IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson - "We Can't Be Who We Can't See" with Michele Norris

Episode Date: February 26, 2024

Award-winning journalist Michele Norris and Michelle Obama discuss how they push each other in their friendship, challenges in relationships, and the importance of mentorship.See Privacy Poli...cy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Light Podcast is presented by Starbucks and Intuit. I am so happy to be here. One of the things we love about Michelle Obama is that she brings people together. And we are all here together looking sparkly and happy because we are here to spend an evening with our forever first lady. So let us wait no further. Let us bring her out here and let's show her. A big, huge, warm welcome for my sister friend, Michelle Obama.
Starting point is 00:00:43 Hi, everyone. It's Michelle. It's been a while since this podcast first came out, a whole year, actually. And a lot has happened since then for all of us. We've had good days and bad days and lots of good and bad days. We felt fear and anxiety, but also community and love. In other words, we've lived a whole lot of life. And what I keep hearing from people I meet
Starting point is 00:01:16 is that they're still looking for new and creative ways to manage everything life throws their way. Now, I don't have all the answers. Believe me, if I did, I'd tell you. But I do know what is working for me, and I hope that some of it will work for you too. That's why I wrote the light we carry. And that's why I'm thrilled to announce that it will be coming out in paperback soon.
Starting point is 00:01:45 And to help celebrate, I'm also releasing a couple of bonus episodes of this podcast that I've never shared before, including this one with my dear friend Michelle Norris. Michelle is also a world-class journalist, author of the New New York Times bestselling book Our Hidden Conversations, and host of the wonderful podcast, Your Mama's Kitchen, which you can find on Audible or wherever you get your podcasts. With Michelle, I never have to look or feel or act a certain way. I can just be myself. In this episode, we talk about friendship, mentorship, relationships, and so much more. I hope you can feel the love and that you have as much fun listening as we did recording it. I love that you use the phrase partnering well because you're not talking necessarily about marrying well,
Starting point is 00:02:44 finding a partner in life. And you talk about it not being 50-50. And that marriage is never 50-50, which is, you know, information that I think many of us need to hear because you go into it thinking, e-meany-mony-mo, paper says a rock, you know, we're going to work.
Starting point is 00:03:01 You do one thing, I do one thing, it's always going to be fair. No, it's not. We need to figure this out. Sometimes you won't like him. You know, and that's just, you will love him, but you might not like him. That's also one of those little...
Starting point is 00:03:15 You might love her or might not like her. One of those little things we don't say about marriage. There will be long periods of time when you won't like them. Long, long, long, long, long. Long periods of time. You know, you come home and you realize it's not going to be 50-50 unless you can... And you don't even want it to be 50-50. There was this time.
Starting point is 00:03:39 I haven't told this story. Barack tells it all the time, but I went on a bit. business trip. Malia was Sasha born yet, but Malia, Barack was in charge. Malia had to go to ballet and
Starting point is 00:03:55 I, of course, this is where my kitchen table, because the thing was is that even when Barack was on his own, he was never on his own because my kitchen table would be like, girl, we got you. And so he was like, no, I can get her to ballet. So he tries to fix her
Starting point is 00:04:11 hair. You know, ballet, the tutu, and the little puff. That's all she had. It was just a poof. All you had to do is gather, gather, gather and tie. Why can't you do that? You know? And he was, he was like, I don't know what to do with this. It's like gather and tie. Dude,
Starting point is 00:04:27 brush, gather tie. Hold it all together. You, you know, you play basketball, you're coordinated, you know, you can do all these things. You talk, give speeches. You can't gather and tie a poof. So he does the best he can. And he
Starting point is 00:04:45 finishes and Malia is old enough to talk. And this is so Malia, Malia, he looks at her and says, you know, how is it? And he's like, oh, Daddy, this is great. So he takes her to ballet. She walked into the parent area where my kitchen table girlfriends come over. He sends her over to one of the mothers who says, come here, sweetie. He overhears this. He says, she asked Malia, you want me to do your hair? And he said, she said, oh my God, yes, this is a disaster. more after the break that's an example though of how the kitchen table watches out for each other absolutely one of the things I appreciate is when you have a circle the other people in your life benefit also so my husband has benefited from our friendship our kitchen table because I come home
Starting point is 00:05:39 a little more calm but our kids benefit you want us to have our kitchen tables you really do so we don't go off on you and you all should have yours too. Yes. Men talk. Make some friends, men. And when you do, talk about something. How many times do they get together and I come back?
