman Steve McMichael helps bring down Packer running back...

    Ed Wagner Jr. / Chicago Tribune

    Bears' lineman Steve McMichael helps bring down Packer running back Eddie Field Lee Ivery during the first half of Monday's game in Soldier Field on Oct. 17, 1985.

  • Bears linebacker Mike Singletary closes in on NY Giants quarteback...

    Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune

    Bears linebacker Mike Singletary closes in on NY Giants quarteback Phil SImms, who was sacked six times in the NFC semifinal game on Jan. 5, 1986, in Soldier Field. The Bears won, 21-0.

  • Steve McMichael (76) at Bears Camp in Lake Forest on...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael (76) at Bears Camp in Lake Forest on Aug. 28, 1990.

  • Jay Hilgenberg, who played center on the 1985 Chicago Bears.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Jay Hilgenberg, who played center on the 1985 Chicago Bears.

  • Former Bear Mike Tomczak (18) is greeted after the game...

    Bob Fila / Chicago Tribune

    Former Bear Mike Tomczak (18) is greeted after the game by the Bears' Steve McMichael (76), who tackled Tomczak several times during the Bears vs Green Bay game at Soldier Field on Dec. 8, 1991.

  • Mike Ditka, coached the 1985 Chicago Bears in the Super...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Mike Ditka, coached the 1985 Chicago Bears in the Super Bowl.

  • Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty take a...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty take a look at the on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home.

  • Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael stands on April 22,...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael stands on April 22, 2021 at his Romeoville home.

  • Hall of Fame Bears defensive lineman Dan Hampton performs with...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Hall of Fame Bears defensive lineman Dan Hampton performs with other members of "The Chicago 6" in Grant Park on July 25, 2019.

  • Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville on April 25, 2019.

  • San Francisco 49ers coach Bill Walsh, left, congratulates Chicago Bears...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    San Francisco 49ers coach Bill Walsh, left, congratulates Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka after the Bears 26-10 victory on Oct 13, 1985, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco.

  • A portrait from 2005 of Steve McMichael with his dog...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    A portrait from 2005 of Steve McMichael with his dog Chula.

  • 1985 Bear offensive lineman Jim Covert.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    1985 Bear offensive lineman Jim Covert.

  • The Giants' Sean Landeta "wiffs" a punt attempt against the...

    Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune

    The Giants' Sean Landeta "wiffs" a punt attempt against the Chicago Bears in a 1986 playoff game at Soldier Field.

  • Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael on April 22, 2021...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael on April 22, 2021 at his Romeoville home. McMichael was recently diagnosed with ALS.

  • Steve "Mongo" McMichael performs with other members of "The Chicago...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Steve "Mongo" McMichael performs with other members of "The Chicago 6" in Grant Park on July 25, 2019.

  • Steve McMichael played in 191 games during 13 seasons with...

    Ed Wagner Jr / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael played in 191 games during 13 seasons with the Bears and retired second on the Bears' career sacks list with 92.5. Was a member of the Bears' 1985 Super Bowl team and made two Pro Bowl teams.

  • Following William Perry's (72) crushing block, far right, Chicago Bears...

    Bob Langer / Chicago Tribune

    Following William Perry's (72) crushing block, far right, Chicago Bears running back Walter Payton flies over the goal line for a touchdown in the second quarter against the Green Bay Packers on Oct 21, 1985, in Soldier Field.

  • The Bucs' James Wilder is stopped by the Bears' Steve...

    Ed Wagner Jr. / Chicago Tribune

    The Bucs' James Wilder is stopped by the Bears' Steve McMichael (76) and Wilber Marshall during a game in October 1987.

  • Walter Payton (34) leaves the field with QB Jim McMahon...

    CHARLES CHERNEY / Chicago Tribune

    Walter Payton (34) leaves the field with QB Jim McMahon (9) after the Bears beat Tampa Bay at Soldier Field on Sept. 8, 1985, in the season opener.

  • Bears Portrait, Steve McMichael of the 1985 Bears with his...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Bears Portrait, Steve McMichael of the 1985 Bears with his dog Chula.

  • Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty by his...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty by his wheelchair at their Romeoville home.

  • Former Chicago Bears defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan on his farm...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan on his farm in 2005.

  • Steve McMichael chats with Police Chief Mark Turvey as McMichael...

