PodClips Logo
PodClips Logo
MICHELLE OBAMA!

MICHELLE OBAMA!

We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon DoyleGo to Podcast Page

Abby Wambach, Glennon Doyle, Michelle Obama
·
27 Clips
·
Mar 28, 2023
Listen to Clips & Top Moments
Episode Summary
Episode Transcript
0:11
Can do heart, people
0:18
happening. I've been looking forward to this for a while. You guys look at you, we are so unbelievably grateful that you trusted us like that. Gosh. Oh my
0:30
I got more than you can imagine. And my husband is like, oh and I told him I was going to do this. He was like uh you're pretty good. He probably didn't sound exactly like that, but yeah, we will take it, okay, I'm all yours. Welcome to the most thrilling day we've ever had long ago when sister and Abby and I heard that mrs. Obama had a new book coming out. I
1:00
Saying to sister on the phone. Just please God let it be like here's everything I know about how to heat it. That's said to my sister and it is mrs. Obama's newest, glorious book. The Light we carry is about how she humans woven through her deeply intimate. Stories are her personal human being tools. Her concrete strategies for navigating life, marriage motherhood, and career with Grace, and
1:30
Grit with toughness and tenderness, mrs. Obama believes that everyone has a light and her book and accompanying new show. The light podcast is about ways to protect and rekindle our light. See and amplify the light and others and light up the world together, we are outrageously honored. That mrs. Obama is joining the pod squad today to shine her warm, life-giving light on all of us.
2:00
Welcome to, we can do hard things, mrs. Michele Lavon bum. Yeah, thank you to the pod squad. I am huge fans of all of you and what you're trying to do with this conversation that you have. So this was the perfect place to come and talk about the light we carry. So thank you for having me. I'm thrilled and remember, call me Michelle, okay? Okay, as we cannot have a
2:30
a real conversation with his mrs. Obama stuff. So you now have permission. So thank you. Okay. You are so known and beloved your husband so known and beloved your mama Marian. Louis Robinson, so known and beloved. And since reading the light we carry, I cannot stop thinking about your father. I fell
3:00
Absolutely in love with him and suddenly what was previously, your inexplicable, well, of Grace and tenacity and steadiness became explicable to me. And I mourned for you that you lost him. So early, and I mourned for our nation that we didn't have the chance to know him and love him. And I just wondered if you
3:30
You could tell us about Frasier Robinson, the third, and how the way he lived everyday shaped your understanding of life? Well, that's a beautiful way to start because, you know, I introduce my dad in becoming but this book allowed me to really dive into the lessons that both. He and my mom have taught me that. Keep me upright. If they were alive, they would have their podcast. If I could convince them.
4:00
At their, their wisdom was actually valuable which my mother still doesn't believe. So this is my way of sharing some of those little tidbits, but my dad, you know, as you you could hear in the story that I tell about him. He's really a special special man, in the older, I get the more that I realize how fortunate Craig and I were die, be parented by these two amazing people. But when I think about my dad, especially in these times when there is
4:30
So much anxiety. So much foam. Oh so many people who seem to be dissatisfied with their lives. My dad lived the opposite way for many reasons, you know in this day and age she had every reason to feel dissatisfied disappointed shaken anxious about his life. He was a black man that grew up in some of the most segregated times of this country.
5:00
Though he was incredibly talented and gifted. He was an artist a sculptor, he got a scholarship to the Art Institute of Chicago. But he couldn't attend, because that's not what men did. Especially if you were working class, you know, he needed to get a job and support his family, he didn't come from the kind of background where he had parents, who would understand investing in art. So he had this thing in him, but he couldn't go to college.
5:30
College. Yeah, Dad get a job and my father had a disability. It was Ms. It affected. His ability to walk, but he didn't have it, his whole life, you know. He grew up with the ability to walk. He was an athlete, he was a boxer, he was a swimmer. He was a very active engaged man, and then he couldn't walk without the assistance of a Cane crutches. So if you were to lay out someone in these times, who should be moan there,
6:00
Life in there faded would be somebody like my father but he lived just the opposite. He was the kind of person who lived by the motto is like you count your blessings. I talk about in the book have the one thing he used to say to us as kind of an admonition to me. And my brother is when we ever did something where it seemed like we were looking at the other person's plate, he'd say, Never Satisfied. I mean that still Rings through my head every day.
6:30
I never satisfied. You wanted an extra scoop of ice cream, Never Satisfied, you know, he taught us to Value what was on our plate and when I talk to my kids Malia and Sasha these days, one of the things that I remind them is that one of the gifts, my parents have is that they have learned to be content, self-content to be satisfied with where they are now at the moment and not looking over at The Grass Is Always Greener. My father lives,
7:00
Way. And as a result, he was one of the happiest people that I knew. Because he valued what he had, he didn't look at what the other guy had and worry will. He didn't measure himself against somebody else's values. I think that's a gift and it's a gift that I try to mirror. You know, because the truth is, I know some of the most powerful wealthy famous people. You name them, I probably have met them. Many of them are my friends.
