WASHINGTON – March 30, 2026 – Forty-five years ago today, a .22 caliber bullet fired by John Hinckley Jr. ricocheted off a presidential limousine and struck Ronald Reagan in the left armpit. The bullet punctured his lung and came to rest exactly one inch from his heart.
Reagan, barely 69 days into his first term, was losing blood rapidly. Secret Service agents rushed him to George Washington University Hospital. As surgeons prepared for emergency surgery, the president looked at his wife, Nancy, and delivered one of the most famous lines in American political history:
“Honey, I forgot to duck.”
The quip was borrowed from heavyweight boxer Jack Dempsey, who used the same line after losing a title fight. But Reagan, a former actor and master communicator, understood its power. In a moment of national crisis, he projected calm, humor, and absolute control.
The surgery lasted two hours. Reagan lost nearly half his blood volume. He was back at work within days, and his approval rating soared. The assassination attempt did not break him—it defined his presidency.
Today, 45 years later, the line remains a textbook example of leadership under fire. Reagan never claimed to be above the law or beyond harm. He simply reminded a frightened nation that even a president can forget to duck—and still stand tall.