    Scott Strazzante / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael chats with Police Chief Mark Turvey as McMichael attends a Romeoville village board meeting on Jan. 2, 2013. McMichael has announced that he is running for mayor.

  • Steve McMichael shows off a copy of his book on...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael shows off a copy of his book on the 1985 Chicago Bears during the Chicago Tribune's Chicago Live! event at the Chicago Theatre Downstairs on Feb. 10, 2011.

  • Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville on April 25, 2019.

  • Steve McMichael played in 191 games during 13 seasons with...

    Nancy Stone / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael played in 191 games during 13 seasons with the Bears and retired second on the Bears' career sacks list with 92.5. He was a member of the Bears' 1985 Super Bowl team and made 2 Pro Bowls. Here, McMichael lights up in a smile as he and Jay Hilgenberg leave the field after the Bears victory over Tampa on Dec. 14, 1991, at Soldier Field.

  • The Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael (76) in action during...

    Bob Langer / Chicago Tribune

    The Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael (76) in action during the Bears vs Green Bay game in Wisconsin on Nov. 5, 1989.

  • Former Bears football great Steve McMichael, who is now is...

    Chuck Berman / Chicago Tribune

    Former Bears football great Steve McMichael, who is now is running for mayor of Romeoville, does at interview in his campaign office on April 2, 2013, in Romeoville.

  • Tampa Bay receiver Gerald Carter pays the price for a...

    Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune

    Tampa Bay receiver Gerald Carter pays the price for a reception as Gary Fencik, left, and Mike SIngletary get a closer look on Oct 6, 1985, in Tampa Bay.

  • Steve McMichael has a laugh before battling Corey Wootton in...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael has a laugh before battling Corey Wootton in a mechanical bull riding competition at Union Station in Chicago on March 4, 2011. The event was held to kick off the Professional Bull Riders' inaugural Chicago Invitational this weekend.

  • Former Chicago Bear defensive back Gary Fencik outside Soldier Field...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bear defensive back Gary Fencik outside Soldier Field in 2005.

  • Former Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael with his wife Misty...

    Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune

    Former Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael with his wife Misty at an advanced screening of "The "85 Bears" documentary about the Super Bowl XX champions on Jan. 27, 2016, at the AMC River East 21 theater in Chicago. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Bears' win.

  • Steve McMichael wears two championship rings — including his Bears...

    Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael wears two championship rings — including his Bears Super Bowl ring — at an advance screening of "The '85 Bears," a documentary about the Super Bowl XX champions, on Jan. 27, 2016.

  • Steve McMichael mugs with Mike Ditka at a Bears event...

    Callie Lipkin / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael mugs with Mike Ditka at a Bears event in Rosemont on Aug. 1, 2005.

  • Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael with his wife Misty...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael with his wife Misty in their new Team Mongo shirts on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home.

  • 1985 Chicago Bear defensive back Leslie Frazier.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune/Chicago Tribune

    1985 Chicago Bear defensive back Leslie Frazier.

  • With an escort from Otis Wilson (55), Bears' Wilber Marshall...

    Bob Langer / Chicago Tribune

    With an escort from Otis Wilson (55), Bears' Wilber Marshall (58) steams into the endzone in the fourth quarter after scooping up a fumble 52 yards upfield during the NFC Championship game with the Los Angeles Rams at Soldier Field on Jan. 12, 1986.

  • Bears head coach Mike Ditka and defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan...

    Ed Wagner Jr. / Chicago Tribune

    Bears head coach Mike Ditka and defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan are carried around the field after they defeated New England 46-10 to win Super Bowl XX in New Orleans.

  • Steve McMichael joins fellow Bears teammates as the Chicago Bears...

    John Smierciak / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael joins fellow Bears teammates as the Chicago Bears honored the 1985 team at halftime of a game against the Ravens on Oct. 23, 2005.

  • Steve McMichael performs with other members of "The Chicago 6"...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael performs with other members of "The Chicago 6" in Grant Park on July 25, 2019.

  • Steve McMichael enjoys a respite on the Bears' bench, circa...

    Bob Fila / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael enjoys a respite on the Bears' bench, circa 1991.

  • Former Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael arrives at an advanced...

    Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune

    Former Bears defensive tackle Steve McMichael arrives at an advanced screening of "The "85 Bears" documentary about the Super Bowl XX champions on Jan. 27, 2016, at the AMC River East 21 theater in Chicago. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Bears' win.

