March 30, 1981. 2:27 PM.
President Ronald Reagan stepped out of the Washington Hilton Hotel into the afternoon sun, waving to the small crowd beyond the rope line. He had just finished a speech. His limousine was ten feet away. He was seventy years old, the oldest president ever elected, and by all accounts, in a good mood.
Then six shots rang out.
Secret Service Agent Jerry Parr reacted before the sound had fully registered — grabbing Reagan and throwing him headfirst into the back of the limousine with enough force that Reagan thought Parr had broken his rib. The car accelerated immediately.
Reagan was confused. Irritated, even.
“Jerry, get off. I think you’ve broken one of my ribs.”
Then he coughed.
Bright red blood. Frothy, bubbling blood — the kind that only comes from one place.
Parr took one look and redirected the motorcade. Not back to the White House. To George Washington University Hospital, less than two miles away.
Reagan didn’t know yet that he’d been shot. A .22 caliber bullet had entered beneath his left arm, flattened on impact, and driven itself deep into his chest. It had punctured his lung. Collapsed it. And come to rest exactly one inch from his heart.
When the car stopped at the emergency entrance, Reagan did something nobody expected.
He got out and walked.
He was the President of the United States. He would not be carried through those doors.
He stepped out. Straightened his suit jacket. And walked in on his own feet.
He made it fifteen feet.
Then his legs gave out entirely.
His blood pressure had dropped to 60 over 0 — barely enough to sustain life. He had lost nearly half his blood volume. Medical staff swarmed, lifted him onto a gurney, and cut away the expensive blue suit he’d worn to give a speech about labor relations just forty minutes earlier. It was soaked through.
Nancy Reagan was having lunch at the White House when the call came. By the time she arrived, Ronald was already being prepped for the operating table. She saw him for only a moment — gray-faced, struggling to breathe, clearly in pain.
He looked at her and smiled.
“Honey,” he said quietly, “I forgot to duck.”
It was a line Jack Dempsey had used after losing the heavyweight title in 1926. Reagan, with a collapsed lung and a bullet next to his heart, was doing vintage boxing references.
Nancy tried to smile. They wheeled him away.
In the hallway outside the operating room, the surgical team gathered around him — doctors in scrubs, nurses positioning equipment, everyone moving with the quiet controlled urgency of people who know that minutes matter. The weight in that corridor was immense. This was the President of the United States. He might not make it off their table.
Reagan looked up at them.
He didn’t ask about his odds. Didn’t ask how bad it was. Didn’t show fear.
He looked at the lead surgeon and said:
“I hope you’re all Republicans.”
The room went still for half a second.
Then Dr. Joseph Giordano — who was, in fact, a committed liberal Democrat — answered without hesitation:
“Today, Mr. President, we’re all Republicans.”
Reagan smiled. They moved him into the OR.
The surgery lasted nearly three hours. They removed the bullet, repaired the lung, drained the blood pooling in his chest, and extracted fragments of metal and fabric that had been driven in alongside it. At one point, Reagan stopped breathing entirely. They manually ventilated him until his lung function returned. His age — seventy years old — made every complication more dangerous.
He survived.
When he woke up in recovery, intubated and unable to speak, he asked for a pen and paper and wrote notes to the nurses. One of them read:
“All in all, I’d rather be in Philadelphia.”
A W.C. Fields joke. Coming out of anesthesia after nearly dying. Still performing.
The notes leaked to the press. Within days, the whole country knew — their president had been shot, had nearly bled to death, and had spent the entire ordeal making everyone around him laugh.
Three other people had been wounded in the attack. Press Secretary James Brady took a bullet to the head that left him permanently disabled — he would spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair, his speech never fully returning. Secret Service Agent Tim McCarthy had thrown himself directly in front of Reagan and taken a bullet to the abdomen. D.C. Police Officer Thomas Delahanty was shot in the neck.
The gunman was a 25-year-old named John Hinckley Jr., who had watched the film Taxi Driver fifteen times and become convinced that shooting the President would impress actress Jodie Foster. It was delusional. It was nearly successful.
Reagan left the hospital twelve days later. He’d lost fifteen pounds. He moved more carefully now, spoke more quietly. But he walked out through the front entrance, waved to the cameras, and smiled.
Thirty-nine days after being shot, he stood before a joint session of Congress and received a standing ovation before he’d said a single word.
The joke in the hallway — “I hope you’re all Republicans” — had become legend. Not because of the politics in it, but because of what it said about the man who told it. It was spoken by someone with a collapsed lung, a bullet next to his heart, and a surgical team wondering if he’d make it. And instead of asking for comfort, instead of letting fear show, he chose to give the people around him a moment of relief.
That’s not a political statement.
That’s a decision about who you’ll be when everything falls apart.
Reagan understood something that most people never get the chance to test: that humor in the face of real danger isn’t avoidance. It’s a form of courage. It tells the darkness — not today.
He was 70 years old. He had eight more years ahead of him as President.
And the moment that defined him most wasn’t a policy or a speech or a summit.
It was a joke. Told by a man who was dying. To a room full of people trying to save him.
“I hope you’re all Republicans.”
Choose who you’ll be when everything goes wrong.
No comments:
Post a Comment