A rugged, dominant force of nature who charges ahead fearlessly.
When a bullet lodged in his chest before a campaign speech in 1912, he stepped onto the stage anyway and delivered a ninety-minute address — because that is simply what a bear does. Theodore Roosevelt embodied the bear personality's defining traits: raw physical power, territorial dominance, and an unstoppable forward momentum that refused to yield to obstacle or opposition. His charge up San Juan Hill, his creation of the National Park System to claim and protect vast wilderness as his own domain, and his famous declaration that "the credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena" all reflect the bear's instinct to confront challenges head-on and impose its will upon the landscape. Commanding yet deeply protective, Roosevelt was the archetypal bear — a rugged, dominant force who shaped the world through sheer, unyielding presence.
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