  • Steve McMichael signs autographs for fans before the unveiling of...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Steve McMichael signs autographs for fans before the unveiling of the statues for Hall of Famers Water Payton and George S. Halas outside of Gate O at Soldier Field on Sept. 3, 2019.

  • Chicago Bears tackle William Perry grabs a 4-yard touchdown pass...

    Jerry Tomaselli/Chicago Tribune

    Chicago Bears tackle William Perry grabs a 4-yard touchdown pass during the 16-10 victory over the Green Bay Packers on Nov 3, 1985, at Lambeau Field in Green Bay.

  • Chicago Bear William Perry (72) lines up with the offense...

    Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune

    Chicago Bear William Perry (72) lines up with the offense along side of Walter Payton during their Monday Night game against the Packers on Oct. 21, 1985.

  • Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville on April 25, 2019.

  • Bears linebackers Mike Singletary, center, and Otis Wilson celebrate during...

    Chicago Tribune historical photo

    Bears linebackers Mike Singletary, center, and Otis Wilson celebrate during their victory over the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XX.

  • Wide receiver Willie Gault from the 1985 Chicago Bears team.

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Wide receiver Willie Gault from the 1985 Chicago Bears team.

  • The Bears defense sacks the Patriots' quarterback Tony Eason.

    Ed Wagner Jr. / Chicago Tribune

    The Bears defense sacks the Patriots' quarterback Tony Eason.

  • Detroit quarterback Joe Ferguson is headed down and out of...

    Bob Langer/Chicago Tribune

    Detroit quarterback Joe Ferguson is headed down and out of action for the day after a resounding hit by the Bears' Wilber Marshall on the third play of Sunday's game in Dec 23, 1985.

  • Bears Portraits Shaun Gayle of the 1985 Bears sitting on...

    Charles Cherney / Chicago Tribune

    Bears Portraits Shaun Gayle of the 1985 Bears sitting on his 1500cc Harley Davidson in 2005.

  • Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Steve "Mongo" McMichael at his Mongo McMichaels restaurant in Romeoville on April 25, 2019.

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Brace yourself. This is not the Steve McMichael you’re used to seeing, this gaunt 63-year-old man propped up on an elevated chair in the corner of his kitchen and struggling with basic movement. It just doesn’t compute.

This isn’t the McMichael whom Chicago has known over the last 40 years as a Chicago Bears great, a rollicking presence wherever he goes, an entertainer who fills whatever room he’s in with his imposing stature, booming voice and larger-than-life personality.

Now McMichael, with his shoulders drooped and hair mussed, is craning his neck just so family friend Laurie Dimakos can spritz his face with water to refresh him. He slumps forward to wrap his lips around the long straw extending from his coffee mug.

This is no longer Steve McMichael, football warrior, a five-time NFL All-Pro who from 1981-93 played 191 regular-season games for the Bears and a dozen more in the playoffs, all in a row. Now he can barely trudge across the room to show off his new high-tech wheelchair, an advanced-hybrid model with both a “sip and puff” straw and head controls for steering.

This isn’t how anyone would ever have pictured McMichael, one of the beloved leaders and most colorful characters of the 1985 Bears, the only team in franchise history to win a Super Bowl. But here he is now in a vicious and unwinnable brawl against amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), often known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, the progressive nervous system disease that is disrupting his brain’s ability to communicate with his muscles.

A little more than three months after being formally diagnosed, McMichael has chosen to reveal his condition. He has lost in the ballpark of 50-60 pounds, now down near 200 and lighter than he was when he graduated from Freer High School in Texas in 1976.

His wife of 23 years, Misty, needs to feed him, help him use the bathroom and give him sponge baths.

He no longer can raise his arms or hold anything in his hands.

Full-time confinement in that wheelchair likely is just around the corner.

“I promise you,” McMichael says, “this epitaph that I’m going to have on me now? This ain’t ever how I envisioned this was going to end.”

Among the reasons McMichael has chosen to offer a glimpse into his very intense battle with ALS: He wants the outside world to know the curtain has lowered on his time in the public eye.

There will be no more public appearances; no more performances with his band, “The Chicago Six”; no more on-air analysis of the Bears on ESPN-1000.

He never will sign another autograph. He has given his last show.

“I want everybody to realize why they’re no longer going to see me around,” McMichael says.

At some point, the disease is expected to further obstruct his breathing and could eventually steal his speech as well. Fathom that. Steve “Mongo” McMichael perhaps unable to talk one day?