Starting point is 00:06:03 They play golf. They play golf for hours and it's like, how's Asia? And Barack is like, she seems fine. I talk to you and it's like, well, this happened and that happened. I was like, what are y'all talking about? If you're not even talking about kids, have some friends and talk about something. Can you guys get that together? It's like...
Starting point is 00:06:26 Because everyone will benefit from that. But as was one of the people who entered the circle later, I had to deal with, I had to decode fear for myself. In part, because, you know, making new friends, you have to make yourself vulnerable. Entering a friendship with Michelle Obama means that you have to move a lot. And you had these boot camps that you invited us to be a part of. And one of the things I didn't tell you,
Starting point is 00:06:49 I'm telling you first on stage in front of a couple thousand people. What have you been hiding? When we first went to boot camp, I would go to the little cabin. We were at Camp David, and we stayed in these cozy little cabins, and I would go when I would get under the covers, and I was crying. Oh, oh, I made my friends cry. Because it was really hard. You know, and I was like, the phone, the cell service doesn't work up there.
Starting point is 00:07:15 Can't tell you where it is. But the cell service, I was like trying to call home. Come get me. Aw. You know, can I just walk down the hill? You make my kitchen table. You can meet me at the Wawa, you know, which is like our 7-Eleven in that part of the world. Can you just come get me?
Starting point is 00:07:31 And I got really, do you remember the first time I went? I got really sick. Yeah. And it was my body saying, uh-uh, you're not making me walk up that hill. You can give that hill a name. You call the hill Bertha? It was Bertha. It was a big hill.
Starting point is 00:07:44 But I thought you were trying to kill me, but what I realized is what friendship will do for you. But you were trying to help me find my best self. Yes. And that was something that I would not do on your own. So when we talk about friendship, I raise this because it's not always daisies and, you know, Chardonnay. You know, sometimes your friends, although Chardonnay does, you know, make things go down easier sometimes. But your friends also tell you what you need to hear, and they push you. And so I appreciate that because what you did for the nation and pushing us to get moving,
Starting point is 00:08:22 you pushed your friends to get moving also. And I am certain that it has added years to my life. And I'm certain that it is... Well, you went from crying in the cabin to now you have a trainer. And how many days a week do you work out? And you play tennis. Three times a week. And so here's what I know about friendship.
Starting point is 00:08:43 It is a thing, especially we as women, we aren't used to pushing ourselves. I think the next generation behind us, now that being a female athlete is now a cool thing. It wasn't when we were growing up. There are more opportunities for girls to play sports. There's a whole generation of us where we weren't encouraged to use our bodies to sweat. Oh, no. They used to call it glowing. Yeah, right. We didn't sweat. We glowed. Right. You were trying to get out of physical fitness, right? Because being a strong, athletic girl, it wasn't cool. Maybe you could be a cheerleader, but there were no role models for girls. There were no serenas, right? There were no, you know, there was no WNBA.
Starting point is 00:09:30 And so as a result, our generation of women, we don't know what it feels like to physically push ourselves. And I think we missed something because of that. We're intimidated by physical fitness in a way that shouldn't. And so what our boot camps were is like they were a series of, it was hard. It was three workouts today. It was really hard. There was a trainer. We had the Marines.
Starting point is 00:09:57 We'd be boxing. We did a little bit of everything. We played games. We played dodgeball. We did relays. You don't want to play dodgeball with Michelle Obama. Well, everyone was competitive after. But just playing and running and laughing,
Starting point is 00:10:12 it's another thing that gets you out of your worry. It shuts your brain off because you didn't have time to think about work or worry about the kids because you were like, there's the workout after lunch, can I do it? And guess what? Everybody did. I want my kitchen table to be alive and healthy. I want us to understand that we can be smart and strong, that I wanted us to model that for our girls. Because all of us have daughters, and all of our daughters move. All of our daughters eat right. they think about health as part of their way of being, and I think it's because we modeled that for them.
Starting point is 00:10:52 So I'm sorry. I'm better for it. Oh, it was hard. It was hard. You talk about opening yourself up to friendship. The other thing I will say is that when you do that, you know, we have daughters, we have sons. I have sons also, two sons.
