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Title: MICHELLE OBAMA: This Is What Scares Me Most In Today’s America!
Duration: 01:26:01
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to whom much is given, much is expected.
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The guilt comes from am I doing enough?
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Me, Michelle Obama, to say that to a
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therapist. So, let's unpack that. Former
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first lady Michelle Obama and someone
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who knows her best, her big brother,
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Craig, will be hosting a podcast called
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IMO. What have been your personal
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journeys with therapy? We need to be
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coached throughout our lives. My mom
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wanted us to be independent children and
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she would always tell me, "Stop worrying
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about your sister." Having been the
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first lady of the entire country and
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representing the country in the world, I
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couldn't afford to have that kind of
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disdain. What would you say has been the
(00:00:42)
most hardest recent test of fear? I'm
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going to make him start so that I don't
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start crying.
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[Music]
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The number one health and wellness
(00:00:55)
podcast, J Shetty. J Shetty, the one,
(00:00:58)
the only J Shetty.
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Hey everyone, welcome back to OnPurpose,
(00:01:04)
the place you come to become happier,
(00:01:07)
healthier, and more healed. Today's
(00:01:09)
guests are two of my favorite people.
(00:01:12)
I'm so grateful and excited to welcome
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one of them back and one of them for the
(00:01:16)
first time ever. I'm speaking about none
(00:01:19)
other than Michelle Obama and Craig
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Robinson. Welcome.
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The dynamic duo. I always say it's like
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you you're my most favorite interview
(00:01:30)
ever. Period. Oh my gosh. That's that's
(00:01:33)
saying a lot. Oh my gosh. Wow. You're
(00:01:36)
going to make me cry. I'm like that's so
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sweet. Oh my gosh. She's the one who
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turned me on to you. So This is like old
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home week. I know. Thank you both. But
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honestly, I'm so grateful. Uh I was just
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thinking when I was preparing for this,
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I was like, I wish my sister was in town
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because then we could have double
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interviewed. All right, we we're going
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to play next time. We want to do that.
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She would have killed me if I did that
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to her cuz she's not on camera.
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She's an optometrist in London. The
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best. Yeah. She could have checked your
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eyes for you happily. She's 4 and 1/2
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years younger than me. And and I still
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remember the moment. Well, I don't
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remember the moment. It's interesting.
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I've seen a picture of me holding her
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when she was born and I was like 4 and a
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half, 5 years old. And so I had this
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memory that I held her when she was born
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and we've been inseparable ever since.
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Jay, you're going to have to when she
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comes to town, just don't tell her. Just
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tell us and we'll come back and we can
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just ambush her. Oh, I love Yeah, she
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she will kill me. But we have one of
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those pictures, too. my favorite family
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picture. Um, uh, I was a newborn. I was
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maybe 10 months, but I was one of these
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big fat round puppy babies and a bonnet
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and a white dress. And my dad was in a
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suit and a bow tie. And mom, my mom had
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the be most beautiful uh, tunic dress on
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and Craig sat on her lap. I was on my
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dad's lap. And um I I have this little
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fat arm and he's in a little bow tie and
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he's holding on to my arm and looking at
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the camera like you better not you know
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he seems so concerned you know he was
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about 2 years old. Can we get the look?
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I I was worried. I had this
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just going Hold on. Cuz I was worried
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that I don't know what they're going to
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do to my sister. But that that picture
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epitomizes our relationship. He is
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always been my quiet protector just and
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that sweet little face. Um yeah, he is
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the ultimate big brother. Uh and he's
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been by my side holding my arm like that
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for my entire life. Wow. I love that.
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And do you actually remember? Do you
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remember the moment or it's the picture
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that you remember? It's like yours. It's
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the picture. I don't and I remember back
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to when I was three and four some
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things, but that when I don't, but when
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I see the picture, it just warms my
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heart every time I see it. Yeah, I love
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that. I mean, sibling relationships, as
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I said in mine as well, my sister and I
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are so close and we haven't lived in the
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same country for 9 years now, but we
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talk and stay in touch and we're
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constantly connected. And I wanted to
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start by asking you this question for
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both of you that I feel like the first
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time me and my sister got close is when
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I shared a secret with her. And I was
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wondering what was the first secret that
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you ever told each other as as early as
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it was uh as silly as it was that you
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remember sharing something in confidence
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in the beginning early days of your
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relationship. Okay. Now, you did this to
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me when you came on our show. That is a
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question I've never been asked. I love
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it. I love it. All right. You got me
(00:04:49)
back. You got me back. Okay. A secret. A
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secret. I don't know if it was a secret,
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but it was a what felt like a secret
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practice of ours. Like we shared a room
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um for most of our lives. And there came
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a point in time when our parents because
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we didn't have a lot of money thought
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it's time for them to have their own
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room. So they took this one big room and
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our grandfather's southside who was a
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jackle carpenter built plywood a plywood
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tea wall that went down the middle of
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the the this one bedroom and broke the
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room into two little units that were big
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enough for a twin bed and a desk and one
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of those accordion doors, right? That
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was those were our rooms and it was that
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old paneling look. So, it was it was
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that fake wood that was like and the and
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the ceiling didn't go all the way to the
(00:05:45)
top of the roof. And there was a little
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crack in between the rooms by the window
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sill. And when we were supposed to be in
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bed, we would spend that whole night
(00:05:54)
just talking in between the walls,
(00:05:56)
right? We were supposed to be asleep,
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but Craig could go, "Me, Meech, are you
(00:06:02)
awake?" I'd be like, "No."
(00:06:05)
And then we'd have some deep
(00:06:07)
conversation about life and you know
(00:06:09)
every now and mom mom would yell go to
(00:06:13)
bed you're supposed to be asleep and we
(00:06:15)
giggle and we just keep talking. Um so I
(00:06:19)
think we shared the secret of not going
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to bed but having our own little
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breakdown of the day. I don't even
(00:06:25)
remember what we talked about but we
(00:06:28)
were supposed to be talking but we were
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constantly talking. So I can't think of
(00:06:31)
a secret. So I can think of a secret.