“I’m pretty sure that’s the last thing that’s going to go,” Misty jokes. “Just to spite me.”

Unsurprisingly, the McMichaels still have their sense of humor. They’re also summoning incredible toughness and resolve to face each day as its own challenge. But taking on this disease is only going to get more difficult.

“I thought I was ready for anything,” McMichael says. “But man. This will sneak up on you like a cheap-shotting Green Bay Packer.”

‘This is a humbling thing, brother’

Last week, McMichael’s legs gave out in his bathroom. He took a spill and cracked a rib. Misty couldn’t pull him up off the floor and had to summon a neighbor for help.

Damn, this deterioration has been rapid.

Last autumn, when chronic tingling in McMichael’s arms continued to worsen, his concern elevated. Misty also noticed he was holding his silverware in an unconventional manner. “Started coming into a caveman grip,” she says.

For a long time, McMichael figured he was dealing with some sort of neck or spine issue stemming from his lengthy football career and subsequent five-year stint as a professional wrestler. But a September visit to a neurosurgeon at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota presented the first suggestion that he might be dealing with ALS.

A doctor there raised McMichael’s right arm and asked him to stop it from falling. The idea was to measure, on a scale of 1-10, how high McMichael could gain full control. Instead, his arm plummeted like an anvil.

“Doctor looked at the nurse (and said) ‘Zero!’ ” McMichael says. “That’s when he said, ‘I think this is about something else.’ “

McMichael didn’t want to believe it. He sought multiple other opinions. On Jan. 7, doctors at Rush University Medical Center repeated the ALS diagnosis. That’s when it became official.

A neurologist at UIC Medical Center later surmised that the condition likely began setting in 36 months earlier.

No matter how much denial McMichael and his wife were in, eventually they had no choice but to face their reality. McMichael still can’t fully believe this is where fate has led him.

“What I used to be is the antithesis of what I am now,” he says. “This is a humbling thing, brother.”

Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets help from his wife Misty while eating lunch on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home. McMichael recently lost use of his arms after being diagnosed with ALS. The new ramp to the garage behind them was built by former teammate Dan Hampton.
Former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael gets help from his wife Misty while eating lunch on April 22, 2021 at their Romeoville home. McMichael recently lost use of his arms after being diagnosed with ALS. The new ramp to the garage behind them was built by former teammate Dan Hampton.

The recent progression of degeneration through McMichael’s limbs has been jarring. First his right arm went dead, then the left.

Then his left leg began to weaken significantly. Now his right leg is following close behind.

“They call it Lou Gehrig’s disease. But I didn’t know that was a metaphor,” McMichael says. “Because it’s going to run the bases on you.”

McMichael still has some strength in his right leg, but that’s decreasing gradually too. The ALS is heading for home.

“It’s running the bases on me,” he says.

“And it’s running them quicker than we thought it would,” Misty says.

That leg weakness has been staggering.

“I know what it feels like to go in the weight room and do a set of three with 725 pounds on the squat rack,” McMichael says. “Now? When I get up and try to move? It feels like I’m doing 1,000 (bleeping) pounds. And it’s just exhausting straining that hard. That’s what my world is now.”

As McMichael ambles across his kitchen, almost toddler-like with his wobbly gait, he finds an opening for self deprecation.

“I’m a Super Bowl Shuffler now,” he says. “As long as I keep my legs stiff and shuffle along, I won’t go down.”

It hasn’t been easy becoming so immobile and needy so quickly. McMichael can’t emphasize enough how much he has admired and valued Misty’s ability to be a devoted caretaker through all this. Along with that, though, there’s a bit of embarrassment that can sometimes hit hard.

“I feel like a baby lying there whining,” he says. ” ‘Help me! Waaaaaa!’ “

Misty says she regularly is having difficulty with her own neck and back. She also never fathomed having to properly fit her husband with an external catheter before bed every night. But this is just life now.

In the saddest moments, McMichael hates what he’s putting his wife and daughter through and the sense of helplessness that comes along with that.

“I’m not the provider anymore,” he says. “I’m just one of the animals. I’m last in line behind the chihuahua. We’re both waiting in line to go to the bathroom.”

‘We scream. We holler. We cry’

The mental toll over the last four months has been significant. First, Steve and Misty had to work past their resistance to accepting the diagnosis. Then they had to deal with McMichael’s frustration, the kind that would come on suddenly when he tried to reach for something but realized he couldn’t.