7:30
They're not the happiest people. I know because when you're always wanting something else, when there's a hole that you can't fill in yourself, you never satisfied. You know, but my father Fraser Robinson. He was a uniquely Satisfied Man. And I think that's probably the best way to introduce him in this conversation. You're transparent that a public political life was maybe not your first choice or
8:00
Into our third lifestyle choice and that you decided to take your foot off the gas on your own career because of how you wanted your family to operate, you call your husband, your greatest disruptor and you say that marriage is an ever-evolving compromised, so we need to know what compromises has he made to make your relationship work and how are you a disruptor of his life?
8:30
Yeah, well first, can I get just a name in on that? Yeah, compromise, because I share that because I meet so many young people who haven't grasped that about the challenge of marriage. I see so many people lunging towards the ceremony especially in this day and age. There's so much emphasis placed on the proposal and the balloon thing everybody's getting engaged 12, different places and they've got
9:00
12 dresses, and they've got these, you know, idea, Pages, flowers. And all I do is shake my head and go. Oh, you're gonna be so surprised when the real of marriage hits, all the hard work because it seems like a party a show, and in this day and age. That's what we show people about marriage. You know, folks like me and Barack joke that we're hashtag couples goals. People see us and our
9:30
Our best, they, you know, the fist bumps, the high fives, the family going to church, and we show our best selves all the time. Sadly. And so, I think it confuses people when we're not completely honest. And so, I'm fine that young people give up on Marriage too early because they think that it's all about the Great Moments and it's really about pushing through the tough moment. So if we don't share those of couples like me and Barack don't share those times. Then we're not
10:00
Really giving the best advice that we can so compromise is right in the middle of it all. And you know, people look at what I've done because I've been so vocal about the fact that I wasn't interested in politics. It looks like I'm the one that's the primary person who's compromised and because I'm the woman in this relationship generally that is the case. But the truth is, is that, you know, Barack has compromised in big and small ways throughout our relationship.
10:30
Ship. I mean just on the temperament side, right? We are totally different people. I love being around people all the time. I can talk to people all day all the time, never exhausted from company. So that's just my natural personality, Barack loves people, but he also is more of a loner, he likes that time to himself. So he's had to compromise and come to the middle.
11:00
On, you know, come out of your hole for minute. Let's talk, one of the things I share, we were first dating because he we were long distance after he went back to law school because he was going into a second year and I was still practicing. But he told me he's like man I'm not much of a phone guy and I'm like oh you're a bad dude. You're about to be a bone Guy. This is going to work. You know, you heard me talking to me every night.
11:30
Ours, you know, so lo and behold he became, maybe I was talking more than he, you know, was maybe do more listening but so those are temperamentally, you know. Yeah, I'm to these relationships is completely different people. Yeah, I talked about him being a swerve. ER, and I was the person that liked my feet to the ground and dinner every night at a certain time. And he had to compromise on how our
12:00
Emily was shaped, I think I was right in many of those decisions as I always think I am but I think he's had a step back on decisions that I've made for our children because a lot of times, he wasn't there, he has backed me on some crazy decision. Malia's first major punishment for something that she did. I grounded her for like a semester, you know? Whoa, yeah. And that's you. That's what that was his first reactions like a semester.
12:30
You know? And I was like, yeah. Okay. That seems like bright and that's round. His eyes. Nice round number. You know, and he was sort of like might be a little harsh but if you said it we're going to go with his. He went with it, you know, and I was wrong. It was way too long, it had no effect, but that's another story. So, you know, even in the way we raise kids and the decisions that we make, he knows that, he's got to have my back, especially we've got to be
13:00
That united front so he doesn't always agree but he won't disagree with me in front of the kids. And his compromise has really allowed me to step back in those times that I wanted to step back. I talked in becoming about the decision. I made to walk away from a very lucrative corporate law career to work in the city and then nonprofits and all of those decisions of mind you guys were financially problematic. We
13:30
We had the same amount of debt, but each job I took, I made less money. And so the only reason way I could do that and he and I together could still pay down our school debt. Was that he took on more of the financial responsibility. At one point. When he was a state senator, he was literally holding down three Fulk, separate careers. He was a state senator. He was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, talk to courses.
14:00
One in common law. He talked con law while he was state senator, and he was still doing appellate work at a law firm so that I could make less money so that I could make the choice to work part time when I had the girls. There are so many ways that that's like what your dad did for with your mom. Yeah. And that let me tell you, that's one of the reasons why I fell in love with my husband, had his core.
14:30
He reminded me of my father, you know, this honorable decent, he is who he says he is kind of person doesn't care about the external stuff. Doesn't sweat the small stuff and I was just so happy that my father got a chance to meet Barack before he passed. My father, couldn't walk me down the aisle but Barack got his Blessing and that meant the world to me, so so yeah. My husband compromises even though I do,
15:00
Don't always talk about it. Yeah.
15:16
Hello. Fresh is wonderful because as a parent meal planning and dinnertime can be the ultimate stressors, fitting them in between busy school nights. Full days of work practices and more practices and other family needs, but hellofresh provides a solution for every challenge. You might face when it comes to mealtime with over 40, weekly recipes to choose from, from all Lifestyles and preferences. You'll find something for everyone in the family, we quickly, discovered our favorites liked us,
15:46
And spiced shrimp that the kids loved from the first bite. You'll also introduced new fun options in your weekly routine going around the globe with Thai rice, bowls on the, go Pita pockets and more go to hellofresh.com hard, things, 60 and use code hard things. Sixty four, sixty percent off plus free shipping, that's hellofresh.com hard thing, 60 and use code hard things, sixty four sixty percent off plus free.