(00:06:33)
Okay. So this is the discovery of Santa
(00:06:37)
Claus. Oh yes, that's a good one. So we
(00:06:42)
Jay, as you know, we lived in a two
(00:06:44)
family home. We lived on the top floor,
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very small apartment. Our great aunt
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Robbie and uncle uh Terry lived
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downstairs.
(00:06:55)
And in our basement, which wasn't
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finished, it was a concrete basement,
(00:06:59)
pillars, washing machine, furnace, a
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storage room. But then there was a table
(00:07:05)
that was like a workbench and a
(00:07:07)
refrigerator that didn't work or it
(00:07:09)
wasn't plugged in. It was an old
(00:07:10)
refrigerator. Old time refrigerator. And
(00:07:13)
we used to go down there and play and
(00:07:15)
play. We played hockey. We'd ride our
(00:07:17)
bikes. We'd do all kinds of stuff. And
(00:07:19)
Meech was down there once by herself and
(00:07:23)
came running upstairs. Craig, Craig,
(00:07:26)
come here. Come here. Come here. And she
(00:07:28)
took me downstairs. She opens up the
(00:07:32)
refrigerator and
(00:07:34)
there are two empty boxes for boxing
(00:07:38)
gloves.
(00:07:39)
Now, this is June or July. Yeah. Little
(00:07:42)
kids boxing gloves. We got boxing gloves
(00:07:45)
for Christmas the year before. Oh, okay.
(00:07:48)
So, and she deduced the gloves were
(00:07:51)
here. Santa wouldn't leave gloves. Glove
(00:07:55)
boxes. Glove boxes. Cuz our our mom
(00:07:58)
didn't wrap the presents. She set them
(00:08:00)
under the tree as if Santa had just
(00:08:02)
brought toys and didn't wrap them. And I
(00:08:05)
remember Meech saying, "Mom and dad are
(00:08:09)
Santa Claus."
(00:08:11)
But then the secret was we weren't going
(00:08:13)
to tell them that we knew because first
(00:08:15)
of all, we didn't want to disappoint
(00:08:17)
them. Oh yeah. You know, cuz it's like
(00:08:19)
what a blunder, right? So we sort of
(00:08:22)
kept it to ourselves that for a good
(00:08:25)
year or two, we knew there wasn't a
(00:08:26)
Santa Claus and just played along. You
(00:08:28)
played along. We played along. We played
(00:08:30)
along. Isn't that just That's so funny.
(00:08:32)
It's like living a lie. That's really
(00:08:35)
And And do your parents know that? Like
(00:08:38)
we finally told They told the story.
(00:08:40)
Yeah. How did they feel when you told
(00:08:41)
them? They were mad at our aunt Robbie.
(00:08:44)
My mom was in particular because she was
(00:08:46)
like, "I told her not to keep those
(00:08:47)
glove boxes." She was supposed to throw
(00:08:50)
those. My My mom was furious because my
(00:08:52)
mom took Christmas very seriously. I
(00:08:55)
mean, she decorated the house. She
(00:08:57)
created a chimney where there wasn't
(00:08:58)
one. She was very crafty. She She really
(00:09:02)
took great joy in keeping this Santa
(00:09:04)
Claus myth alive. And the fact that our
(00:09:07)
aunt Robbie spoiled it for us sooner
(00:09:10)
than she was ready to, she was not
(00:09:12)
happy. It's always
(00:09:14)
an some aunt the aunt that didn't have
(00:09:16)
kids and didn't really appreciate it and
(00:09:18)
she cared more about saving a couple of
(00:09:20)
boxes than, you know, keeping the magic
(00:09:23)
of Christmas alive. Oh, that's amazing.
(00:09:25)
So yeah, that was a good one. That is a
(00:09:27)
good one. That's why it's good to have
(00:09:28)
him here cuz I wouldn't have remembered
(00:09:29)
that at all. That's what's so beautiful
(00:09:31)
about this this relationship. And it's
(00:09:33)
interesting you both said cuz we did the
(00:09:34)
same thing. So me and my sister shared a
(00:09:36)
room as well. And it's so interesting to
(00:09:38)
hear about I I talked to a lot of
(00:09:40)
siblings and some are not close to each
(00:09:41)
other and some are very close to each
(00:09:43)
other and you see that pattern in people
(00:09:45)
who shared a room who talked about
(00:09:47)
something every night connected and
(00:09:50)
that's how I think me and my sister got
(00:09:51)
used to talking to each other because
(00:09:53)
that's who you dissected the day with.
(00:09:56)
Exactly. Uh even if it wasn't very deep
(00:09:58)
and profound at the time, we were stuck
(00:10:00)
with each other for better or for worse.
(00:10:03)
I I love that. What was what would you
(00:10:05)
say was something that you felt a value
(00:10:09)
that you learned at that early stage in
(00:10:11)
your life that you both feel you've kept
(00:10:13)
till today? Like something that's
(00:10:15)
continued to be a part of who you are
(00:10:17)
today. My mom wanted us to be
(00:10:20)
independent children. And she would
(00:10:23)
always tell
(00:10:25)
me, "Stop worrying about your sister."
(00:10:28)
Because whenever I did something, I
(00:10:31)
wanted to include her. If I was going
(00:10:33)
outside and she was outside, I felt like
(00:10:35)
I had to keep an eye on her. I felt like
(00:10:38)
I had to protect her. And my
(00:10:41)
mom always said to not do that.
(00:10:46)
Interesting. First of all, she didn't
(00:10:48)
want Meech to have to feel like she was
(00:10:51)
being looked after by her brother.