On the bad days, the agitation can boil over.

Says Misty: “We scream. We holler. We cry.”

The tears have been frequent.

“A good cry helps me clear my nose out,” McMichael cracks.

Steve McMichael signs autographs for fans before the unveiling of the statues for Hall of Famers Water Payton and George S. Halas outside of Gate O at Soldier Field on Sept. 3, 2019.
Steve McMichael signs autographs for fans before the unveiling of the statues for Hall of Famers Water Payton and George S. Halas outside of Gate O at Soldier Field on Sept. 3, 2019.

The McMichaels also have had to begin envisioning the future, planning for survival with this ailment and the challenges it brings.

As much weight as McMichael has lost, he still is north of 200 pounds and difficult for Misty and their 13-year-old daughter, Macy, to move if he has fallen or otherwise needs help.

“I can’t pick his ass up by myself,” Misty says. “Macy and I managed to pick him up together one time. But if one of us is crying, we get weak, and now we need the neighbors.”

As much as anything else, Misty knows she has to find the family a new handicap-accessible home. Or a builder who can rapidly construct a handicap-accessible home. Amenities the family never would have thought about before — ramps, widened doorways, a roll-in shower, a toilet lift, track-lifting systems — suddenly are must-haves.

The McMichaels rent their current residence in Romeoville. As such, they are unable to make any extreme modifications or renovations.

“I know we need to move before his legs go out fully,” Misty says.

The clock is ticking.

“Calling all Bear Fan realtors,” McMichael says. “Mongo needs a handicap-equipped house.”

‘We’re all still in shock’

Dan Hampton and McMichael have been close friends for 40 years, Bears teammates for 10 seasons and buddies long after they both retired. Hampton hasn’t been able to wrap his brain around McMichael’s rapid decline.

“We’re all still in shock, a state of total disbelief,” Hampton says. “I look out my window and shake my head.

“I don’t know how many times I’ve looked at my wife and said, ‘I can’t believe this. I truly can’t believe this.’ “

Steve “Mongo” McMichael performs with other members of “The Chicago 6” in Grant Park on July 25, 2019.
Hall of Fame Bears defensive lineman Dan Hampton performs with other members of “The Chicago 6” in Grant Park on July 25, 2019.

In 2013, when Hampton revived “The Chicago Six” band, he brought McMichael on board as a guitarist and vocalist. Now, Hampton thinks of the last show the group did — in September at the Centennial Park West Summer Concert in Orland Park.

“It’s hard to believe that last show is the last time Steve will ever sing with us,” Hampton says. “We’re heartsick about this.”

Around the time of that final show last fall, Hampton heard McMichael complaining about the tingling and occasional numbness in his arms. McMichael also shared how he was having abnormal difficulty even twisting the plastic tops off Coke bottles.

“We were concerned,” Hampton said. “But Steve had complained for years about a neck injury. And maybe I was deluded into thinking that was it. …. We all know the predominant attitude of a pro football player is that we’re indestructible and nothing can stop us. Obviously this is a cold slap of reality.”

As word of McMichael’s condition has circulated slowly and privately through the Bears fraternity in recent weeks, the shared shock has been pronounced.

Former Bears offensive linemen Tom Thayer and Jay Hilgenberg visited McMichael this month and were jarred to see him in the state he was in, thin and unsteady and so incredibly vulnerable.

“And you know what they did?” McMichael says. “They looked at me, then looked at each other and they got ready to double-team me. Just like, ‘I think we can take him now.’ “

“Mentally,” Thayer says, “he is still fit as a fiddle. But then you see the other stage of what the disease does to you. That’s the hard part to take.”

‘There is no cure for this’

Thayer has made it a point in his time with McMichael to talk about the old days, the good times, to provide at least a temporary distraction from his current ailments. The old stories always provide a healthy dose of laughter and feel-good vibes.

“It’s more just trying to get access to the good times,” Thayer said, “instead of what he’s living through.”

So many of McMichael’s former Bears teammates still love him as much as always. Maybe more now. Dennis McKinnon has visited on multiple occasions to provide company and support.

Keith Van Horne, Richard Dent and Jim McMahon continue to reach out.

Gary Fencik and his wife are scheduled to pop in next week.

“There is no cure for this,” Fencik said. “It’s just a matter of not if but how long it takes before this (disease) really starts bringing its terrible consequences. And it has already begun.