16:16
Shipping hellofresh America's number one meal kit.
16:25
I want to give you my big, big, amen. Because it means so much at such a personal level to hear you be. So open about what it takes to walk a long marriage. Because when you hear and see you as part of this iconic couple,
16:49
Talking. So openly and courageously about your struggles. It really shifts. Something fundamentally in someone like me, who may hypothetically have been thinking I was doing it all wrong and I am now, like maybe I wasn't doing it all wrong. Maybe this is just how it is and so I deeply deeply. Thank you for that because I agree with you. That people aren't doing that in the world and it's so important. And I wondered if
17:19
You could share with us.
17:22
More about what the challenges of having young kids are on marriage and oh my goodness. And what are the gifts of a long partnership on the other side of say, a decade of not being able to stand each other? They were well, this is what we don't talk about. I joke about it all the time even if I were to track the hardest years of our marriage, the times when I was most resentful was the time when the
17:52
the kids were little because they suck the oxygen out of all living things. Yes suck the oxygen out of all living things. Yes, it's a good working title but nobody tells you that, you know, I had to work hard to have my children, I wanted them desperately, I wrote in becoming, we went through IVF, we had unexplained infertility as
18:22
More people are doing, it wasn't unexplained. We were in our 30s, trying to get pregnant, but nobody talked about that. You just felt bad in the moment. You felt like you were broken in some way. So just that emotional, trauma alone, how that impacts a marriage because nobody talked about it. I don't think that we had the tools to know how much of a challenge that was for us. I was feeling bad about myself.
18:52
Myself. I was depressed. I had a miscarriage. I didn't understand why we couldn't get pregnant. It was one of these things. When you're a hard-driving person, you decide what you want and then you go after it and you get it. And then the one thing you want that, you really, really want, it's out of your control. That was one of the first experiences that I had. So I was going through stuff, we don't talk about postpartum, I don't think I had it, but who knows? We never talked about what having
19:22
It does to your hormones and we didn't have the language. We didn't have the knowledge. So let's just start there, right? That's not before they even arrive. That's before they even get here and breastfeeding. Oh, you know, some doesn't work out right? So will you mad at him? But you can't help me. What are you doing? There's so many ways that kids are hard on on life but we can't
19:52
Say that out loud because we love them and as Barack and I say that's why God makes them cute. But there's just this thing about them, right? You know, they're just so you can't be mad at them because of them. All right, so who you going to take it out on you take it out on each other, the sleepless night, the worries, I mean, the endless worries. My kids will be 22 and 25 this year. Let's just stop there. That's kind of shocking.
20:22
Write those two little people. They're grown women in the world. They, they are away from us and you would think that that would create less stress, but no more strat-o-matic, guess what there are out there on their own taking planes, living in apartment driving cars, having relationships, it never ends. And no one tells you about this, they just say have a baby. It's going to be great. We are together. No, it's very hard because you love them. And so I think
20:52
I think that we got to talk about that. So that when young couples do run into those struggles, they don't think that they're broken. It's like, no, this is the hardest thing. You're doing marrying, another individual melding two lives, do different ways of being and then adding more life into that mix and then you don't even know what kind of kid you're going to get, because that's another thing. Then I'll tell you have one, maybe you think you're a great parent, right? You're like, well, I got this down and then the second one shows up and they
21:22
Not having any of your first child decisions. They don't even abide by that, right? But let me not talk because I want to hear. I want to hear that. I'm not crazy. I just feel that so much. I mean, I really thought I was a really good parent when I had my first kid. I did I, oh, people would complain and I feel like my god. Oh, and then I had the second and I was like, oh this has nothing to do with me, that's the good news.
21:52
And the bad news and Barack goes through that because our first Malia what they're both. Brilliant, of course, Malia was more of the, she's more of an appeaser. She's a people pleaser, she was in many ways. So I think Barack thought that he was really interesting. Young people, you know, the difference in like when they were teenagers, were Malia would say, all right, I'm going out this weekend. I think I need to go in and
22:22
Of dad like 15 minutes, right? And he would she would go into treaty Room in the White House and she'd ask him. So tell me about Syria. And well I saw that you gave a speech on blah, blah blah. You know she just go in and he come out with its just pumped up, you know? And I feel like, do you know where she's going this weekend? He was like huh. No I didn't even ask. It's like, that's some Jujitsu because you were so thrilled with the fact that she took interest
22:52
It in your presidency that you don't even know what she's doing, right? Then Sasha shows up and Sasha's totally like, don't touch me. Don't look my way I don't need to please. You, you're annoying. He got a lot of that. He was stunts, you know, and I tell them it's like she's gonna come around you know and now at 21 there they just got off the phone last night. Yeah. She called him looking for advice and it just took her a longer but
23:22
I was devastated. We used to joke is like, Barack is so scared of Sasha. You know, it's so desperately trying to win her approval and she was having none of it. So it's like that they're different kids and so that can take you for a loop, right? Yes, we don't know how they think, the way they do. And if you care too much about them liking you, you're already losing gets jealous, okay?
