The School of Greatness - Michelle Obama Opens Up: Her Struggle To Feel Like She's “Enough,” Mental Health in the White House & Lessons from Childhood w/ Craig Robinson
Episode Date: May 5, 2025Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Michelle Obama and her brother Craig Robinson reveal how growing up in a tiny Chicago apartment shaped their va...lues and outlook on life. From Craig "vetting" Barack Obama during a pickup basketball game to Michelle navigating the pressures of the White House, their conversation uncovers how family bonds grounded them through extraordinary circumstances. What makes this sibling dynamic special isn't just their impressive achievements but their authentic connection - Craig bringing lightness and joy while Michelle delivers wisdom and perspective. Their shared belief that "home is about who's there, not where you are" resonates deeply as they explain how they raised confident children amid extreme privilege and spotlight by teaching them that success comes from character, not circumstance.IMO PodcastMichelle’s book BecomingMichelle’s book The Light We Carry: Overcoming in Uncertain TimesCraig on InstagramMichelle on InstagramIn this episode you will learn:Why basketball became the ultimate character test when Michelle asked Craig to play pickup with Barack Obama before their relationship got seriousHow their parents "coached confidence" decades before it became popular, building them up rather than breaking them downThe surprising way Michelle and Barack maintained their mental health during White House stress by coaching their daughter's basketball teamWhy Michelle feels more confident at 61 than ever before despite asking herself "am I good enough?" throughout her careerThe counterintuitive parenting approach that helped them raise grounded children despite White House privilegeFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1767For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Venus Williams – greatness.lnk.to/1591SCMuniba Mazari – greatness.lnk.to/1684SCJason Wilson – greatness.lnk.to/1725SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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Welcome back my friend. We have some big guests today. Former First Lady Michelle Obama and her
big brother Craig Robinson are on the School of Greatness to really open up and share in ways
they've never shared before. Both of them dive in deep about growing up in a small Chicago apartment
together with parents who instilled unwavering confidence in them and Michelle and Craig offer powerful insights
on building self-belief, raising grounded children amid privilege,
and maintaining your core values through life's most extreme challenges.
In this conversation, they discuss navigating the pressures of the White House
while remaining authentic to themselves and their perspectives on emotional regulation during high stress situations.
Also Michelle's reflection on finding her deepest confidence at 61 is
especially inspiring from my experience in this interview, proving that
self discovery is a lifelong journey.
And throughout the conversation, we have a ton of fun, some really
interesting conversation about Craig sharing how he played basketball with
Barack Obama. And he had to pass the basketball character test before
Michelle would continue dating him. Also story about how he played with
Barack and Michael Jordan around the same time, which was kind of
interesting. Michelle talking about the importance of emotional regulation
and staying in the
pocket during extreme highs and extreme lows and how she's been able to maintain
this calm, cool, emotional state through all the ups and downs over the last 30
years, why Michelle feels more confident now than ever before.
And also finally answering the question, am I good enough?
She reflects on her time right now in therapy and all the lessons that she's
been experiencing and learning about with herself and reflecting on the
past 10, 20, 30 years, the whole conversation is inspiring.
They both share things I've never heard them share before.
And I'm so excited for
you to hear this conversation. Again, make sure to share this with one or two friends that you know,
someone that you want to inspire someone that you care about, send them a link to this episode,
and make sure to follow Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson will have their social media
and their podcast linked up on the description of this episode.
I'm so excited about this. I hope you enjoy. Let me know your thoughts online. When you
listen, please share it with a friend. And without further ado, let's dive into this
episode with Craig Robinson and the former first lady, Michelle Obama.
Welcome everyone to the school of greatness. We have Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson in the house.
Thank you guys for being here.
Very excited.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
This is awesome.
Excited.
Very excited.
You're in a brand new studio, the School of Greatness.
It's good.
It's beautiful.
Elegant.
Beautiful, elevated.
We've got an amazing team that helped set this up.
And one of the things that, right, big fireplace going over here.
I started the School of Greatness 12 years ago because I wanted to learn the lessons that I feel like I didn't learn in school
Okay that I wanted to learn how to overcome insecurity how to deal with failure how to
Deal with navigating intimate breakups and getting into relationships consciously and all these things that school didn't teach me
You guys both went to Ivy League schools,
and you have done incredible things since college.
But what I'm curious about is what is one lesson
each one of you has taught each other as adults
that you didn't learn in school?
Craig, I'll start with you.
The biggest lesson that Michelle has taught you
as an adult that you didn't learn in school.
I will tell you, I've learned a lot from my sister.
And you know, people, now that she's iconic,
people think that my sister is older than me,
but she is really 20 months younger than I am.
And she is so full of wisdom,
I could probably tick off about four or five different things.
But recently, in the recent past here, you said to me to make sure, because I have four children,
two adult kids, but I have a 15 and a 13 year old.
And I am, as she will tell you,
I'm the charter member of the ODC,
which is the old dad's club.
And being a charter member, you're continuously parenting.
And she said to me,
make sure that you're taking your wife out on dates.
And, you know, my wife is a coach's wife.
So she's used to handling 20 student athletes at a time,
you know, or 20 people in our house at a time,
and not saying a word about what her needs are.
Putting herself last.
Putting herself last, like a lot of women do,
like most women do, I can even say that.
And it was such nice advice to hear from her
because it enabled me to do it
before my wife had to ask me to do it.
And it was, it's really, and we-
I wanna talk to Kelly now, she'd say, you're doing it.
You can check in.
I'm gonna check in on this.
No, this is really good.
Really check, and we don't do anything
but sit and talk about the kids, you know,
when we go on these dates, but it's just, it's fun.
They're old enough, we can leave them at home on our own.
And so she gave me that advice probably about nine months ago.
Maybe it was a year and a half ago.
And how has the relationship grown or thrived from that?
It feels like it's the same, but we're having fun when we go out.
You know, we're having fun and it also allows us to let the kids sort of
have the place to themselves and not tear it up and give them some rope.
And so it's a growth region for all of us.
So-
That's a beautiful lesson.
Yeah, it's a good lesson.
And so what's Michelle, what's the biggest lesson
your brothers taught you about life or anything
that you didn't learn in school?
Craig is, there's such a youthful, joyful innocence in him
is there is such a youthful, joyful innocence in him
that you've never lost.