(00:10:54)
That's what her parents were for. And
(00:10:55)
she didn't want me to have to worry
(00:10:57)
about her. Mhm. But I will say
(00:11:00)
that I couldn't stop worrying about her.
(00:11:04)
So, I have been looking after her from
(00:11:07)
the time she was a little kid and I was
(00:11:09)
holding her arm. We ended up at in
(00:11:12)
college together at Princeton. And you
(00:11:14)
remember when we drove to South
(00:11:15)
Carolina? Uhhuh. Yeah. We rented a car
(00:11:18)
for spring break. For spring break and
(00:11:20)
drove to South Carolina and to visit our
(00:11:22)
grandparents just moved down there. They
(00:11:24)
had moved down there from Chicago and we
(00:11:27)
thought we'd surprise them. And the two
(00:11:29)
of us were going to drive, but I was so
(00:11:32)
worried about her driving that I tried
(00:11:35)
to drive the entire way by myself. And
(00:11:38)
you know, 6 hours he's starting to
(00:11:41)
blink. Like I'm like, "Are you okay?"
(00:11:43)
He's like, "I got I got it. I got it."
(00:11:44)
And I was like, "You know, I can drive."
(00:11:46)
She's very capable and a very good
(00:11:48)
driver, but I was, you know, me and Mr.
(00:11:50)
Worry. So, finally, I I had to just take
(00:11:52)
it out. I just I have to go to sleep. I
(00:11:55)
was like, "Well, pull over. I can do
(00:11:57)
this." I drove us the rest of the way.
(00:11:59)
Drove the rest of the way. But at every
(00:12:01)
15 minutes after I fall asleep, I'd be
(00:12:03)
like, "Are you okay? Are you okay? Yeah,
(00:12:05)
I'm awake." It's like, "Are you okay?
(00:12:07)
It's fine."
(00:12:09)
Well, for me, the value it's the value
(00:12:12)
of family. It's the value of there's no
(00:12:15)
one you can count on more than, you
(00:12:18)
know, your your siblings and your mom
(00:12:20)
and your dad. And I feel for people who
(00:12:23)
were raised with sibling turmoil, you
(00:12:26)
know, uh or turmoil in their household
(00:12:29)
where they didn't feel safe at home. And
(00:12:32)
that was never the case. We felt poor,
(00:12:35)
you know, we felt like we didn't always
(00:12:38)
get the stuff that we wanted, but we
(00:12:41)
always felt and and it wasn't just our
(00:12:43)
nuclear family. Our we grew up in a big
(00:12:47)
community of family. We're fortunate
(00:12:49)
enough to be uh raised with all four of
(00:12:52)
our grandparents. Um they all lived
(00:12:55)
within a couple of mile radius of us. Um
(00:12:59)
even though our maternal grandparents
(00:13:01)
were separated, they lived in separate
(00:13:03)
households around the corner from each
(00:13:05)
other. Oh wow. Um which was around the
(00:13:07)
corner from us. Right. Right. Cousins
(00:13:09)
and uncles and aunts. And when times
(00:13:12)
were down, people would share homes. I
(00:13:15)
remember when we were little and
(00:13:16)
Southside, our our our mother's father
(00:13:19)
who lived with a couple of her sisters,
(00:13:22)
their house burned down. Their apartment
(00:13:24)
did. And I remember being really little
(00:13:27)
and there was a discussion or how are we
(00:13:29)
going to help people out until they
(00:13:31)
found a new place to live. And so two of
(00:13:34)
our aunts, Carolyn and there was someone
(00:13:37)
else stayed in our little apartment and
(00:13:40)
she worked nights but she slept in my
(00:13:43)
bed and I didn't even really know it
(00:13:45)
because she would come in and just push
(00:13:46)
me over and sleep in bed with me which
(00:13:49)
was next to Craig's bed. Um it was just
(00:13:52)
this when when family's in trouble, you
(00:13:55)
step up. Um and I think to this day
(00:13:58)
throughout uh all our travels,
(00:14:02)
travailes, being in the White House, we
(00:14:04)
retained that. No matter what was going
(00:14:07)
on in his life or mine, we had some
(00:14:11)
rituals. You know, we did Thanksgiving
(00:14:13)
together. His family came to the Easter
(00:14:15)
egg roll. My niece and nephew, his
(00:14:18)
oldest kids. Whenever we had an
(00:14:20)
interesting trip in the summer, Avery
(00:14:22)
and Leslie always came with us. So, it
(00:14:25)
wasn't just me, Malia, and Sasha on
(00:14:27)
Brightar, the first lady's plane, seeing
(00:14:30)
Nelson Mandela or going on Safari or
(00:14:34)
going to see going to Rome, but Avery
(00:14:37)
and Leslie came with us. So it just made
(00:14:41)
the whole experience feel like we
(00:14:43)
weren't on some island just doing this
(00:14:45)
really hard thing, but we were still
(00:14:47)
doing it as a as a family. So family
(00:14:50)
values I I think is probably one of the
(00:14:53)
strongest things we took away and and we
(00:14:56)
made it happen in that little house on
(00:14:57)
74th in Ucllet. It was just brimming
(00:15:00)
with with love and conversation and
(00:15:04)
trust. I'm 60 years old. I've finished a
(00:15:08)
really hard thing in my life with my
(00:15:10)
family intact. I'm an empty neester. And
(00:15:13)
now for the first time, as I've said
(00:15:15)
before, every choice that I'm making is
(00:15:18)
completely mine. My mom always said that
(00:15:21)
it's not my life. It's not my failure.