“Steve has this. He’s acknowledging it. And there’s no reversal. This is going to be a cruel, cruel existence going forward. But he has a great attitude, and all we can do is hope he keeps that.”

Former Bears defensive back Leslie Frazier can’t even comprehend the idea that an athlete as burly and seemingly indestructible as McMichael is now so exposed.

“When I first heard about his condition, my heart dropped,” Frazier said. “You think of Steve as this strapping, physical specimen. He was a guy who would go hard all the time. And you never fathom he could be in this state. It’s been hard for me to wrap my mind around.”

McMichael always called Frazier “Corn” because he came to the Bears from Alcorn State. And while the two couldn’t be more different personality-wise, they always had a bond as teammates and a respect for one another’s work ethic and purpose.

Frazier knows all the 1985 Bears will forever share that deeper connection, forever attached by their triumph and the fun they had on the way there.

“To this day,” Frazier said, “it’s still a brotherhood. And I really believe all the guys feel the same way. When one guy is hurting, everybody feels the pain. This has not been an easy thing to process …

“I still picture Steve in our locker room posing and kissing his muscles. He’d say, ‘Corn! I know you see these muscles. You may want them. But you can’t have ’em.’ “

‘A man needs to know he was loved’

Don’t think McMichael doesn’t feel the love. The visits from former teammates always bring laughter and wise-cracking and a chance to relive the glory days and talk ball.

But it goes deeper than that. The visit from Hilgenberg and Thayer reminded McMichael of how sincerely his Bears brothers care about him.

When Hampton stopped over two weeks ago, he built a ramp from the laundry room into the garage.

“That type of compassion renews your faith in humanity,” McMichael says. “It does. A man needs to know he was loved. So he can be proud of himself and know that he mattered.”

Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty by his wheelchair at their Romeoville home.
Former player Steve McMichael and his wife Misty by his wheelchair at their Romeoville home.

The McCaskey family has vowed to cover the cost of the fully loaded wheelchair McMichael needs.

“Bears fans should be proud of the way they’ve stepped up,” McMichael says. “In my entire life, I haven’t paid as much for a car as that thing is going to cost.”

McMichael remains eligible for substantial financial aid from the NFL. His application for funding from the league’s “88 Plan” — named in honor of Pro Football Hall of Famer John Mackey — is under review and should open the door for up to $144,000 annually for medical and custodial care. The plan provides assistance for former players diagnosed with ALS, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s disease and dementia.

That funding will help, no doubt.

“But I don’t have that yet,” Misty says. “And Steve is degenerating much quicker than we thought. So we have to start fundraising now.”

Misty has been floored by the cost of the medical bills and specialist visits and medications and estimates for what Steve’s long-term care will require. The itemized-expense list seems unending. Misty recently had to purchase a new Chrysler Pacifica, equipped with a mechanical ramp, to help Steve get in and out of the car in his wheelchair.

The family savings have eroded rapidly. They’re also house-hunting during a seller’s market when inventory disappears rapidly.

“It’s unbelievable how fast homes are going right now,” McMichael says. “It’s like people are (bleeping) looting toilet paper.”

A Go Fund Me page has been set up, a means, according to the site, “to help defray the mounting cost of Steve’s daily care and medical needs.”

This weekend, Obvious Shirts founder Joe Johnson will begin selling “Team Mongo” T-shirts on his popular website, promising to devote all proceeds to Steve and Misty. (Naturally, McMichael’s shirt will be personalized to read “Me Mongo.”)

Information on future fundraising events and additional “Team Mongo” gear can be found at the official website, www.TeamMongo76.com.

The McMichaels and their team also have reached out to the Team Gleason Foundation, established by former Saints safety Steve Gleason after his ALS diagnosis, hoping to receive assistance in eventually getting McMichael an augmentative communication device, a computerized method of speaking for those who lose their vocal ability.

That’s still impossible to comprehend. Steve McMichael without his booming voice, without that Texas drawl and emphatic inflection.

“I look at it like this,” McMichael says. “I’ve already said it all anyway.”

‘They know they’re playing for real’

Even as his body deteriorates and his muscles wither, McMichael vows to draw on an inner strength and resilience that will help him and his family persevere. His desire to fight has smothered any temptation to surrender.

“That’s the ‘it’ they’re all looking for at all those scouting combines. That fight,” McMichael says. “You’re never going to stop bringing that.”