And that creates a lightness, you know,
that I think other people feel.
I mean, I joke that everyone loves Craig, you know?
And I'm among them, right?
And if he were a different kind of brother, I'd probably hate him because everybody loved him so much.
I teased that my mother loved him more than she loved me.
It's like, I'm in the White House.
She's living in the White House.
When's Craig coming?
Great's here.
He showed up.
We're at his house in Milwaukee, in McQuann, Milwaukee.
And she's Me McQuann.
McQuann, somewhere in there, outside of Milwaukee.
It's cold there.
It's hard to speak the words.
Exactly.
It's freezing.
Exactly.
I know you know.
Yeah, yeah.
And she's raving about the wine he has in Wisconsin.
I was like, Mom, you live in the White House.
What more do I have to give you?
I'm first lady of the United States, right? But any little sister could be resentful.
But retaining that joy, retaining that kindness, and he's different as a coach on the bench.
Sometimes he scares me and I'm like, who is this dude yelling at these little boys?
But I'm trying to hold on and embrace more of that
because in my line of work,
there's a lot of cynicism.
There are a lot of problems.
There's a lot of in-your-face reasons
to be less than optimistic.
And when I'm around you, Craig,
everything is just like wonderful and new,
no matter how many times he's seen it,
he enters a space with this level of joy and awestruckness
that it's important to keep.
Did you ever lose that when you were in the White House?
Like being in awe of how far you had come
and how far you and Barack had, you know,
created your lives together, ordered it?
Did you ever just be like, oh, this is the norm now?
I think we practiced just staying level,
not getting too high, not getting too low.
I mean, and I think that became a habit.
My husband's nature is that he is
very cool, calm, collected. He's an athlete, but he's the slowest walking person I've ever...
No urgency.
Do you walk that slow?
That island time.
He's an island.
And he's like, why are you walking so fast? It's like, if I walked any slower,
I'd be walking backwards.
I don't even know how you do it.
So he has a natural calm.
My temperament, I'm a little more fiery.
And if I were to let my emotions guide me,
if I got too pumped about the good times
and too down about the bad times, I'd be a mess.
So I think there has been a little of,
yeah, that's fine. Yeah, we just did that.
Okay, great wall of China. All right, what's next?
Meeting with the Pope, so good to see you.
Let's move on.
A private meeting with Nelson Mandela.
That was really cool, but okay, now we have to do,
you know, it's just because the lows were like,
we're mourning kids that were shot, you know,
we're
we're at a site where people have lost their homes in a
Horrible tornado. We are grieving with military families
I'm visiting Walter Reed and you know in the midst of the war and seeing rooms in rooms full of young men And I think getting through that, I've just learned to remain a little unplussed either
way, just to get through it.
And I think that's a great way to do it.
And I think that's a great way to do it.
And I think that's a great way to do it.
And I think that's a great way to do it.
And I think that's a, you just, I've just learned to remain a little unplussed either way
just to get through it.
And then in comes Missy, whoa, wow, look at this.
And it's like, that's so sweet, you know?
I mean, sometimes you need to just be like,
this is the coolest thing ever.
So yeah, I do think that I practiced a little more.
That's so interesting.
Staying in the pocket.
Cause you had to really,
it sounds like you had to keep your nervous system
steady at all times.
Otherwise the highs and the lows
could have made you exhausted emotionally, it sounds like.
And as a basketball coach,
you have to motivate and keep people steady as well when there's
momentum and it's going and when you're down by 20.
So did you now, but as siblings, this is actually the first brother sister combo that I've had
on the show.
I've had siblings, but not brother, sister.
So this is interesting.
Were you able to just be her big brother in the height of all this
while she was in the White House? Or were you trying to coach her like you would your
athletes? Oh, I did the former because I could not coach her like she's an athlete. Because
I'm not saying you're not coachable. But but But... It's not in tennis right now, you know?
No, I was more there for support.
Okay.
Right?
I was there.
I was coaching her up on the side to get her spirit up rather than technical things.
Here's what you should do. I'd like to think that when we came to town, my family, my wife, Kelly and my kids
again, it was like, all right, it's time for us to have some fun.
Like the old days.
Bring the lightness, the familiarity.
Yes.
Yes.
Bring the normalcy that we used to have when we were in Chicago, when our mom
picked up all four of our kids and
took them to one of our houses and we had a barbecue on, you know, Friday night. So
that was I felt that was my role. When they were in the White House. And then, you know,
I would say, being able to sit with Barack and watch a basketball game.
Although he was such a good multitasker. He had so much stuff going on and then have the game on
and he would know exactly what's going on in the game while he's doing all this other stuff.
But it was, it just was nice to sort of have normal family time, albeit in the White House.
Yeah, try to make it familiar in and out of the whole world.
Ignore all of this.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Bombproof class.
I also heard that you asked your brother to play basketball at the Rock.
Is that right?
To like feel out if he's a good guy or if he's...
Yeah.
Well, Louis, you can appreciate this because being an athlete, and I know you're a football
player. I played D3 basketball, but not D1.
I was just going to say most football players fashion themselves as basketball players.
I was a basketball player first and then I stopped growing and I was like, I'm not going
to make it in the NBA, so let me go try football.
I did.
So my dad used to, my dad and I talked basketball.
Now my dad wasn't a basketball player,
but we talked sort of basketball
and how the game brings out your real character.
It does.
Especially pick up basketball
because you have to call your own calls.
Oh, I know that.
And so my sister heard us popping off about that,
and she said when they first met,
hey, will you take Barack out?
Because I really like this guy.
I want to see if he's really real,
if you like him based on what you and dad said on the court.
And how long had you known him before that?
It was the first year that we were dating,
because it was like, I like him. He's cute, he's funny, he's smart.
We're starting to get close, but who is he?
What's his character?
What's his character like?
And when you're with the family, everybody is going to perform at Thanksgiving dinner,
or if they were just to go out for drinks.
I mean, Barack was smart enough to know how to...
He presents well, right?
But it wasn't just overhearing them talk about it.
I mean, being the sister in a basketball culture, right?
I was dragged along for all the sports.
I spent my life in gyms.
I was athletic.
She's still salty about it. But, you know, but it was just the sports. I spent my life in gyms. I was athletic. She's still salty about it.
But you know, but it was just the norm.