(00:15:24)
It's not my homework. It's not my going
(00:15:27)
to school. It's yours. I told Barack, I
(00:15:30)
was like, you know, we either do this
(00:15:32)
stuff early and deal with it. have these
(00:15:34)
hard kind of conversations, deal with
(00:15:37)
these mistakes and failures when they're
(00:15:39)
10 and five and 13 rather than having
(00:15:42)
them live in our basement at 35 for the
(00:15:46)
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(00:16:34)
last time we were together, you were
(00:16:36)
talking about just the kitchen table and
(00:16:38)
just the gathering of minds and family
(00:16:41)
and how important that is. And Craig, I
(00:16:42)
know your birthday is coming up too,
(00:16:44)
like
(00:16:45)
it. Thanks for remembering 21st. Yeah,
(00:16:48)
absolutely. Happy 21st birthday, but
(00:16:51)
were birthdays a big part of connecting
(00:16:53)
over the years as well or has that not
(00:16:55)
been? cuz that for my sister is like the
(00:16:57)
biggest day. She's like, "My birthday is
(00:17:00)
really important. Do not miss my
(00:17:02)
birthday." Like I know. Well, we never
(00:17:04)
missed birthdays and we always
(00:17:07)
celebrated birthdays, but they weren't a
(00:17:10)
big deal like where we had a party. Like
(00:17:12)
I think you had one or two birthday
(00:17:15)
parties. And this is the tripped out
(00:17:17)
thing about this generation. Like kids
(00:17:19)
have parties every year and multiple
(00:17:21)
parties. They're blowout, you know? It's
(00:17:23)
a birthday month now. birthday month and
(00:17:25)
you're renting something and you're
(00:17:27)
catering and you know I think like our
(00:17:30)
generation you had maybe 13 maybe five
(00:17:34)
years old you had two parties and they
(00:17:36)
were at your house in the kitchen table
(00:17:38)
you know with your cousins and you
(00:17:39)
played pin the tail on the donkey in the
(00:17:41)
yard or somewhere like that but but as a
(00:17:44)
family we celebrated everybody's
(00:17:46)
birthday and it was a big deal and every
(00:17:49)
now and then that community of relatives
(00:17:51)
that were around us would come over and
(00:17:53)
it didn't matter what the day if it was
(00:17:55)
Thursday and everybody had to go to work
(00:17:58)
on Friday, they would come over and sing
(00:18:00)
happy birthday, gift cards out.
(00:18:02)
Birthdays were always celebrated in our
(00:18:04)
family. They weren't like big like see
(00:18:07)
me bring me gifts, but it was a time
(00:18:10)
together. Yeah. Uh and we're talking
(00:18:12)
about the extended family. So my mother
(00:18:15)
uh had seven brothers and sisters and
(00:18:19)
then the cousins and then our
(00:18:21)
grandfather. We were always at
(00:18:23)
Southside's house for these birthdays
(00:18:25)
cuz that's the side of the family that
(00:18:26)
did it. Every there was a dinner and
(00:18:30)
cards for every birthday for all those
(00:18:33)
people, you know. Wow. It's a lot of
(00:18:35)
people. So, it's almost like every
(00:18:36)
weekend we were celebrating somebody's
(00:18:39)
birthday. That's amazing. What What's
(00:18:41)
been something that you've an idea that
(00:18:43)
you've had to unlearn since you were
(00:18:46)
younger? Something that you've kind of
(00:18:47)
had to let go of as time has gone on?
(00:18:50)
something that was important before, but
(00:18:53)
you're like, "No, it's not so
(00:18:55)
important." Me talked about our
(00:18:58)
grandfather's apartment being on fire.
(00:19:02)
Fire back then in the 70s was a real
(00:19:06)
thing. Like houses caught on fire.
(00:19:09)
People didn't have smoke, especially in
(00:19:11)
working-class poor communities. You
(00:19:13)
didn't have smoke detectors. Smoke
(00:19:14)
detectors. So, I think we knew several
(00:19:16)
kids whose homes caught on fire.
(00:19:20)
And I had to unlearn worrying about our
(00:19:25)
house being on fire. I mean, I grew up
(00:19:28)
completely obsessed with being able
(00:19:32)
to recognize if the house was going to
(00:19:35)
be on fire, number one, and then having
(00:19:37)
the ability to get everyone out. And
(00:19:39)
you, you know, our dad had MS and so he
(00:19:42)
he he walked with a limp from the time I
(00:19:46)
could remember. He then had a cane and
(00:19:48)
then he had the crutches that went
(00:19:50)
around his arm and I would
(00:19:52)
practice dragging him with his should
(00:19:56)
with my arms under his shoulders around
(00:19:58)
the house and he would I know it was
(00:20:01)
humiliating but he'd let me do it and my
(00:20:05)
mom would be like, "Craig, put Frasier
(00:20:08)
down. Just stop doing that." And I
(00:20:10)
wanted to make sure I could drag him
(00:20:12)
through the house and we had like 14
(00:20:14)
stairs down to get out. I didn't drag
(00:20:17)
him down there, but I knew I could if I
(00:20:19)
had to. That's something I had to
(00:20:21)
unlearn because that was a real fear of
(00:20:24)
mine was a fear of dying in a fire. Wow.
(00:20:27)
Yeah. What did it take? like what was
(00:20:29)
the Well, what it took was I realized it
(00:20:32)
was irrational as I got older because
(00:20:34)
there were less house fires and and I
(00:20:37)
guess it wasn't irrational because there
(00:20:39)
were actually house fires, but the the
(00:20:42)
advent of smoke detectors and the advent
(00:20:45)
of sort of inflam noninflammable or what
(00:20:49)
is it non-inflammable
(00:20:51)
items around the house. I was always
(00:20:53)
worried about a fire starting and we had
(00:20:55)
a fire start in our kitchen. remember we
(00:20:58)
were cooking Pop-Tarts which were like
(00:21:00)
Saturday morning to we kind of had the
(00:21:03)
run of the kitchen uh cuz that was the
(00:21:06)
day mom would sleep in. Um and we had
(00:21:09)
this old toaster and we were making
(00:21:11)
Pop-Tarts and it caught
(00:21:13)
fire coming and the flame came up and
(00:21:17)
then sure enough you're like this is it.
