![TR Vs. Weakness - podcast episode cover](https://www.omnycontent.com/d/programs/e73c998e-6e60-432f-8610-ae210140c5b1/3d6feb9a-6791-4552-9a39-ae39006db1ea/image.jpg?t=1687279787&size=Large)
Episode description
In 1912, after Theodore Roosevelt was shot in the chest, he proceeded to deliver a 90-minute campaign speech before allowing someone to take him to the hospital. Was it for patriotism’s sake, or a bull-headed refusal to show weakness? Given his history, perhaps the latter. Mental Floss editor-in-chief Erin McCarthy traces Roosevelt’s battle against weakness back to his childhood as an asthmatic, wildly energetic boy determined to overcome his poor health with a commitment to “the strenuous life,” which essentially became his life philosophy.
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