We weren't going to cheer him on in a sport
because at the time, Title IX hadn't kicked in.
And even though I was kind of a tomboy, very athletic,
there wasn't a place for me to put that energy,
nor was it cool for girls to be athletes,
especially if you were tall, because everybody assumed that.
So I was the sister on the sidelines,
got to meet all the cute basketball guys.
So I wasn't complaining or anything.
But I know sports, and I understood the game,
and I dated people that were on Craig's team,
and I'd hear about them.
Like, how were they in practice?
How were they coachable? Were they...
So I believe that myself, that, you know that you learn a lot about a man in particular and how he engages
in the game, right?
100%.
So I was like, take him out.
Really?
So in the first year?
Because also Barack said he was a basketball player.
Yeah, like, oh, let's see if he's a real player.
Yeah.
And if you say you're a player, and he didn't talk himself up, but he is a basketball fanatic.
And I kind of wanted to know, was he an athlete?
Yeah, is he really an athlete?
Is he really an athlete?
I don't know if I'm gonna-
Because I wouldn't have minded if he wasn't,
but I would have been suspicious if he had said he was,
and then he couldn't even dribble the ball.
If he talked a big game and he couldn't back it up.
Exactly.
So wait, so- He couldn't even dribble the ball.
So can you walk through the scenario of how this, did you call him and say, Hey,
let's go hoop it up.
Let's play a pickup game.
Is it one on one?
What's the scenario?
Let me start with how she asked.
Okay.
She said, Hey, I want you to take him out and I want to know what he's really like.
And the first thing I said, I'm not doing your dirty work.
No, I was worried that if he turned out to not be a good basketball said, I'm not doing your dirty work. No, because I was worried that if he turned out
to not be a good basketball player,
I'm the one who has to say,
oh no, this guy's a complete jerk.
But you're also, you were Ivy League like,
MVP, you were a professional, you got drafted.
Let me get to that.
You were a pro.
So listen, so it would be the guys I worked out with,
it wouldn't be fair for them.
So I said that to her.
She was like, oh, come on, please.
You got to do it.
So I called up some guys that I knew who were like me, but weren't going to be trying to
kill them.
Right.
So if you were in Chicago at the time, I would have called you up.
I called Arnie Duncan up.
I called my friend John Rogers.
Athletes, but not like NBA guys.
Not the summer league guys that I'm working out with.
And so I and I called him up and said, hey, we're playing up at,
you know, I forgot where we were, University of Chicago.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a story. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
University of Chicago. OK, yeah, yeah. It's a story. Yeah, yeah, yeah. University of Chicago.
Okay.
Let's go play.
He came and it was, we started playing and I'm just, you know, we're playing a nice friendly
game and it's fine.
Is this five on five?
Is two on two?
No, it's three on three and four on four.
Half court.
Okay.
You know, you can hide in a full court game. Yeah, yeah. Not good. Oh, four on four, half court. You can hide in a full court game.
You're not good.
You can cherry pick.
Half court game, you have to be engaged
or you'll get called out.
But he was terrific, right?
He was a decent player.
And I always say he's a real lefty.
So he dribbles to his left and shoots with his left hand.
You know how some lefties are really right handed
and they shoot with their left hand.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, like, for your audience.
My best friend Matt is that way.
See?
Louis knows, see?
I do.
Louis knows.
The athletes know.
The athletes know.
But here's what I liked.
You know how when you foul a guy, you know you follow a guy.
And in a gentleman's game, you just say, hey, your ball, I follow you.
You're not trying to-
You call it.
Yeah, you call it as the defender.
And he did that.
And I was like, that's a really good sign early on.
And then the other thing is he didn't shoot too much, but he didn't pass too much.
Like he took the open shots and he passed when he wasn't open.
But the thing that really put him over the top
was he didn't just pass me the ball knowing I was her brother.
Yeah, let's make you look good.
Listen, you know how that would do to be like, hey, Craig,
shoot, you take the shot.
I'm like, oh, come on, man.
So I was able to go back and report
that the Robinson basketball is...
Well, he got married, so I was...
It worked out, yeah, yeah.
She reported this for so long.
Now, here's the thing.
If he wasn't...
I'm just saying, if it hadn't worked out,
I might not have kept dating.
Really?
You know, I don't know.
If your brother would have said something about,
you know, his character was really nasty,
like, he was really mean, and getting in fights. They wouldn't have gotten married. Really your brother would have said something about, you know, his character was really nasty, like he was really mean, he'd get in fights.
They wouldn't have gotten married.
Really?
I would have addressed it.
I would have had the conversation.
It's like, sorry, here you were kind of a jerk on the court.
What's that about?
Right?
Why would you do that?
Or, you know, I mean, I would have had a discussion and then I probably would have been looking
for other signs.
He didn't show.
Yeah. You know, he,
the outcome of that pickup game was consistent
with what I was seeing.
That's good. Right.
His behavior matched his words.
Exactly, exactly.
So it's, and it's continued to be that way.
That's beautiful.
I mean, Barack is who he appears to be, you know,
and he shows up well.
He's somebody you want on your team.
That's beautiful.
And that was, that was important to know in a, as a, as a, as a woman who grew up in sports
culture, right? That's important. You know, that's a value that I hold. Dear, that's something,
that's something I respect, not just in my male friendships, but in all my friendships. Are you who you say you are?
Do you show up well?
Do you, are you a team player?
So yeah.
That's beautiful.
That's beautiful.
Great story.
I love that.
But growing up, you know, you guys,
I think I heard you say in your podcast,
which is an amazing show,
I want people to go download it and watch it.
But you're talking about you grew up
in a one-bedroom apartment together,
essentially with like a living room
as your guys' bedroom up until you went to high school.
Yeah.
So you shared a room for like 10, 12 years together.
Oh yeah, we shared a room our whole time growing up.
Wow.
Until I went to high school.
And then we-
Turned the back porch into a bedroom.
...portch into a bedroom.
Yeah.
You know, finished it off and enclosed it and insulated it and that became my bedroom.
But I would say our entire apartment was as big as this area right here.
And that was the kitchen.
And in the kitchen had a table,
so it wasn't a dining room.
You come through the hallway,
that bathroom would have been right there
and the stairs down would have been across.
This, which was considered the living room
was really the dining room.
But we use it as a living room.
One bedroom in there and then the living room was there.