Starting point is 00:11:14 but I don't know if you remember this when you first, you know, you talk about making yourself vulnerable, but when we first, we went to dinner early on at your house. And do you remember the time that Norris got, Norris went missing in the house? Do you remember this? He was playing hide and seek for like, you mean in the White House? No, we were up in, we were vacationing and you invited us to dinner. And for 15 minutes, he was like missing, he was hiding. I don't remember that.
Starting point is 00:11:38 And I thought, they're never inviting us back. See, that's the other thing, is when you're first. friends are the president, the first lady, you're sweating stuff that we're like, of course, they broke it, they don't know what's going on, which is why I'm grateful that people put up with what it was like to make friends with us in the heat of that. That wasn't an easy feat. But I share all that because if we get back to it as a tool, you know, I would just strongly encourage all of us to prioritize friendship. It doesn't happen on its own. And it's got to be up there on the list of things.
Starting point is 00:12:16 And even when you have kids and a relationship, let me tell you, kids are gone before you know it. They leave fast, too. They take up all the oxygen in your life. And then they leave. It's like, bye, I'm done with you now. And it happens soon. It's like, I have Friday, I have a party.
Starting point is 00:12:32 And it's like, well, we used to spend Friday. So I can't be with you any longer. This relationship, they break up with you so fast. And take your money. And take your money. make you pay for leaving them. For leaving you. So that's going to happen so fast.
Starting point is 00:12:52 And we have so much life left to live. And we are social beings. You know, even though we've gotten used to the comfort of being in our own words, there's a comfort there. You can easily slip into it. As much as I like people, I like being alone. I like when Barack is traveling. I have the remote to myself.
Starting point is 00:13:14 You know, that's just sort of feeling of no one is in my space. They're not going to comment on the fact that I'm watching a third season of the Real Housewives and come in like, why are you watching that? And I was like, why do you watch ESPN all day? You know, no judgment. It's good not to have judgment. But you can fall into that trap of comfort, but all the studies show that that's not good for us. And I want our young people not to get in the habit, especially now that you don't have
Starting point is 00:13:44 to go to work. If you're out there and you're finding yourself alone a lot, I want you to resist that being the norm. And that means you've got to take the risk, the scary risk, the fear thing again, of reaching out to somebody, you know, maybe being rejected, learning how to parcel through the, and get some resilience around friendship so that we're not alone. And that helps with stress, anxiety, uncertainty. Just being able to talk to somebody going, doesn't this feel crazy these times? Just having somebody else go, yeah, I'm struggling too.
Starting point is 00:14:22 That helps. That's a tool for getting through these times. More after the break. So an observation. In the years that you were in the White House, you seem to have used that kitchen table metaphor even when you were in the White House to take some of the pressure off,
Starting point is 00:14:44 to bring people in for dinners. to, you know, after a rough week, Friday night, Saturday night, let's bring some friends in. Let's invite some people that we not always friends, sometimes dignitary, sometimes people whose work you admired. Am I correct in saying that, that that was part of what you did when you were at the White House also? Our motto in the White House was also, don't make that house so precious. It's the people's house. But I watched, and I'd been there before as a U.S. Senator, and I realized who comes here? Who gets to come into these hallowed halls?
Starting point is 00:15:16 And there'd be statesmen and diplomats and state dinners. And I'd notice, even as a citizen looking in, what goes on in that house? I didn't want it to be a mystery. I wanted people in that house, particularly kids in that house, kids who would never be invited in that house but for us being there. I wanted it filled with music. I wanted there to be trick-or-treating. I wanted us to use the South Lawn for sleepover.
Starting point is 00:15:42 So every state dinner that we had, we had kids, we would do a companion tasting for kids who would come in. They'd be able to see the China. They would learn about the country that was coming. Kids would be invited to that arrival ceremony so they could sit on the lawn. Because I was like, what does it mean to live in D.C. and have a state visit, and you don't even know what that is. Why would we do that? Why wouldn't we have kids from Anacostia and all over just in that? house so that they understand what goes on behind those gates. We wanted that house to be alive.
Starting point is 00:16:19 And so, yeah, we had people there all the time, all the time. It was a valuable part of me making sure that the kids I came in contact with felt seen and they felt like a part of this administration, a part of this country, all kids. I'm not surprised to hear you say that because when we first met each other. I was actually covering you on the campaign trail. You were out in South Carolina campaigning for your husband, who was then a candidate before he was elected to the White House.