(00:21:19)
This is it. Mom to the rescue. Mom came
(00:21:21)
in and put it under the sink and it was
(00:21:23)
over. So save the day. That I mean
(00:21:24)
that's a real fear. Yeah. That's Yeah.
(00:21:27)
But as you talk about fear, when I think
(00:21:29)
about things uh that I think we had to
(00:21:34)
subconsciously unlearn um was fear
(00:21:38)
because you know we grew up at a time in
(00:21:40)
you know just coming out of the the deep
(00:21:43)
segregation of Chicago. But our parents
(00:21:47)
and grandparents grew up in it. You know
(00:21:50)
in a time when being black in the city,
(00:21:53)
you know, you were isolated. Um there
(00:21:55)
were areas of the city that you couldn't
(00:21:58)
go into because you could be literally
(00:22:02)
harmed, killed as a black person. Um
(00:22:05)
that was that was the truth of Chicago.
(00:22:08)
As I noticed in my family, fear the fear
(00:22:12)
of what could happen to a black man, to
(00:22:15)
a black person kind of consumed some of
(00:22:19)
our elders um and stunted their growth.
(00:22:22)
I mean, Southside, the grandparent that
(00:22:24)
I talked about, he was kind of a mama's
(00:22:27)
boy, you know, his mom, our
(00:22:29)
great-grandmother, mama, uh,
(00:22:32)
overprotected him. And as a result, he
(00:22:35)
never really got his own footing because
(00:22:37)
he had a mom that was going to make sure
(00:22:40)
you live at home, I'll take care of you.
(00:22:42)
Um, he also had limits as a black man
(00:22:45)
because he was a carpenter who wasn't
(00:22:47)
allowed to join the unions, uh, couldn't
(00:22:49)
afford to go to college. They were of
(00:22:52)
the generation where even if you were
(00:22:54)
smart and talented, the ceiling was
(00:22:57)
real. Um, and the dangers were real. A
(00:23:00)
lot of the reason our family was so
(00:23:02)
close, right, was because the elders
(00:23:05)
were keeping everybody close and they
(00:23:08)
were slowly passing those fears on,
(00:23:11)
don't go down this street, don't go on
(00:23:13)
this bus, maybe not take that job, don't
(00:23:16)
try something new because it could kill
(00:23:19)
you. M I think our parents tried to
(00:23:22)
actively unhook those those things from
(00:23:26)
us by pushing us out. I think they knew
(00:23:30)
that they had the tendency to suffocate
(00:23:33)
their dreams because of these fears to
(00:23:36)
not try new things to not draw outside
(00:23:38)
of the lines and I think they
(00:23:41)
deliberately pushed us. So there were a
(00:23:44)
lot of yeses in terms of experiences,
(00:23:47)
exposures, Craig traveling on his um uh
(00:23:51)
AAOU basketball league to other parts of
(00:23:54)
the city even, you know, cuz in a city
(00:23:57)
like Chicago, because of those fears, we
(00:23:59)
had cousins that lived on the west side
(00:24:01)
of the city. We lived on the south side
(00:24:03)
of the city in a neighborhood that was
(00:24:04)
right along the lake near downtown
(00:24:07)
Chicago. If you're a black kid growing
(00:24:10)
up on the west side of Chicago, we met
(00:24:12)
kids that had never been downtown. They
(00:24:16)
had never seen the lake. And if you've
(00:24:18)
been to Chicago, to be from Chicago and
(00:24:21)
never see the lake is a herculean
(00:24:24)
effort. But you understand it when
(00:24:27)
you're a black kid from the west side
(00:24:29)
and you're viewed with suspicion when
(00:24:31)
you come downtown. You don't feel
(00:24:33)
welcome outside of your neighborhood. So
(00:24:35)
your world gets smaller and smaller. I
(00:24:38)
think our parents did not want that
(00:24:40)
smallalness for us. Uh and we saw how
(00:24:43)
that smallalness kept some really
(00:24:46)
intelligent people in our lives in one
(00:24:49)
spot. You know, they didn't move. They
(00:24:51)
didn't grow. They didn't try new things.
(00:24:53)
I had an aunt, my mother's youngest
(00:24:55)
sister who recently passed this year,
(00:24:58)
who never came to the White House in all
(00:25:00)
the years that we were there. She never
(00:25:03)
came. Why? because she was afraid of
(00:25:06)
flying. She was afraid of driving too
(00:25:09)
long. She was afraid of doing anything
(00:25:12)
but leaving her house and going to work
(00:25:13)
and coming home. We saw that fear,
(00:25:17)
right? We saw saw that. And we you you
(00:25:21)
have to actively tell yourself a
(00:25:23)
different set of messages about what you
(00:25:25)
can expect from the world. And and we
(00:25:28)
also could have been limited by that
(00:25:30)
because while um it physically limited
(00:25:33)
some of our our relatives, some of our
(00:25:36)
grandparents' perspectives like many
(00:25:38)
people in this country, they were
(00:25:40)
backwards thinking, you know, their
(00:25:42)
views of white people and who they could
(00:25:45)
trust. You know, the same Southside
(00:25:47)
never went to the doctor because he
(00:25:49)
didn't trust doctors. So he, you know,
(00:25:51)
he never went to the dentist. That's
(00:25:53)
probably why he died in his 70s. He
(00:25:55)
didn't have a tooth in his head, but he
(00:25:57)
would never go to the dentist, you know.
(00:25:59)
And we would talk about these things
(00:26:01)
around our immediate kitchen table
(00:26:03)
because our parents wanted us to learn
(00:26:05)
from the mistakes that they had made and
(00:26:07)
others. And that was the power of that
(00:26:09)
household is I our parents talked to us
(00:26:12)
very openly and honestly about some of
(00:26:14)
the weird things you'd see at Christmas
(00:26:17)
dinner or some of the conversations and
(00:26:19)
you'd come back and go, "Well, why did
(00:26:21)
why did Dandy, our other grandfather,
(00:26:23)
say that? Why did he yell about that?