Then we use for our bedroom.
That's incredible.
We started out with our beds head to head like this
when we were really little.
And then when we got older, my grandfather,
my paternal grandfather, Southside,
who we called him that because we had a,
we, he used to live on the Westside.
We had two grandfathers and we would say,
who's, which house are we going to?
West side grandpa or south side grandpa?
He used to say west side.
And then he moved to the south side.
So we named him south side.
He built a paneling, a paneled T
down the middle of that room.
So that turned into one bedroom for me,
one bedroom for Mish and then a common room.
So yeah, we shared.
We shared space.
But our father was a...
He was a city worker.
He's a blue collar city worker, worked for the water filtration plant.
And we lived off of his salary until I went to high school because my parents thought
it was important for my mom to stay home.
So in order to make that work, and my father was very financially responsible, even though
he didn't earn a lot of money, and they made sacrifices.
So their view was, it doesn't matter the size of the house, it's more important for you
to have your mother there who is, you know, so we could come home for lunch and she was a room parent and she knew our friends and, but we didn't have a
lot of money.
We didn't grow up with stuff.
And so, you know, when I talk about this with parents, when, you know, you hear young people
waiting and it's like, well, I want to make sure I have a 6,000 square foot house and
that we have savings for college already lined up
before I can even think about getting married.
You know, that wasn't what made us who we were, you know?
And living in that little bitty space with four people
in one bathroom, that built character for us.
And it created a level of closeness and intimacy.
And it's a reminder
to us today that no matter how successful we get, home is about who's there, not where
we are.
Which was something I had to overcome with the idea of moving into the White House, which
was amongst my biggest fears when Barack said he was gonna run. I was like, if you win, how can we raise a family in that environment?
You know?
That's not normal to us.
That weightiness was not, to me, something that, you know, could sustain a healthy family.
And I worried about it.
The weight of it all.
But what I came to learn even in that environment,
that it wasn't the house, the biggest is it was us
in that house.
That's so interesting.
So we had to find a way.
And creating family is doing it in a small way.
If you think about it, it's like it's creating closeness.
That's what everybody in families,
they gather in the kitchen, right?
I mean, in real close households, no matter how big the house is, everybody's in the kitchen.
Because if they're really talking and wanting to connect, they want to be with each other, right?
And it was that way in the White House.
We would all wind up gathering this one center space no matter what was going on,
especially if Craig was over.
We wanted to be together.
So it doesn't matter if you have 6,000 square feet or 600 square feet.
Wow.
We gather in the kitchen because we're always hungry, Chris.
I'm just like, we're always going there, then everyone else follows us.
I'm like, hey, you want to hang out with us?
We're in the kitchen.
Here's what I'm curious about, Michelle.
Both of you have had successful careers and
made big impacts in the world in your own way.
How did you build belief in yourself that you were worthy of the success at such a high
level?
You as a coach and in the business world and the NBA and even going from a small little
apartment with both of you to being in the most iconic house in the world.
Like how do you believe you're deserving and worthy
of that life when you come from such
smaller, humbler beginnings?
Well, it's a step-by-step process.
And if you've got good, smart parents like we did,
who don't even know what's coming,
but they understood for us that they wanted to make us
feel that way at our little kitchen table.
So you begin feeling that because you feel it,
you see your excellence in the eyes of your parents.
Like we have parents that really thought we were smart and funny and interesting.
And they reflected that back to us.
They wanted to hear what we thought.
So we grew up thinking, we're so funny.
We're so smart.
You know, we're so interesting.
You know, I know you want to hear what I have to say.
I know I'm five, but let me tell you my opinion about these things.
So it starts there.
And especially when your poor black kids on the South Side of Chicago, I think our parents
knew that what was coming for us was the absolute different message.
That at every turn, what was awaiting us us regardless of who we were what they were going to be teachers and people who would be
Constantly lowering our bars for us anyway
so I think they
Fueled us with a level of can do it must do it miss
Interesting that would arm that would give us a kind of armor as we went out and sort of started getting dinged.
In the world.
In the world.
Yeah, yeah.
So what are they instilling you
to keep your self-confidence high
when the world was trying to take you down?
So I'll give it to you in coaching terms.
Before people were coaching confidence,
they were coaching confidence.
Interesting. What would that look like?
What would they say do or react? This is this is what it would look like
Mom, how do you learn how to read and I'm four years old
Instead of saying
You you put letters together
She said here go get a book. I'll show you how to read
she taught me how to read when I was four years old,
because I asked her, how do you read?
And every time I asked her, how do you do something,
she stopped what she was doing, and she showed me.
And then she would talk about how wonderful it
was that I could read, or that I could tell time,
or that we could go around the block on our bikes
by ourselves. And that it's really interesting because today people talk about coaching confidence
and leading with confidence. When we grew up, leaders didn't do that. They broke you down to
build you back up. They yelled at you. They yelled
at you and they, it was just a different mentality back then. Even in corporate America back
then, people would put you through the gauntlet and didn't coach confidence. They told you
how poorly you were doing. And then they hoped that the cream would rise to the top. Our
parents did the exact opposite. How did they learn how to do that? Like they were ahead of the game.
And as mom said, she tried to do the opposite of what was done for her because she came
out of a generation of that generation of, you know, they didn't know what they were
doing with parenting. There was no philosophy. Kids were seen but not heard.
There was no conscious parenting. There was no philosophy. Kids were seen but not heard. There was no conscious parenting. There was no conscious parenting. And our parents were smart people. They weren't college educated, but they could have been. You know, my mother
could have been a teacher. She could have been a professor. You know, she just didn't,
there was no pathway that she saw for herself. So just like all of us, I mean, while there's some insecurity there,
there's also in each of us this level of,
I know more than they're giving me credit for, right?
I think it's already there and then it gets beaten out of you.
It gets abused out of you.
It gets, there are other things that get in the way.
I think my mother always felt like every kid has the power and the ability to learn if
you get out of their way.
And if you fuel it and you don't suffocate it.
And my parents were sane people and just we were blessed in them.
And so that established a foundation for us to then go out in the world with this belief of,
I'm pretty confident and competent because that's what our parents get.
They forced us to be that way.
And every time you succeed, you know, and sometimes we rob kids of that,
parents today because we're trying to make sure kids don't fail.
We're trying to avoid our hurt and our embarrassment
with them failing.