Starting point is 00:16:50 And we were at this community center, and I remember that you visited a community center where they had a children's program. And your staff was like, got to go, got to move, got to go, got to move. And you sat and you spent, you bent down and you talked to every
Starting point is 00:17:06 one of those kids. You spent time with every one of those kids. So when you moved into the White House and you started to fill the White House with children, I was not surprised at all. And I think one of the most profound things you have said repeatedly is, I see myself in you. That's such a powerful statement because so many children from different kinds of backgrounds have never heard that from someone, someone like you, someone who lived in the White House. We can't be who we can't see. And, you know, that has been said in so many ways.
Starting point is 00:17:37 And yeah, it meant a lot. We ran all eight years off camera, nothing that we publicized. We did a mentorship program for kids in, and by mentorship, we did leadership programs, but this was a very intimate internship program because I felt like this house needed to have a relationship with the kids in the immediate vicinity, right in Anacostia, right in northeast, the kids right in the backyard of the kids. the White House. And I wanted to have a meaningful long-term commitment because the other thing I realized about kids when they interact with famous people, you interact once and then you never see them again. And I always wonder, what does that do? You know, especially when we show up,
Starting point is 00:18:23 we shut down streets. It's a big deal. There's press. There's lights, cameras. I feel like apologizing going, I don't want you to feel used by this. And when you show up once, it feels like you're using kids. And I never wanted kids to feel used. So any interaction I had at a school or with a set of kids, the goal was we have to touch these kids at least three times. They can't just show up for a photo op. That may mean they get invited back for a music event,
Starting point is 00:18:55 or they'll come and do something in the garden, or I'll go to the school, or I'll invite them back for lunch or a conversation, because I want kids to know this wasn't just a one-time thing. This wasn't just some important people coming through your life. You were going to be engaged, and the mentorship program was a way we could drill down. So we picked kids in the local area, diverse group of kids. We didn't pick the top students.
Starting point is 00:19:21 We didn't pick the worst students. We picked the kids that were just right there, kind of lost. They weren't bad enough to be trouble and weren't good enough to be excellent, but still capable. And we brought them in once a month. They were paired with somebody senior in the administration. For the girls, it was the executive chef. She was a mentor. Valerie Jarrett was a mentor.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Everyone from the top down. And everyone was assigned a girl, but the girls would come every week. And the first time the girls would come, the way they would come into the house, they were, of course, shy, quiet. They'd meet with me at first, and they could barely love. me in the eye. And my whole goal was, by the time you finish, you're going to feel like you own this place. Because if you can walk into the White House, be here every week, feel like this place is for you, you can do anything. So they'd come in as sophomores, barely look at me in the eye,
Starting point is 00:20:21 right? But after coming for years, month after month, and then we would do a graduation program, the transformation would just be amazing. All these girls would come in with their parents. Oh, this is Michelle Obama. I talk to her all the time. Who I really want you to meet is blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And this is the dip room, and this is where we did this exercise. Their chest would just come out, right?
Starting point is 00:20:50 That's what seeing a kid can do. You know, it is as simple. As that. Now, I can't say that all these kids went on to be president, but they will remember that. You don't forget when somebody tries to lower your bar, especially when you're young. You remember the people who doubt you. You remember the negative energy. You know when you're not being seen. You know when you're not being valued. And when you don't get that light, you misbehave in the darkness. when we look around at kids, any kids anywhere in the world who are stealing, doping, drugging,
Starting point is 00:21:33 ganging, those are kids who are not seen. And so I use my platform as much as possible so that they have something good to remember. They can say that Barack Obama saw me. Barack Obama allowed me to sit in his house and talk to me like a real person again and again and again. We can all do that. for a kid in our life, but we also can do the damage. So we have to be careful about how we interact with kids, the assumptions we make about them,
Starting point is 00:22:07 if they walk into a store and you accuse them of not belonging. You follow them. You call them out for selling lemonade. You Karenize them. I don't want to be. But when that happens to a kid, they do not forget it, and it damages them. Our duty is to use our light to shine it on kids so that they don't have to seek out attention in the dark.
Starting point is 00:22:34 I have one last question. Yes, ma'am. And it's sad to get to the end of the road. But what does it mean to you to be back with people who are so eager to hear your message and to sop up all the wisdom in your book? What does it mean to you? This is the air I breathe too, you know, because I don't, I am a people person. and I don't get to be in the world normally anymore.