23:52
Okay, yes. So I what I hear you saying then, is that in years of that is, if they don't like us or nailing it where you want some balance. Yes, right. One of my sayings, which I hear myself saying it. It's like don't talk to me that way. I'm not one of your little friends, you know, it's like we're not friends, I love you, I love you desperately, but we're not on the same plane and they don't even want you to be on the same plane. They want, boundaries and Authority. So
24:22
Urge young people who are thinking about having kids, it's like think about why you're having kids. Because in my view, we're not supposed to have kids to fulfill something in us that we're missing, right? As my mom Marian Robinson said, we are here as parents to raise individuals and we have to be thinking along those lines and if you have a baby because you need a friend, well, you're going to be sorely disappointed because with
24:52
Friends, you make accommodations for your friends, right? And with kids you can't make accommodations. They are 34 they're unreasonable. They don't know anything. Yeah. I mean they have no facts, no logic. So we can't treat them. Like they have since all the time and we want to treat them like they're capable in my view. Kids aren't supposed to be your friends you because the job is too big to worry about whether they like you or not and
25:22
No matter what you do, they will find a reason not to like you. That's their job to push against us. And if we get pushed a little bit and we cave, well, then we're giving them no Foundation. We're giving them no base. And a lot of times that's what they're testing. They're trying to test. Can I push you? Like, I can push my friends. And the answer has to be no, absolutely not. You know, there's some consistency. There's some predictability and how I'm going to react to you and we don't do that with our friends. That's all.
25:52
Right. So you mentioned your mom. Hmm. So on this podcast, we're always asking this question of are we supposed to change our kid for the world or we supposed to change the world for our kit? Okay. This is like a repetitive theme. You do your mother's wisdom, give us a third way, which rocked all of our worlds and is one of the many things about the book. We haven't stopped talking about. So, you write that whenever you or your brother complained about how people in the world will responding to you who like
26:22
You and who didn't your mother would say come home, we will always like you here. Yeah, hmm, it's simple and so not simple. It's such a brilliant way of refusing to either change other people to like your kid or change your kid to be more likeable. Hmm and instead it's just offering your very self as a safe accepting celebratory Sanctuary from this unpredictable.
26:52
Evil world. How did knowing come home? We will always like you here helped shape Who You Are.
27:00
Oh wow, profoundly profoundly because when you have a base of love, you know, and not everyone has it right. You have a place to come where people are glad to see you. They're happy to hear your voice. They're happy that you're alive. I grew up with that. So it didn't take away. The pains the fears, the hurts of the world, but it gave me a safe place to
27:30
And to lick my wounds to build, you know, up my courage to go back out into the inevitable chaos, and that is more powerful than book knowledge. What I find myself falling back on and have fallen back on throughout my life. It's that General, enoughness that, my parents gave me at home. That helped me settle myself and learn how to heal myself.
27:59
Myself from the inevitable you know Flux Of The World. I fall back on it to this day. I try to emulate it with my own kids. I try to replicate it for kids that I come in contact with just this notion of, we cannot control the world nor should we? So all we can do is control our own selves to protect our own light, but is no one is
28:30
Is shown us the value of our light. It's hard to do it, you know, if we didn't, you know, and it doesn't have to be a parent. I say that because I know that there are people who don't have it in their homes, but that light, that feeling of enough illness that feeling of gladness can come at school from a teacher. I just want young people to search it out and to, and to run after it whenever they see it, and they recognize it because that's all.
28:59
All we can control. I wish I could fix the world for my kids. I'm no different than any other mother. I am a mama bear to this day. My kids come to me with a problem and the first thing I was like, well, who give me a name? Yes. Well, thank you for that. Thank you who's, who she yeah, what's her last name? You know. And they're like Mom, Mom, don't start googling people. You know, I have that in me, I will fight to the death for my kids.
29:30
But they have to live in the world, you know, and they have to fight their own battles. And they have to know that they can. My mother was good at that. I knew she always would have my back my parents I could come home I could tell them anything I could complain. And a lot of times when you're a kid, you don't even want them to do anything. That's right. Yes, you know, you just want to be heard. My mom spent so much time doing this. That I didn't realize it was more like. Mmm. Mmm. Oh
30:00
Really hmm. What did you? You know, that was most of my conversation. I was like yet another thing and then and she let me spin like the Tasmanian devil and I just run out of energy and she would end with what you do you need me to do anything? And the answer was usually, well, no, I actually felt better after letting it all out, right. Hmm. That's what my poor little working class home life was like and we had no money.
30:30
Me.