So we never let them, we never really hand them their lives.
And so they don't get those experiences.
And so they miss out on those early, you know,
sort of building blocks of confidence that you need, our parents handed that to us.
And so then there were the experiences
that went along with it.
We came into the world as good people, polite kids,
we knew how to engage with teachers,
that multiplies that confidence and competence
because teaching your kid how to be socialized helps them because better socialized kids, they get better feedback from the world.
And we were always the kids that the teachers liked and loved.
And so now you get a little bit of that.
And then now you learn how to do that, right?
And then so you just keep succeeding.
And for me, one of the aha moments was actually going to Princeton because I wasn't confident
then, because I wasn't a great test taker.
I was a great grade getter, but I wasn't good on SAT.
So I had good grades, not great scores.
So all the scores said, you don't belong at Princeton.
And there were people who saw me, saw the color of my skin
and said, you're aiming too high, right?
So luckily he went.
Yeah.
You were already there for two years, right?
Or a year or two?
Yeah, I was there for two years.
And she was, she's being nice,
but what she really said was, if this dude can get in, I know I'm getting in. Yeah, I'm smarter than him. She is a better student than I was there for two years and she was, she's being nice, but what she really said was, if this dude can get in,
I know I'm getting in.
Yeah, I'm smarter than him.
She is a better student than I was.
I was a guy who could do well on tests,
but I never studied.
Interesting.
So my first years at Princeton, I got killed
because you have to be able to study there.
Wow.
But my sister is studious and smart.
And just the bad, she got frazzled on the test.
Yeah, yeah.
And me, I was like, you know, process of elimination.
You imagine going to these schools,
being told that you're not ready.
And that was my first insecurity of thinking,
well, maybe I don't belong here.
And that's the world telling you that you don't belong,
even though it's like, well, all my experiences
up until this point say that why wouldn't I belong here?
So how did you overcome that belief that you don't belong
or that other people are telling you you don't belong?
I got there and I looked around and went, oh my God.
Sat in a few classes.
Sat in a few classes and sort of realized
that affirmative action isn't just the color of your skin,
but there were a lot of kids that were legacy kids,
they were athletes, they were, it was like,
and then you sit in class with people,
a lot of bright people, but there were a lot of people
that were just, so you wonder, well, how'd you get here?
You know, who told you you were ready, right?
And then doing well in that environment.
For me, it sort of took the curtain off of this elitism.
It lifted the veil.
It lifted the veil.
That's the phrase I was trying to come up with.
It lifted the veil for me in a pretty...
So if I'm here at the top schools in the world
and I am succeeding, then all this other stuff is a lie.
Interesting.
You telling me that I can't, this is the scam.
Like you want me to think I don't belong here when I actually do.
And so that was the first step of, let me just let me trust my gut again. Let me go back to the
foundation, the things that my parents were telling me that I thought maybe they just loved me,
and start believing what's actually happening in the world. Let me trust my experiences.
Interesting.
And so I experienced my way into confidence. And the White House is just another Princeton, right?
And the experience was just the same.
You have a lot of people saying that there's no way
that this Black couple is capable
of representing our country.
They are not patriotic.
Look at their fist bump.
Did she really get into Princeton? Is he really from this country?
You know, did he really go to Harvard?
Is his, you know, it's the same kind of let,
because we can't see past our own prejudice,
let's question, because we were told that there is an order
and that you don't belong at the top, you know?
And what I soon realized is that's not about me,
that's about them.
Which goes back to what we learned at our kitchen table.
It's like you cannot base who you are
and how you think of yourself on what anybody else,
other than who's at this table and knows you, thinks.
Because everybody's bringing their own stuff
to their opinion of who you are.
So you have to do the work and let your work speak for itself.
That's fascinating because if you're at the position
you're in for eight years during that time,
how are you able to keep the core nucleus of your closest
friends and family to just only focus on what they think of you rather than what the world
thinks of you, both at the extreme high high and others extreme critical?
How did you not own your own hype of half the world or whatever or most of the world
and then the extreme criticism.
Like you can't listen to either.
Interesting.
And so that's not to say that I didn't look at any press, you know, especially when you're
campaigning, you can't help but know what things are.
But what I learned was that I have to filter it.
So the beauty of being in the White House is you have a comms team, a communications team.
And I just get to the point, tell me the things
that are objectively are things that I need to hear.
And I just had to practice and I wasn't always good at it
because I'd look through the clips,
I'd look at stories every now and then,
I dig a little too deep, you know, good and bad.
Yeah. Feed the ego and then also the criticism.
Ah, that doesn't feel good.
Exactly. And it's like, well, I can't believe one and not the other.
So let me just do the work.
So I tried to develop a habit of getting my information, not firsthand, but third hand.
So my comms director tell me in this meeting what I need to know, what I need to be paying attention to.
If there's an article or something about the girls
or something that I need to know in preparation
for this speech, give me that information.
So I do what I tell young people do.
Do not read the comments section.
Just don't go there.
If you're in social media and you're doing this work, do not let that stuff feed you. You have to be disciplined enough to just
put your head down and do the work and let the work speak for you. So I would read things
about the work. You know, did the speech work? Is the program working? Is it having impact?
But all the other stuff, the op-eds and the commentary, it's like good and bad.
I can't take it in because it would cloud the work.
That's interesting. And so it's really about, you know, was I effective?
That's right.
And as a coach, you're seeing, were we effective? Maybe it wasn't pretty, maybe it wasn't perfect,
but did we accomplish our goal? Did we win the game? Did we move the initiative forward?
And really not looking at the praise or the feedback too strongly as well on either spectrum,
which I'm hearing you say is you had to regulate your emotions.
And it's something you probably have to do as a coach is like get student athletes or
athletes to not react when someone
gut punches them under the, you know, and doesn't get called the foul.
Yeah.
And also not own their own hype too much.
That especially in the age of social media.
Oh, yeah.
All these guys want to read about themselves.
Oh, yeah.
And it was a real challenge to try and get them to stay off their phones and reading
because most of the feedback is gonna be negative.
That's just the nature of it.
Somebody's gonna take time to write.
It's gonna be bad.
The criticism.
Yes, yes.
Yeah, the critiques.
And I also, I gotta ask you off camera,
but I hear you also played with Jordan when he came out.