When Macy heard from one of her father’s doctors that the life expectancy of a patient with ALS averages around two to five years after onset, she interjected and told him they didn’t know what they were talking about.

“She’s a strong girl,” Misty says. “And she knows her mom is going to keep her daddy alive until she’s grown.”

Steve McMichael wears two championship rings — including his Bears Super Bowl ring — at an advance screening of “The ’85 Bears,” a documentary about the Super Bowl XX champions, on Jan. 27, 2016.

During a visit with the McMichaels earlier this month, Hampton came away thoroughly impressed by the sense of resolve Steve and Misty have found.

“I was struck by their ability to focus and face this with a no (B.S.) attitude. They know they’re playing for real.”

Hampton knows that response isn’t universal and shouldn’t be taken for granted.

“If I was to be afflicted with this? I don’t know. I really don’t,” he said. “I don’t know that I could chuckle or laugh. I’m just being honest. I’d be destroyed. But Steve has found a way to accept this and say, ‘This was the hand I was dealt.’ For that, you shake your head and say ‘Wow! What amazing courage.’ “

McMichael sees it as a combination of perspective, perseverance and gratitude.

“I’m not in a depression, brother,” he says. “This disease came onto Lou Gehrig when he was still playing baseball. At least it waited until I was an old man. I’ve lived so long that I’ve seen and done things I want to forget.”

‘Hell yes, I would do it all over again’

McMichael has long taken great pride in his philosophical reflections and sharp one-liners, boasting that he combines the deep contemplations of Forrest Gump with the humorous invective of Don Rickles.

For years McMichael has joked that he should take all his musings and beliefs — “Mongoisms” — and fold them into a book or at least one of those one-a-day calendars.

“They flash across my mind like neon,” he jokes. “Why would I want to keep them? That just means there’s not enough room for the next one.”

Among his most recited pearls of wisdom: Every man lives, but not every man really lives.

To that point, McMichael always has had a profound appreciation for how football and his place on the Bears changed his life.

Two years ago, the Tribune named McMichael the 18th greatest Bears player of all time. That kind of recognition still means something to him. The Super Bowl triumph of the ’85 Bears, of course, tops his achievement list. He always will be remembered as a key figure on an iconic team.

The sport he loves did so much for him. It opened doors. Gave him a stage. Allowed him to be a showman. Best of all, it inspired him to test his limits and see how much greatness he could squeeze out of his talent.

So no, McMichael won’t allow himself to feel bitter toward football or question whether its brutality helped lead him to this current state. (A 2012 published study from the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology noted that NFL players with at least five years of experience in the league were four times more likely to die from ALS than those in the general public.)

Says McMichael: “One neurologist I saw suggested to me that ‘Maybe the damage you did to yourself opened the door for what’s happening (now).’ But there are other people who get this where it just opens the door itself and kicks their ass.”

More than two dozen former NFL players have come forward with their ALS diagnoses, a group that includes Gleason, Dwight Clark, O.J. Brigance, Kevin Turner, Wally Hilgenberg, Orlando Thomas and Tim Shaw. Former Raiders running back Steve Smith, now 56 years old, has been battling the disease since summer 2002. His wife, Chie, has now become one of Misty’s most trusted resources and confidantes.

Forever, McMichael has told anyone who would listen that the joy of his career and the passion it brought out of him was worth every last ache, pain and bruise, surgery and long-term debilitating setback. But that’s a question worth revisiting now that the brutality of ALS has taken over.

Would he still do it all over again knowing this misery was waiting?

“Hell yes, I would do it all over again,” McMichael says. “Because it’s that journey that’s the reward. It’s that climb and how hard it was to substantiate yourself as out of the ordinary. That kind of achievement isn’t just given to you.”

Not that McMichael has any say in turning back time or reversing his condition. At this point, ALS has wrested control of his life. And McMichael is the first to admit he doesn’t want the hordes of Bears fans and other admirers to have their lasting memories of him be as a fragile man on the decline, weak and confined to a wheelchair.

Sure, he’s going to miss the adoration and the chance to entertain.

“But the dancing chicken is ready to be entertained himself,” he says. “I want to see someone else on that hot plate dancing around.”

In a more solemn moment, McMichael uses his bottom teeth to bite his upper lip and nods. He has one last message for those who may soon be concerned about him and his family.

“Say a prayer,” he says. “Say a prayer.”

Chicago Tribune’s Brad Biggs contributed.

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