30:30
Hmm, my parents didn't go to college, they didn't have networks, they didn't have any of that, but they had that enoughness that enoughness in themselves to be confident that what was going on at 7436. South Euclid was just as powerful as what might have been going on in the white house or somebody else's nicer house that our world was Secure because we had love and respect for each other. That's like
30:59
like so much more powerful than trying to fix the world so that your kid never experiences pain, never experiences failure. There's nothing wrong with those feelings. With those experiences if they have a safe place to land and they learn how to build that for themselves as they become adults. Yes, that's where the kitchen table comes into. If you have it at home now, you know, how to replicate it and build it for yourself when you go out in the world because it's not just coming from your
31:29
Mom your dad your home life. You gotta know how to build relationships with people who sustain you. Right? And that's part of that kitchen table, my parents taught me that so I my relationships are just as valuable to me with my friends as they are with my parents because I need them desperately. I need the enoughness that I get from my girlfriend's, right? So I was able to go out into the world with that tool and that's that tool has
31:59
stain me through being the first black first lady having people called me fat and names and, you know, meeting the bully down the street or the professor at undergrad who didn't think I was smart enough or the counselor who told me I couldn't go to Princeton my attitude towards all that wasn't that it wasn't supposed to happen. I didn't feel like I was entitled never to experience that. Yeah, what I had was I'll show
32:30
You know, I will show you because I know what failure feels like, I know how to go home and get the reassurance that I need and I will come back and I will prove all of you wrong to me. That's a better tool than being hurt or being afraid or shying away from the negative things of the world. Inevitably has waiting for our kids out there in the world. Yes.
33:05
There are so many benefits that come with learning something new, you step outside your comfort zone, you grow as a person, the list goes on learning a new language accomplishes. All of this and Babel is the way to do it. In today's world bite-sized lessons in 14, languages voiced by real native speakers all from the comfort of your home for me. Babble, wasn't learning a new language, but it was relearning. And
33:29
Finding my Spanish speaking abilities. And when I traveled to Mexico with my family, the Babel lessons, I had taken in the months prior made a world of difference. Their speech recognition technology, help my pronunciation, and their ten minute lessons really do amount to a cohesive language. Learning experience right now, get up to 55% off your subscription when you go to babble.com / hard things. That's Babel.com
34:00
hard things for up to 55% off your subscription Babble language for Life. How does it feel to have your girl's creating that with each other right now that they're living together? We cannot stop talking about it. Is that ultimate extreme, right? You guys, it is the best feeling in the world, you know.
34:29
And my kids have their already accomplishing some pretty amazing things out there. They are great students. They remain sane in a pretty unusual childhood, they manage the negative and positive attention, great grades gone to Great colleges, but the truth is that when I see them building Community with each other and taking that out, and staying connected to their friends and creating their own,
34:59
Our own rituals, I don't doubt that they can do the work that comes. I want to know that they can sustain themselves as human beings when I'm not here because let's stop there, you know, my mother of all people, and we roll our eyes. She's been preparing us for her death and she's one of those morbid ladies. He's like, well, I'm not gonna be here. So you will better be able to Adams like oh, would you stop talking about the day, you're gone.
35:30
You know, but she's getting us ready because she's like, I don't want my kids falling apart because I'm not here and what's the point of that. And so I find myself feeling the same sense of gratitude for my girls because I feel like they're getting to the point where they don't need me and that feels good. They like me. They like us. They like being around us but they don't need us. And I think that was our job, right? As parents that said outside.
35:59
That's our job. That's it. You know, not to be one it needed. I don't want to be grading your papers, or reading your assignments. I, you know, I don't want to go to school with you again because I don't want to do that again. I want you to be able to handle your business. I want you to be able to handle your disputes when somebody is racist. I want you to be able to look them in the eye and know that you're ready. And I see that in them and that gives me a great sense of relief. And that's what I would urge all parents to think about. We can hold on.
36:29
On and try to fix the world for our kids. But dag, if we do that, we're going to be doing that for the rest of our lives. Yeah that's that's like a lot. So tired from having already, exhausted, great. And we're only you get older, you get more exhausted. I don't have the energy for that. I don't want to go through a new first job again. I want to watch you to it. Okay, tell me about it. I did it already. So I find that I enjoy my life more.
36:59
Or my kids more because I taught them to be competent and independent and we practiced it for a long time. And that's why I want parents to know. It's like the helicoptering is something you can never let go of and that seems exhausting. It doesn't seem like a great way to live. Let's start getting our kids ready earlier. We can't wait until they're 23 and out of the house to teach them that they can get themselves up at in the morning that they can handle their.
37:29
Work that they can deal with disputes at school and with their friends. Let them practice. Let them fail. Let them get hurt because that's waiting form. Yes, it is. You know and if the first time they experience a losses in their 30s they're going to fall apart. Hmm. We have to help our kids understand their way through because this next thing is scary. So much of your book is so helpful in teaching us
37:59
us about how to look our fears in the eye. And you said that fear comes from within, which means that denying your fear almost always involves denying a part of yourself. Yeah. That rings. So true inside of me and it feels like
38:22
Since that is true than when you're facing a fear, whether you are succumbing to it or overcoming it. Mmm would your always denying a part of yourself. Hmm. So my question is, how do you know that it's the right part of yourself to deny? How do you know, if it's the anxiety or it's the intuition, if it's the oppressor or the Liberator, how do you identify that voice? Which part of yourself, is the right part of yourself, to deny.
38:52
Oh, suck deep. Good question for me. It's it's practice. It's like it's self knowledge and self knowledge takes time. And I think that that's the frustrating thing about your 20s. In your 30s, you don't know because you haven't had enough practice with yourself, and unless you have dealt with a whole lot of trauma, and I've been pushed in ways, and
39:21
There are a lot of people out there who have had to learn a lot about themselves and they sadly have done it without much guidance and ability or time to be self-reflective about it but I find that that's one of the things like yeah, you learn yourself over time. I have learned by taking risks and doing hard things that over the course of what will be the coming on my 60th year of life.
