You move through the sequence of rooms at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial and realize it is designed more like a story than a statue. Rough granite walls, water that rushes and then goes still, and quotations carved at eye level describe a presidency lived inside economic collapse and global war. This narration invites you to notice how policy becomes physical: breadlines cast in bronze, open plazas for the Four Freedoms, tactile surfaces worn by visitors. Leadership here is not heroic distance but daily improvisation. Consider how empathy, experimentation, and endurance became tools of governance when certainty was impossible.