Yeah, I'm happy to tell you.
You can share real quick.
So Jordan retired.
He was supposed to play baseball.
Jordan retired to play baseball.
And when he came back, people were hearing
he was working out.
And he wanted some guys to work out
with who could play enough but weren't like gorillas
while he was getting in shape.
Tim Grover, who was his workout guy.
Tim's a buddy of mine.
So Tim knows the story,
because Tim is the one who called up,
again, Arnie Duncan, myself, John Rogers,
and a couple other guys.
And we started play two on two or three on three.
And then when he got in shape, we play five on five.
And then when he was ready, when he got past us,
he went to the real dudes to work out with.
Summer league.
Yeah, because I think I was in my late 30s, probably then.
So we could give him a safe game.
We knew the game, we knew how to guard him
without jumping into his landing spot,
so he'd get a twisted ankle.
And it was just, and he was so gracious.
That's cool.
But he was as tough as he was on the last dance.
He didn't want to lose anything probably.
He was trying to beat us every single time.
And-
He was the opposite of Barack.
Yeah, he was like, He wasn't passing the ball.
He was working on his game, seriously, and working on his sort of emotional and mental
attitude too.
And he has been absolutely gracious every time I run into him.
When I was working for the Bucks, I'd run into him.
Worked for the Knicks, I'd run into him.
Would be an All-Star.
And, hey, Craig E. And he is just the same person that he is. He has always been
the same person.
That's cool. Yeah.
What a cool experience.
Oh, it was, it was, but you know, I had played against him in the summer league in Chicago
when I was, when he first came. So Chicago had one of the best summer league basketball
leagues because Chicago was one of the few places where you had pros,
college players, and high school players.
So when Jordan got drafted by Chicago,
we played up at Chicago State University.
You guys probably heard about him kind of like growing up and all this stuff.
You were in that world.
We were in the world.
And then he shows up after he gets drafted
and he's playing in the summer league that I'm playing in.
Wow, that's crazy.
It was fantastic.
It was just, the place was packed.
Great time to be in shot.
Amazing.
You guys were living the dream.
Now I'm curious about this, Michelle.
I'm curious, did you ever struggle with your mental health
while you were in the White House? Did you ever struggle with your mental health while
you were in the White House? Did you ever feel like the pressure is too big, the anxiety
is too much, or I'm having the weight of it all was too much? Or do you feel like you
were pretty steady throughout the whole time?
Yeah, I mean, I think we were surprisingly equipped for it. You know? And that's not to say that I didn't have my bad moments,
we didn't have our bad days, we did, you know, but I didn't feel like we can't do
this. We'll never make it through this. That's not first of all how we were
raised, right? I mean, you're in it. We're going to make this. It's going to work. We're going to show up every day.
Every day we're going to show up.
And you also, I found that,
how is it important for me and Barack to keep our sanity,
our even keelness, because we were raising little kids.
Gosh, that's going to be so challenging.
Like being a parent without the world looking at you constantly and having to make big decisions
every day has got to be one of the most challenging things ever, right?
But then doing it, and how can you be a great mom, a great wife, a great leader in the world
as well, and take care of your health and your mindset?
How do you do all that at once while raising kids?
But it also helps to have them because guess what kids are?
They're big distraction and they're very self-centered.
And they're very much about, you know, OK, dad, that's nice about the Middle East.
But let me tell you about little Susie from what we did.
I mean, they keep you grounded.
And because you got to be in the present. You got to be in the present.
That's where they are.
It's like, I don't really know who Putin is, but let me tell you about Ms. Czerny.
Okay?
I mean, their worlds are real.
And it was Barack, you know, he reveled in that normalcy.
Really?
Just coming home from a day at the office, you know, and being able to sit down with
two chatty little
girls and hear about their lives and remind them what's important, right? That helped.
So it was a stress, but it was also a very grounding thing.
And it probably brought a lot of joy to your life too. It's like when you're dealing with
heavy, stressful things all day long to have children bring love and joy and play and just
wonder. Yeah.
You know, more of like what Craig brings to the world, right?
Just that joy, like curiosity and awe in the moment.
One of the best stories about my husband is that he became a coach during his White House
years.
He coached Sasha's fourth grade basketball league.
Really?
The Vipers.
And... How did he do? How was his... He did. I'll let her finish. Sasha's fourth grade basketball league, the Vipers. And-
How'd he do?
How was his-
He did, I let her finish.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
So he didn't start out as the coach,
but we signed her up for basketball
and it's at some local YMCA in Chevy Chase.
And of course we're going to the games
because it's basketball.
Of course, you have to go.
And it's not maybe the one, he's got one, then maybe we'll do it, right?
So we're all going to the games.
And also on the team was Maisie Biden, Joe Biden, the then vice president's granddaughter,
the Biden girls and our girls grew up together, friends.
So imagine that rec league on any given Sunday, because we all went right? President, the vice president,
second lady.
Too detailed.
No, like big details because all the clubs had details.
Brails.
They got their own bodyguards also.
Ambulance, helicopters, SWAT people all over the gym, right?
It's like a little middle school gym.
Like, yeah, two rafters, like nothing.
Right. And of course, they're all still young.
Basketball, maybe.
And I'm just like, Joe, you gotta like yell.
You know, Barack, sit down, sit down.
But it was a parent coach league, and the two parents of the Vipers weren't professional coaches,
and they really didn't know basketball.
And it was very evident by game number two, as Barack would just start sliding down to the coaches bench and
just say, you know, have her block that one and get them to
tie their shoes. So he was sort of side coaching. And at the
time, his eight was Reggie Love. Reggie Love was a division one.
That was his body guy. So it's he and Reggie. And they're they
come out of the games really
critiquing what wasn't going right. They weren't running plays. There were no practices. So
they started making the side giving side advice to these two parent coaches. Oh my gosh. So
how do you you know, well, what do you do with that? With the president doing some coaching
advice. He's like, ah, Eventually. A little whistle as a coach.
You know, he starts offering to run practice for the Vipers.
So they come to like one of the, um, department, one of the, uh, downtown, uh, gyms in the
department of agriculture or the interior or whatever.
So they take over a gym every week.
Their coach in the Vipers. They teach them two plays.
One was box and one was something else.
Not the triangle offense.
You know, not the triangle offense.
Because these little girls weren't even tying their shoes.