39:51
If I'm getting better, I'm still now just getting better at making those kind of distinctions, right? I know when my fear is real and I have to pay attention to it. And I know when my fear, as I write in the book is, is trying to keep me stuck this trying to keep me from growing. I've learned it more and more because I've done harder and harder things that roller coaster ride that you go on when you're doing something.
40:21
That's hard, but not dangerous. It's just scary. And you know that feeling when you I'm about to fall off this mountain. Yes. And I just don't want young people to think, you know, it right away because I find that young people if they can't distinguish it right away. They think they don't know themselves and it's like, well you gotta try on a few things. Hmm. Everybody's going to have their first, their first time, you know, getting on a bus by themselves, you're learning something there.
40:50
Oh that's, that's that competence that's giving your kids. The practiced in Independence, just riding a public. Bus tells you some things about, is it the bus ride or is it that scary dude that just got on at the third stop? And what do I do under those circumstances? Do I can just put my headphones down and not, listen or watch, or keep my eyes open, or do I get off and run? It takes practice, you know, going away from home for the first time, right? That that's the first that really
41:21
That hole is, should I stay home and not go away to school because I don't want to be away from the things that are familiar to me. And we all know if you've got a chance to go away to school, it could be that those first six weeks, even three months can be horrible. Oh no, anybody I'm a horrible, you know, and you don't have a friend, you don't know how to be alone yet. You don't even know how to get to the library, but you don't
41:50
Why's that that's going to pass, you don't not go to college because the first 6 weeks, or even the first three months, they're going to be hard. Because guess what? In three months you'll make a friend or at least you'll know your roommate or you'll get used to the pace of college. So that fear isn't a fear that should stop. You starting your first job moving to a new city. I mean all of that you know but the more that we do the more that I've done, I know in my life the more
42:20
I can this make the distinction, but if you're holding onto your child to yourself, if you never taken that First Leap, you never get to practices. And there's so many people who live in their comfort zones forever and they make their world small. I wrote about some of those people in my life. My grandparents were those people. Sometimes my mom can be my mom is well, I tease her, she's like she's well
42:50
Just in the art of no. Because guess what, when you're black woman raised on the south side of Chicago, Chicago was a very segregated City, you know, going out into the wrong neighborhood. Could mean, you were going to get beat up killed? There are some real fears there. So people were more reticent about stepping outside of their family, their neighborhood, right? So my mom's got that naturally, right? Um, but as she's grown up with us, she pushed us and now
43:20
Find that I'm pushing her. It's like, yes, Mom, you do want to go to China with us as you do want to move into the White House. We need you. It's going to be an interesting experience. You do want to meet the pope for a second time. You do want to go to Venice. I mean, you look to my mom, I'm like Mom, come on. We're gonna meet the pope, but her first response to everything is no. Why would I want to do that? Yeah. Is that the flip side of being deeply?
43:50
Satisfied when you're talking about a deeply satisfying person is his. Yes it's stuckness sometimes because and so now the test is are you satisfied? Or are you afraid? Which is it? And these are all questions that we all have to ask ourselves. Are we satisfied? Are we scared of the new? And I talked about that being a part of bigotry racism, unbeknownst to some of us.
44:20
We just get caught in our comfort. We block out all the new and so now we don't know any new. We just do the same thing all the time and we don't realize that that newness is keeping us blocked off from other his other gets scary, right? Yeah. And so, as I said, when I went to places like Princeton for the first time in my life and I realized, wow, there are whole places in this country that are wealthy white and don't even know I exist.
44:50
Just oh, my God. And these are people who have money, right? They live in Worlds where they don't see, you know, smart young black women from Chicago, they don't even know I exist. So me realizing that gives me more empathy because I'm like, well, it's going to take you a minute to know that I even exist but we need to challenge each other on those fronts. Yeah. Because that gets dangerous when we're only living in our safe zones. Yes. Because then
45:21
We don't know our neighbors and then that means somebody can tell us something crazy about our neighbor. That's not even true. We're susceptible to lies and misconstrued, Notions people who were afraid that Barack Obama was a terrorist that he was a Muslim that he was that we were other that our family was so different that we posed a threat to the nation, right? I don't want to dwell on that part of ourselves, but that was a part of the challenge of being the first
45:50
Black family in the White House people. In no black people, you know, and know what we would do. How do we think? It's so different, you know, that that fist bump that I gave him? That was a terrorist fist bump, right? It wasn't just a yo, dude, we just, we just want, you know, that could be misconstrued as something dangerous. And so are we all know people who are stuck in their sameness in that
46:20
Guard and not because they're inherently bad people. They're just afraid, right? That's why we have to. Why? Talk about what we have to dissect our fear? Yeah, and I want young people to dissect their fear early, so that we don't get stuck in just what we know. But that takes practice, it takes constantly pushing ourselves out of our comfort zones and how do I know? Because I've been doing it.