Starting point is 00:23:05 That was a trade-off, you know, and I'm not complaining because we were able to do some good stuff in the world, but I no longer have the luxury of anonymity. You know, I can't just sit and listen over your conversations and figure out, what would you say in the grocery store? You're going to see me, and then you're going to stop talking and go, is that Michelle Obama? It's like, now I'm just trying to hear about your marriage.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Just pretend like I'm not here. just trying to figure out where things are. At my heart, I am a sociologist. That was my major. I love people. I love the study. I am fascinated with y'all. But selfishly, it's like these rooms keep me hopeful.
Starting point is 00:23:50 And I hope they keep you hopeful. One of the things I said in my book is that, you know, I think these rooms are sort of about me. But I think they're more about us and what we crave. When you leave here, you guys are going to feel better about yourselves and each other because this is what America is. I've been out there. It's not what we read on the news.
Starting point is 00:24:18 That's a business, right? And this does not diminish how hard things are right now. People are struggling, and we need to be doing more to prevent. support, mental health support, health care support, jobs. We need to figure out what we're doing and as jobs are being eliminated because of technology, the planet is getting warmer. There are lots of problems. Our young people are experiencing record levels of anxiety. So this is not to whitewash the reality of things. But America is full of decent people. And right now, because of those uncertainties, we just are acting outside of ourselves. But that's not who we are. This is who we are,
Starting point is 00:25:08 regardless of party. Because as the first black first lady of the United States, people have always been decent to us. Not across the board, but the vast majority of people were willing to open their hearts to this new thing, this black family in America running the country, and go, huh, I see myself. Yeah, that makes sense. I get it. I didn't know that that's who they were. And people's hearts can open more. That's why we can't be afraid of each other, because there's really nothing to fear. You know, we're all just trying to get to the same place. I hope these rooms remind you and make you as hopeful as they make me. and we've got to hold on to these feelings, right? And we've got to look for leaders who want to lead in this way.
Starting point is 00:26:12 I don't care what party, but we should demand more hopeful leadership. We deserve it and our kids deserve it. Thank you so much. Amen. Sometimes when you're in it, when you're living life and feeling overwhelmed, it can be easy to forget that you're not alone. it can be hard to remember that other people may be feeling the same way you are and that there are folks out there who might be able to help or at least relate.
Starting point is 00:26:53 In those moments, you might not know you need them. You might not even think you need them. But we all need people who compliment us. And I don't mean those who just say nice things. I mean people who fill a part of us we didn't even know was empty. people who lift us up when we're down, who get us out of that fog when we didn't even know we were in it. It can just be one person, a friend who sees us for who we are, who can help us become who we want to be. This year, I hope you find a new friend, a new mentor, a partner, or a peer who complements you.
Starting point is 00:27:36 And I hope they bring a little more light into your life just for you. like Michelle does for me. Because you deserve it. We all do. Thanks for listening. I'll see you next time. If you want to hear more for Michelle, check out your Mama's Kitchen on Audible
Starting point is 00:27:55 or wherever you listen to podcasts. And if you want to keep the conversation going with me, pre-order the paperback edition of the light we carry online or even better at your favorite local bookstore. This has been a higher ground and Audible Original. Produced by Higher Ground and Little Everywhere. Executive produced by Dan Fehrman and Mukta Mohan for Higher Ground and Jane Marie for Little Everywhere. Audible executive producers are Kate Navin and Nick DeAngelo.
Starting point is 00:28:33 Audible co-producers Keith Wooten and Glenn Pogue. Produced by Mike Richter. With additional production by Joy Sanford, Dan Galucci and Nancy Golembiski. With production support from Andrew Eepin, Francesca Diaz, Camila Thurtecuse, and Ryan Kozlowski, Chief Content Officer at Audible, Rachel Giazza. Special thanks to Melissa Winter, Jill Van Lokerin, Crystal Carson, Alex May Seeley, Haley Ewing, Marone Heilimeschel, Sierra Tyler, Carl Ray, in Jerry Radway, Meredith Coup, Sarah Corbett, Tyler Lechtenberg, and Us The theme song is Unstoppable by Sia.
Starting point is 00:29:18 The closing song is Lovely Day by Bill Withers. Copyright 2023 by Higher Ground Audio, LLC. Sound recording copyright, 2023 by Higher Ground Audio LLC. Voiceover by Novena Carmel. This episode was recorded live at the Masonic in San Francisco.

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