(00:26:25)
What was he talking about? We were
(00:26:27)
always allowed to question. And that
(00:26:30)
fear element and the the limitations on
(00:26:33)
people's views of the world, we would
(00:26:36)
see and discuss. And we were told, you
(00:26:39)
have to do better than that. You have to
(00:26:42)
live beyond that fear. You have to push
(00:26:44)
yourself outside of your comfort zone.
(00:26:46)
And I continue to try to do that,
(00:26:48)
instill that in my kids and other kids
(00:26:50)
to this day. I mean, that's such a
(00:26:53)
profound thing to reflect on when
(00:26:56)
thinking about what to unlearn because
(00:26:57)
it's so, as you said, it wasn't both of
(00:27:00)
yours, but especially this is something
(00:27:02)
that isn't going to change based on a
(00:27:05)
mindset because it exists in reality.
(00:27:07)
Did either of you ever have any close
(00:27:10)
calls or runins that Oh, yeah. that you
(00:27:12)
would like to share or feel comfortable
(00:27:14)
sharing? You were about 10 years old. I
(00:27:16)
was I was probably more like 12 cuz I
(00:27:18)
could ride to Rainbow Beach. So you
(00:27:21)
figure I'm 12 in our neighborhood.
(00:27:23)
Seventh gradeish, a department store
(00:27:26)
near our house called Goldlats had a
(00:27:28)
sale on 10speed bikes, the kind with the
(00:27:32)
with the uh handlebars that go under it.
(00:27:34)
That was brand new back then. They were
(00:27:37)
yellow. And they sold a ton of them. And
(00:27:41)
you got one as a gift. Your first 10
(00:27:44)
speed bike. And it had to I got must
(00:27:46)
have gotten it for my birthday. So it's
(00:27:47)
probably around this time of the year.
(00:27:50)
but it didn't come with the clamps to
(00:27:52)
hold the cables along the yolk. So, my
(00:27:55)
mom used these twist ties that she got
(00:27:59)
from the baggies that you would put
(00:28:02)
stuff in before you had the zip lock.
(00:28:04)
You had these bags and then you put
(00:28:06)
these green and white twist twisty ties
(00:28:09)
on it. So, she put them on my bike and
(00:28:11)
and there is a point to this. Yeah, I'm
(00:28:13)
wondering what it is. Well, so, so, so
(00:28:17)
I'm riding my bike by myself down 75th
(00:28:21)
Street, which head, if you head east,
(00:28:23)
you run right into Lake Michigan. And
(00:28:25)
I'm almost there and a policeman comes
(00:28:28)
up to
(00:28:29)
me while I'm riding and I'm on the
(00:28:32)
sidewalk and he's in the street, turns
(00:28:33)
his lights on, tells me to pull over and
(00:28:36)
I stop and I was like, "Officer, how can
(00:28:38)
I help?" Because I'm always happy to see
(00:28:40)
a policeman. My uncle's a a policeman
(00:28:42)
and um you know officer friendly in
(00:28:45)
school. And he said, "Uh, where'd you
(00:28:47)
get that bike?" And I said, "Ah, I got
(00:28:50)
it for my birthday. I just got it. I
(00:28:52)
mean, take a look at I was proud of it.
(00:28:54)
I was like, this is my new 10-speed
(00:28:57)
bike." He said, "You stole that bike."
(00:28:59)
Now, this was a black police
(00:29:03)
officer. And I was like, "No, no." And
(00:29:06)
and I it was it was so out of the realm
(00:29:08)
of my mind to be accused of stealing a
(00:29:12)
bike. I wasn't even worried at first. I
(00:29:14)
just said, "No, no, listen. You got it
(00:29:16)
all wrong. This is a brand new bike that
(00:29:19)
I got." And he was like, "I know you
(00:29:21)
stole that bike." And he was basing it
(00:29:24)
on the fact that someone who had bought
(00:29:27)
a similar bike had it stolen and their
(00:29:31)
mom used twist ties to put them on the
(00:29:34)
cables.
(00:29:35)
So he wouldn't believe me. And so now
(00:29:38)
I'm getting worried. And he picks up my
(00:29:40)
bike and puts it in the trunk of the
(00:29:41)
car, puts me in the back of the car and
(00:29:44)
says, "Where do you live?" And I said, I
(00:29:46)
told him where I lived. And he drove I
(00:29:49)
said, "You'll you'll realize this is my
(00:29:51)
bike. We can go right to my mom's right
(00:29:53)
to my house." So we pull up to my house
(00:29:57)
and by this time I'm in tears. I'm just
(00:30:00)
beside myself. I ring the doorbell and
(00:30:03)
my mom was worried cuz she knew I was
(00:30:05)
gone for a long bike ride. She comes out
(00:30:09)
and I said, "The policeman is accused me
(00:30:12)
of stealing this bike and I'm in in
(00:30:15)
tears." She comes out and she said,
(00:30:18)
"Wait inside." And I'm on our front
(00:30:21)
porch looking out or actually I'm
(00:30:23)
upstairs looking down cuz we lived
(00:30:25)
upstairs. I'm looking down and I see her
(00:30:30)
and I can tell she is pissed and she is
(00:30:34)
talking to him like she would talk to us
(00:30:36)
if we were in trouble. And all I can see
(00:30:40)
is the the policeman trying to defend
(00:30:43)
himself. So after about 20 minutes, she
(00:30:48)
yells up to the window, "Craig, come
(00:30:49)
down here." And she said, "This
(00:30:52)
policeman uh has something to say to
(00:30:54)
you." And this dude took off his hat and
(00:30:58)
apologized for accusing me of stealing
(00:31:01)
his bike. And as it turned out, they
(00:31:04)
ended up finding the guy, but it was,
(00:31:08)
you know, that's that's kind of the
(00:31:10)
collateral damage of being a young black
(00:31:13)
kid. I just think about all, you know,
(00:31:16)
what would have happened if my mom
(00:31:19)
wasn't a stay-at-home mom? What if she
(00:31:20)
had been in work when that happened?