46:50
For 60 years now. And I still don't have it, right? I still don't always know myself because, as I said in becoming we are always evolving the journey that evolutionary process, never ends. You just get a little better in it. You become comfortably afraid. This is what I write about in the light and I think that's where I am a little more self-aware. A little more comfortably afraid, so
47:19
good.
47:28
Just thinking about parachute, makes me want to curl up for a nap there, cotton, percale sheets, which I have on our bed now, make a restful sleeping experience. No matter what happened during the day or what I have to look forward to tomorrow, I just become absorbed in these sheets. I lay down in my bed and I know I'm in my happy place and if you're a hot sleeper a I feel your pain and B. These are cool and breathable.
47:58
They're made with care in a family-owned Factory and without harmful, chemicals, or synthetic softeners and they just continue to get softer over time in a word as far as bedding goes there. Perfect. Visit parachute home.com hard things to discover, all of parachutes soft things. That's parachute. Home.com hard things for soft, sheets, fluffy towels, and all things home, parachute home.com,
48:28
Hard things.
48:34
You share really
48:35
powerfully in the new book about the loneliness of only - of being the only black family, or black woman in a space. And you also talked about the opportunity cost of own Lena switch isn't talking about enough. So our son's friend recently texted me for advice from a day's long protest at Wellesley for Trans rights. And when I told Abby about the text
48:58
I said to her that when Emma texted from that day's long protest I thought what do you think the other kids in their English class are doing right now? They're studying. Yeah because they don't have the extra job of demonstrating for their own existence so who's going to do better on Tuesdays test? Yeah. So what do you tell your daughters about how to protect their precious time and energy in this world that will try to give?
49:28
So many extra jobs. Yeah, I try to explain that very principle of getting lost in the Battle of explaining yourself. Your example is perfect, that's what happens to only' to women, people of color, you know, in c-suites and in boardrooms, and in classrooms all over the world. There's a self-consciousness, there's an extra weight.
49:58
There's a as I say this tray of expectations, it's not even just within yourself, but it's the history that you represent. Everybody else is hopes and dreams that you're carrying on this tray, across this tightrope. It can be exhausting. So what do I say to my daughter's other young people? As I first of all, let's acknowledge that that's happening because so many times is an only right, you feel crazy. You feel like you know, nobody else.
50:28
Is this there's this ghost in the room that only you are experiencing and sometimes it's just important to remind, young people you're not crazy. This is actually happening. It is a burden, it is not right? But it is real and acknowledging the realness of the problem for a lot of people is important. That's why there's so many young people who are trying to be seen. See me where I see my struggle. See my thing and
50:58
And it's important to say, yeah, but to go back to what my mom says, what I tell my girls is at this is the way the world is. We need to continue to work to change it. But you also cannot focus yourself solely on the only - mmm and nobody can help you out of that. But yourself, you have to constantly remind yourself what your job is. What your point is. What your purpose is that still work that you have to do in your 20s and 30s and focus as much on that.
51:28
As you do on fighting the battles of the past or the things that are in front of you. Because, as you said, you have to bide your energy. You cannot take on every battle and you can't do it all at once. So there is a pacing that has to happen and a lot of these young people have to be told that it's okay to pace yourself. And the other thing that I, you know, we're mine, young people, is that your first first and foremost, you have to do the job at hand.
51:58
And right and I tell young people that all the time, your job as a 15 year old, a 16 year old 18 year old is not to fixed the economy or to fix racism. Your job is to graduate you know you got to start with what's right before you the thing you can control you know it 15 you can't fix your whole neighborhood that is being bombarded by drugs and crime you 15 years.
52:28
Old can't do that, but you can do your homework, you know, you can go to school every day, you can focus on your own mental health so that you can get up and go to school. Because if you don't get your education, don't get your high school diploma. You'll never have what you need to fight the battles when you actually have the power to do it. So, I constantly urge people to do the job at hand but that doesn't mean you're complacent.
52:58
I only say that because the young people will go back to the respectability politics and balance and patience my own kids, they hate feeling like we're telling them to just be patient, right? And it's not about being patient. It's about being strategic. Yes. With your time with your energy. It's about being smart even as in the white house as first lady, one of the most power positions I've ever had, there were only a handful of things I could do.