They didn't know the basics.
Just tucking shirt in.
So eventually, Barak's on the bench with Reggie, with the parents,
and they're running plays.
That's incredible. Long and short of it is the Vipers won the championship.
Let's go. That's cool.
Vipers won the championship.
Well, we have, me and your daughter have something in common.
We both played on a team called the Vipers.
My arena football team was called the Vipers,
so we have something in common there.
That's amazing.
So you imagine what, how, you know, what that does to,
you know, just to alleviate stress that once a week you're just a parent
and eventually no matter who they were playing, he was just the Vipers coach.
It was good for him, it was good for his relationship with our daughters, it made us focus on something
other than the world crises that he was facing.
So the girls brought us down, you know.
And he went to every parent-teacher conference.
Really?
Every single one.
Motorcade and all, which embarrassed the hell out of the girls.
It's like, dad, the SWAT guys are on the roof.
They've got the machine guns out.
And we were just like, just ignore it.
This isn't about you.
Just ignore it, yeah.
We were just trying to make them focus on their lives.
It's like, this president stuff, this is one thing.
Your life is your life.
And we are entering into it just like every parent.
We're going to go, I'm going to the potluck.
I'm going to stand on the soccer field.
I'm going to watch your tennis game.
Tennis was a hard sport to watch,
so I would stay in the car in the motorcade
and kind of look, because it's hard to watch
high school tennis, which Lea played,
without showing up with all the agents and stuff.
So that I wouldn't do, but soccer you could do.
Yeah, you can stand back far enough.
Stand back far enough, and interact with the parents in a normal way
So that people would understand I'm a mom, you know, and these are my daughters
You want the best for them?
Yeah, I want the best for them and we'll have sleepovers at the White House and the girls will come over so that helped
You know, that's a long way of saying that
Having young kids helped us stay normalized and it helped us with our mental health as
a family.
That's interesting.
Yeah.
Now, how did you, I mean, you guys grew up with parents that weren't famous, that didn't
have a lot of money, that weren't in the public eye, that weren't in universities or in politics
and the world was paying attention to.
But that wasn't the case for both of you.
You're both public people in your own way
and had a lot of fans and critics.
And you had more money than your parents,
more success, more opportunities,
all those different things.
How do you raise both of you,
how do you raise healthy, conscious kids
to be good, loving, generous How do you raise, both of you, how do you raise healthy, conscious kids
to be good, loving, generous,
when they are given more financially,
success opportunities, networking,
when they're given more opportunities
than what you were given?
Yeah, that's a terrific question.
And the way we approach it is, you all haven't done anything yet.
So you can't.
This isn't about you.
This is not about you yet.
You got to earn your keep and you do your chores and you get good grades and you behave,
then you start to get rewarded.
But because you don't want to rob the confidence
of them making mistakes and building their own thing.
So how do you do that?
Well, we're trying to do it like our parents did it.
Give them, coach them for confidence and hard work.
The results will come.
And I always thought that my parents did me such a justice. When when I got older, I realized there were a
lot of kids who I went to school with both in high school and in
college, whose parents were cracking the whip for them to
get good grades. And it prevented them from getting good
grades. And my parents always said, Look, if you do, do your best, I trust that you'll
get your good you'll get good grades. So don't worry about it. Just do your best. And whenever
they at whenever I didn't do my best, and they asked me, I had to say I didn't do my
best because it might come back in evidence at the end. But it was rare because they trained us
to just do your best, that's all we want.
We don't forget about the grades, do your best.
And it was the same in sports, just do your best.
And I'm trying to do that with our kids,
even though we have more than what we did growing up,
does mean our kids have to have, you know,
four times as much as they would have had.
And it's not like, you know, we would get pizza growing up when we got report cards.
That was our reward for good report cards. Italian fiesta, pizza.
We do the same with these kids, but we have pizza more often than when we did.
We go out to dinner more. We go on better vacations. But when it comes down to just working,
just work hard. Work hard and you'll be rewarded. And that's, you know, and it's lovely to see
between my two older kids and her two older kids,
they're all adults out on their own in their, you know,
in their early 20s and early 30s, not in our basements.
Right, right.
So it's, and they figured out budgets,
they figured out their relationship with money.
And that's the one thing that my dad spent
a good amount of time with us
showing us the value of money.
And I think that's important too in this day and age
because we do have more money than I did growing up
and helping our kids understand. Like my wife, Kelly, she only buys stuff on sale. So our
kids look for things when they want something, they know it's got to be on sale or they got
to spend their own money.
Interesting.
Yeah.
That's cool.
I think you've got to know who your kids are, right? And that starts really early.
I think all of that work starts way earlier than a lot of parents think because it's about
boundaries.
It's about respect.
It's about teaching your kids how to hear no.
Not giving them everything.
Not giving them everything and being okay with their disappointment.
And that starts at three and five.
It started way before we entered the White House, even though they were really young.
It starts with discipline and not being afraid to discipline your kids,
doing it with love, but still doing it and being consistent. So our kids even coming to the White House
were already at seven and 10, those kids, right?
So then the worry became like, I don't want,
and for all of our kids,
I don't want you to think that you have to be this, right?
Cause the pressure can go the other way.
And our kids are Obama's, right?
They entered the room with a name and a face that makes them have to prove something.
So I'm, for my kids, because of who they are, they're already hard workers.
They're already good people.
I hear this everywhere they go.
They know how to enter a room and treat people kindly. They're gracious
They've learned how to be diplomats in this process because this whole experience that I was worried about also taught them how to maneuver in the world
So now I worry about them feeling like
Success has to look like what we did in the White House or
Come on like this is unusual.
This is not the norm.
And did your parenting style shift or evolve pre-White House,
during the White House, and post-White House?
It evolved not because of where we were,
but because of their ages.
My kids lived in the White House longer than they lived in any house. So they came in at seven and 10 and they came out the year that Malia graduated.
She graduated from high school and took a gap year in our last year because she didn't
want to go to college as the president's daughter. She didn't want to have a detail.
Right? So she took a gap year for that reason.
Sasha graduated from high school when we were, you know,
it was post-White House.
So they were different people.
So now you move from creating boundaries
to being an advisor, right?
And slowly letting giving. For me, I felt like my job is to every year give you more
rope.
Every year give you more control of your life.
Every year step back even more to get out of the way.