(00:31:22)
What if, you know, he didn't have a mom
(00:31:26)
that, you know, would stand up for him?
(00:31:28)
What what if what are all the what ifs
(00:31:31)
that that could have happened? Um, and
(00:31:34)
that, you know, is you imagine you're
(00:31:37)
just having a regular day and your son
(00:31:39)
is pulled up to your house in the back
(00:31:42)
of a police car at 10 years old. At 10,
(00:31:45)
12 years old, it was it was frightening.
(00:31:47)
It was frightening, you know. And I
(00:31:48)
think what she was incredulous was about
(00:31:51)
was that he wasn't even inclined to
(00:31:53)
believe this little boy who was
(00:31:54)
obviously articulate, didn't look, you
(00:31:57)
know, you don't even want to say didn't
(00:31:58)
look like some little hood rat because
(00:32:00)
what does that matter, right? But that
(00:32:03)
was, you know, that was unusual for us
(00:32:06)
because we were good kids. I mean, and
(00:32:08)
we lived in a neighborhood where there
(00:32:10)
kids were getting into trouble all the
(00:32:11)
time and he knew all the kids cuz he was
(00:32:13)
a basketball player. He knew the the
(00:32:16)
gang kids and the drug dealers and the
(00:32:18)
but everybody also knew him, you know,
(00:32:21)
and you know, when you grow up in a
(00:32:23)
neighborhood, people know the kids that
(00:32:25)
are heading in the wrong direction and
(00:32:27)
the kids who have promise. Everybody
(00:32:30)
knew that Craig was a good student. He
(00:32:32)
was a good guy. And the notion and I
(00:32:34)
felt the anger, too. It's like, how dare
(00:32:37)
you do that to my brother? But he, you
(00:32:41)
know, he had a support system. he could
(00:32:44)
have wound up in jail for stealing, not
(00:32:46)
stealing a bike. Um, so yeah, that kind
(00:32:49)
of stuff happened all the time. Um, you
(00:32:53)
know, walking into a department store as
(00:32:55)
a young kid and having the the, you
(00:32:58)
know, salespeople wonder why you're
(00:33:00)
there and you're coming, you're an honor
(00:33:03)
student coming from high school, you
(00:33:05)
know, having lunch with your friends. I
(00:33:07)
mean, they don't they didn't see that
(00:33:09)
part. There were times when that that
(00:33:10)
part of us couldn't be we couldn't walk
(00:33:12)
around saying validictorian straight A
(00:33:15)
student uh you know speaks excellent has
(00:33:19)
excellent diction if you give them a
(00:33:21)
chance. You know we knew very early on
(00:33:24)
that that no one was going to see beyond
(00:33:27)
the color of our skin at an early age.
(00:33:30)
Uh and and that could get you in
(00:33:32)
trouble. Yeah. I mean, when you talk
(00:33:35)
about that fear, I'm sure that fear has
(00:33:37)
been tested across your life in so many
(00:33:41)
different places. And I wonder what
(00:33:44)
would you say has been the most hardest
(00:33:46)
recent test of that fear? Because it's
(00:33:49)
not one of those fears that you kind of
(00:33:50)
get over and it just goes away. It kind
(00:33:53)
of shows its head in many different
(00:33:55)
ways, I imagine. Well, in this current
(00:33:57)
climate for me, it's, you know, what's
(00:34:00)
happening to immigrants, you know? So,
(00:34:02)
it's it's not the fear for myself
(00:34:05)
anymore. I drive around in a fourc car
(00:34:07)
motorcade with a police escort. I'm
(00:34:10)
Michelle Obama. I do still worry about
(00:34:13)
my daughters in the world, even though
(00:34:15)
they are somewhat recognizable. So, my
(00:34:17)
fears are for what I know is happening
(00:34:20)
out there in streets all over the the
(00:34:22)
city. And now that we have leadership
(00:34:24)
that is sort of indiscriminately
(00:34:27)
determining who belongs and who doesn't
(00:34:29)
and we know that those decisions aren't
(00:34:32)
being made with courts and with due
(00:34:34)
process and you know that that it's
(00:34:37)
being made like this cop that pulled my
(00:34:40)
brother over when he was 12. You don't
(00:34:43)
look like
(00:34:44)
somebody that belongs. you know, I can
(00:34:48)
determine just by looking at you that
(00:34:50)
you're, you know, you're a good person
(00:34:52)
or you're not a good person. And knowing
(00:34:55)
that there's so much bias and so much
(00:34:57)
racism and so much ignorance that fuels
(00:35:00)
those kind of choices, I worry for
(00:35:03)
people of color all over this country.
(00:35:07)
And I don't know that we will have the
(00:35:09)
advocates to protect everybody. And that
(00:35:12)
makes me that frightens me. It it keeps
(00:35:16)
me up at night. Uh and I know that there
(00:35:18)
are and I and I see that when I'm
(00:35:20)
driving around LA. I'm I'm just looking
(00:35:22)
in the faces of folks who could be
(00:35:24)
victim. And I'm wondering how are you
(00:35:26)
feeling? How do you feel standing on the
(00:35:28)
bus stop? How do you how do you feel
(00:35:30)
comfortable going to work, going to
(00:35:32)
school when you know that there could be
(00:35:35)
people out here judging you and who
(00:35:38)
could upend your life in a second?