53:28
And if I try to do too much I would do nothing. That's why I had to be strategic about picking a handful of initiatives. Yeah and let me tell you we got letters and people were disappointed why didn't you do more on this? And you never talked about that and you're like you're right you're right I had to say no more than I said. Yes, I did as much as I could to go deep and not just bra but I was also 40-something years old, I'd been used to being in a
53:58
T giuk place. I understood how to get things done. That you have to narrow and focus. I was practiced in that in a way that a lot of young people are still learning when they're the only reason these other situations. It reminds me of what sister you said, the Deep instead of just brought it realizes what you were saying. So I was thinking about how the whole world knows you. As when they go low, we go high and this new transformational tool that you have in this book
54:28
Look, we have started calling when the stress goes big. We go small. Because the world is screaming at us. Go big or go home. Go big. Yeah. But you talked about the importance and the dignity. Mmm. Of tending to the small. What you call, what is good simple and accomplishable, what makes the good simple and accomplishable so important and so dignified for us to do
54:59
Because in my view that's that's how change happens. The real lasting change. You know, when we look over the course of human history, yes, they're the big Wars, there's the depression there, Big Stuff, the invention of the telephone and you know, all of that stuff that's all big and we write about it but the way the world works is that we live you know we love we bring life into
55:29
In we teach from that life it goes on and it does better than us. Small things. I was first lady of the United States of America but the biggest job I've ever had will ever have, is raising two human beings that I'm putting out into the world more empathetic, more compassionate. It is it glamorous it should be more glamorous than what we make of it in the society because it's really pretty profound what we do to raise. And
55:59
Other human being right? How we interact with other human beings in the world right now. People are losing their minds because we're all just being rude. Everybody is mad and impatient, and because we had a leader that led that way. We pretended like it didn't matter, but it does. It matters how you lead. It matters how you show up in the world, as a human being seems really small not as big as being president of the United States. But look
56:29
Okay, good. Teacher a person who is a good teacher can have as great if not a greater impact on the world than the president of the United States. To me, that's how change happens. It's not glamorous and oftentimes sadly, it's unsatisfactory, right? Because you are not going to live to see the fruits of your labor sometimes. And I think that that's our, that's our uh, our
56:59
With so much immediacy. You know we want gratification now we want winds now. I think about all the older black folks and people who fought for civil rights and for change who didn't live to see Barack Obama become president, but it didn't change the nature of their fight, the nature of their work, you know? And I hope we don't fall into that. Feeling of if it's not big and I can't see it. Then what's the point?
57:29
Cuz changes that day by day, slow grind. It's the knitting that we do. You know, the analogy wise, stay open up the book with power small and talk about my knitting is that that was something that became real clear to me over the course of the pandemic, when the whole world shut down and there was no big that could happen and all we could do was to tend to our knitting, you know, to get up every day to try to stay safe to feed our
57:59
Lay's to hug our loved ones and for many, they didn't even have the luxury of being able to do that and for us to feel like that at that moment, one of the most profound moments of In Our Lifetime. That the biggest thing we could do was to be small. And to do what we could do manage ourselves, our health, the people we were responsible for our neighbors, our friends, that's life, that's the profound thing of it. All to me write that it's
58:28
Still all starts with what's in here that light inside of us. The thing we can control. We can't control how people feel about us, how they see us. Whether they're mean to us, we can control the thoughts in our head, how our soul operates, we can control the the families that we raise the neighborhoods that we live in the smaller, the better. That's what we can control and then that impacts the big because if we're all doing that small job,
58:59
Imagine all the stuff he wouldn't have to be bothered with if we all just tended to our knitting. It'd be so much we wouldn't have to worry about, right? If at least, that's how I see it handed to our wedding. Michelle Obama. I just called you Michelle Obama. You did it. I did it during the even the really dark times over the last decade you have been a consistent.
59:28
N't light. Yeah even when we can't see you, even with you're not in our heart but your existence who you are in the world, the way you walk through the world, the way that you wife, the way that you friend, the way that you lead, the way that you parent has been a consistent light to the point that when I got to the end of your book and you were talking about,
59:51
are we still going to go high? Yeah. It was a part of me that thought that maybe you were going to say we weren't. I don't know. I just really didn't know the last page. I hope there it is. And when you stayed study when you stayed the light that you are, I described I just started crying and I don't know what that is. It might be just that you're you have been one of the only constant consistent things in the world. Yeah, for the last decade. So thank you. We would be in your corner.
1:00:21
Forever and ever. Amen. We love you. Thank you for this hour. Thank you for this platform. Thank you for the light. All of you are putting out there. This is that small power conversation. One at a time, we'll never know who's listening. You never know who's going to touch, but the fact that all three of you are putting your souls out there every day. Taking that risk. I applaud you. That's why I wanted to be here with you. Thank you for not destroying.
1:00:51
Disappointing in the depth and breadth of this conversation. Thank you guys so much. That was our only goal. Please don't disappoint, Michelle Obama. So thank you. We have done it. We can go now. Thank you so much. Love you guys, love you so much. Thanks for coming on.
1:01:10
Wow. Wow, you all are smooth. Oh my God.
1:01:20
If this
1:01:21
podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us if you'd be willing to take 30 seconds to do each or all of these three things first. Can you please follow or subscribe to? We can do hard things following the pot helps you because you'll never miss an episode and it helps
1:01:39
Us because you'll never miss an episode to do this. Just go to the, we can do hard things, show page on Apple podcasts Spotify, Odyssey, or wherever you listen to podcasts. And then just tap, the plus sign in the upper right hand corner or click on follow. This is the most important thing for the Pod while you're there, if you'd be willing to give us a five star rating and review and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful. We appreciate you very much.
1:02:10
We can do hard. Things is produced in partnership with cadence 13 Studios. I give you Tish Melton and Brandi, Carlile,
1:02:30
I chased it is. I am I made sure I got one's mine.
1:02:39
And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me.
1:03:09
I stopped asking directions, some places they've never been need to can do.
1:03:39
No heart.
1:04:03
Sometimes things fall and I continue to believe the best people are free.
1:04:21
Sometimes, but I'm finally fine.
1:04:30
Adventure directions.
1:05:09
A heart.
ms