And I wanted to do that before they left my house because I wanted to see what do you
do when you have all the rope?
And mistakes were made.
Wow, I'm sure.
Yes, let me tell you.
And mistakes were made.
But it was better for me to see those mistakes
so we could come home and talk about it.
We could institute punishments.
We could, you know, I didn't want to know that
when they were out of the house.
And so, I gave my kids a lot of their rope
with each phase,
but that had more to do with who they were
and how I wanted them to develop,
because we also, they weren't going to have
Secret Service their whole lives.
So, it's like, you got to learn how to drive.
Yeah.
And you got to learn how to drive with your agents.
So, we had to switch that around. It's like, you're driving in the car by yourself and your agents are following
Wow, so now you have to learn how to manage and communicate with a group of grown men
On how you're moving in the world because you have to do this. Yes, you know
You have to learn how to get gas you have to learn how to get on a bus
You have to learn how to get on a plane by yourself and I can't be there
To do that with you because I still have all that.
Right. Right.
So it's so the game, the changes were really based on the kid, what they needed
and the age and my motto was your life is soon going to be yours.
So let's start now.
That's beautiful.
That's beautiful.
I've got about five minutes with you guys left, they're telling me.
So I've got to go.
I know.
We'll have to do another one in the future.
So many more basketball chat I want to have and everything else, you know.
But I've got a couple of fun questions, so hopefully they'll let me finish these few
ones up.
But before we ask them, I want people to download you guys' new podcast, IMO.
I listened to the first episode where there was gist of YouTube.
I thought it was fascinating hearing these stories you guys share about early childhood
growing up the lessons you learned, how you're able to instill confidence in each other,
support one another and overcome challenges in the world.
I just think it was really cool and all the other conversations you're having with people
I think is really needed right now.
So IMO with Michelle Obama and Craig Robinson,
I want people to go download that.
They can go to imopod.com.
IMO podcasts everywhere on social media
and all the good stuff.
We'll have it linked up as well, but really inspiring.
And I'm glad you guys are doing this.
So congrats on the show.
It's really cool.
This is one more question I have for you
than I have a couple for both of you to wrap it up. I'm curious about your confidence pre White House, during White House,
and then in the last decade since you've been in the White House. And I love your reflection on this
as a brother and what you've witnessed. Do you feel like you're more confident now in the
last 10 years? The eight years in office or the kind of four to eight years before leading into
the office? Easy answer now. Really? I think I'm my most confident now. I think, and by confidence, I mean, I feel,
I feel like I can claim my wisdom.
And I've said this before, I think,
maybe it's a little bit different for women.
Maybe I'm, oh, I can only speak as a woman
because I'm a woman, but I feel like throughout my life,
you know, like a lot of women, I was reticent to claim what I knew.
And I was always sort of, well, maybe
you don't know what I'm talking about.
Maybe I won't speak up.
Or yeah, maybe this idea seems that way.
Maybe what I'm saying to these guys in the West Wing
doesn't make any sense.
While I was doing my thing
and having my own proofs, it still took until now
for me to kind of go look over all this life
and say, I kind of got, I kind of know a few things.
I think I can now sit in my wisdom at 61. And I think a lot of that has
to do is with the fact that I am, I'm of course still a wife, but I'm not the I'm not the
first lady of the nation. I'm not the the primary parent of Malia and Sasha. They are
adults out there on their own. Is it the first time in my life when every decision, good or bad, is mine to own.
And I feel good about owning it.
I'm still working on it though, because there's still guilt.
There's still a sense of obligation.
There's still a sense.
There's still always the sense of, am I good enough?
Because while the confidence, I think it's there in so many of us.
Like that's what I've come to...
Well, you think, am I good enough?
You've created and accomplished so much,
not only professionally, but personally.
So at 61, you're still feeling that?
But is it enough? And that's the work that I'm doing.
Like if it's not enough now, I'm telling myself and my therapist,
then it won't be enough.
So now I have to determine for myself, because this is all an internal conversation, that
I'm good, right?
I just really now have the time to do that work.
Right?
Because when you're climbing, slaying the dragons,
you're just feeling the feelings.
You don't have time to assess it, right?
Raising kids, getting through hard times,
writing books, doing book tours, working on the library
with my husband, blah, blah, blah.
The decade that I was talking about that just went by,
just like a flash, when was there time to reflect and work on
that stuff?
Do the healing work.
To do the healing work. Because after all that work, there still is healing from it.
That was, you know, that was a mighty experience that we had.
Yeah, it's a lot to unpack.
And so in these last years, I've been unpacking it.
And I'm becoming better with my choices, feeling the most confident in myself and the most
settled in that question of am I good enough?
And I'm finally starting to answer it.
Yeah, I think I'm there.
I think I'm there.
That's beautiful.
I feel like this is, we're just getting started, but unfortunately I'm going to have to wrap
this up.
So I want to ask you guys both a final question.
And that is, what is your definition of greatness?
And I'll start with you, Craig, your definition of greatness? I think greatness is the ability to both have an impact on your
own life and on other people's lives. I think if you can find a way to develop yourself and coach yourself up,
you can inspire and develop and coach up others.
And that's kind of what sort of my life's work has been.
And even before I was coaching, as a player, as an executive,
as a corporate worker, I've always felt like we didn't inspire each other enough.
Everybody was sort of an independent contractor.
And if we could all be team players,
we'd be in a better position.
That's cool.
That's cool.
I love that.
I think mine is similar because we were raised
in similar places.
It's a great thing.
It's greatness is giving more than you get. I think mine is similar because we were raised in similar places.
It's greatness is giving more than you get.
You know, because what's it all for?
Greatness, I think greatness, greater good.
We should be all, we all should be working for our greatness to affect the greater good.
And then we all experience that greatness. We all should be working for our greatness to affect the greater good.
And then we all experience that greatness.
Because greatness as an individual feat, I mean, yeah, I guess, right?
I mean, you can sit in your own greatness and have all the stuff and be really alone.
But the bigger greatness is putting that energy out.
Amen. Thank you both for bringing it back. Thanks for having us, man. But the bigger greatness is putting that energy out. Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Amen.
Thank you both for being here.
Thanks for having us, man.
Appreciate it, Michelle.
Thank you so much.
Twelve years, we can see the experience.
Let's go, you know.
Let's go.
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