(00:35:41)
um that you know that that that's who I
(00:35:45)
worry for right now. What do you both do
(00:35:48)
with that fear because I think that's
(00:35:50)
very real and a lot of people listening
(00:35:51)
probably feel very similarly to both of
(00:35:54)
you as well. What do you do with it?
(00:35:56)
Because it almost feels
(00:35:58)
overwhelming and especially for someone
(00:36:00)
going through it as you were talking
(00:36:01)
about with your daughters too. It's it's
(00:36:04)
not something that you rationalize and
(00:36:07)
you know it's it's not the same as so
(00:36:08)
many other fears. So, what do you do
(00:36:10)
with it? See, I still have a couple of
(00:36:12)
young kids at home. So, I've got a
(00:36:15)
15year-old and a 13year-old. So, I'm
(00:36:18)
still in the education process for those
(00:36:22)
guys because we, you know, we live in a
(00:36:24)
suburb and and uh we have a relatively
(00:36:28)
safe environment. So, our kids aren't
(00:36:31)
growing up with that kind of fear that
(00:36:34)
we had, but I have to make them aware of
(00:36:37)
it because at some point they're going
(00:36:39)
to be away from us and they're going to
(00:36:40)
be in a place where they're going to
(00:36:43)
encounter that. I'm trying to be as
(00:36:46)
empathetic as I can because that's how
(00:36:49)
we were taught to deal with this kind of
(00:36:52)
behavior. Our mom always said, "Just put
(00:36:54)
yourself in the other guy's shoes. He's
(00:36:57)
probably had a bad upbringing, an
(00:36:59)
ignorant upbringing. Uh his folks didn't
(00:37:02)
know anything. And that's how I always
(00:37:05)
viewed people who treated me with
(00:37:08)
disdain because of my race or because of
(00:37:10)
where I'm from or
(00:37:12)
or anything. And I'm trying to help my
(00:37:16)
my even my older kids who are 33 and 29.
(00:37:19)
They're they're they're pretty much
(00:37:21)
formed and are are handling things on
(00:37:22)
their own. But it's a good reminder to
(00:37:25)
talk about this and and put put some
(00:37:28)
coping strategies together for
(00:37:30)
especially our our teenagers because
(00:37:33)
they're going to um they're going to
(00:37:36)
encounter this at some point. I have to
(00:37:39)
re practice reverse, you know, messaging
(00:37:43)
in my own head about this stuff because
(00:37:46)
you can get locked in the the the
(00:37:49)
disappointments of what is happening
(00:37:52)
right now and you can sit in it and let
(00:37:55)
that eat you up and it can taint your
(00:37:59)
view of so much. Having been the first
(00:38:02)
lady of the entire country and
(00:38:05)
representing the country in the world, I
(00:38:08)
couldn't afford to have that kind of
(00:38:10)
disdain. You know, I had to um remind
(00:38:14)
myself and put myself in situations that
(00:38:17)
reminded me the ideals and beliefs that
(00:38:20)
I disagree with are not pervasive. That,
(00:38:23)
you know, there are a lot of good people
(00:38:25)
out there. again employing empathy but
(00:38:29)
also reminding myself of the truth of
(00:38:31)
what I've seen and I've experienced
(00:38:34)
where that we're in a confusing time but
(00:38:37)
it doesn't help me and it doesn't help
(00:38:40)
the country for me to grow cynical in
(00:38:43)
that space. So it I kind of view it as
(00:38:45)
it's it's a duty as a citizen to not do
(00:38:48)
the same thing that they're doing and
(00:38:50)
start making assumptions about people
(00:38:53)
based on my anger and fear. you know
(00:38:55)
that I have to assume that most people
(00:38:58)
are trying to do the right thing. That
(00:39:00)
deep down inside, the vast majority of
(00:39:03)
us do not want to see our neighbors and
(00:39:06)
our friends and relatives live in fear.
(00:39:08)
They just don't understand what it feels
(00:39:10)
like to be the target. But if they knew,
(00:39:13)
they would understand. Which is why
(00:39:16)
communication and conversation is so
(00:39:18)
important because maybe if I can tell a
(00:39:20)
story, you know, if I can if I can help
(00:39:24)
them be in the shoes of someone and that
(00:39:27)
it can have that same empathizing effect
(00:39:30)
that I'd rather use that rather than
(00:39:33)
than become to become discouraged and
(00:39:36)
then suspicious and just be the, you
(00:39:39)
know, just do what they're doing. I
(00:39:41)
don't want to become that. Uh, so it's a
(00:39:44)
constant reminder. Do not slip in to
(00:39:47)
that behavior yourself. I love that. I I
(00:39:51)
think that's such
(00:39:53)
uh optimistic, hopeful, powerful
(00:39:56)
mindset. And you're so right because if
(00:39:59)
we all become cynical and skeptical and
(00:40:02)
negative, it only makes it worse for us
(00:40:05)
and worse for everyone around us. Yeah.
(00:40:07)
And let let me tell you, I can I can and
(00:40:10)
I can be cynical and I can be all of
(00:40:14)
that and I don't want to set myself
(00:40:15)
because in these times it's hard. No one
(00:40:17)
is perfect, but I try to keep that to my
(00:40:21)
kitchen table, you know? I mean, I I
(00:40:24)
feel like when you when you have a
(00:40:26)
platform and you have a voice, there is
(00:40:28)
a responsibility to use that wisely. So
(00:40:32)
yes, I I yes, even I in going high,
(00:40:36)
there are times I want to go low and I
(00:40:38)
need to let that out, but I'm never
(00:40:41)
gonna let that out in public because
(00:40:43)
that's not even fully truly how I feel,
(00:40:46)
you know? Um, so just for our listeners
(00:40:50)
and viewers, it's like, yes, of course,
(00:40:52)
we all feel it. It's just a question of
(00:40:54)
how do we act on it? And you hear this,
(00:40:56)
this is why we're doing IMO, right? It's
(00:41:00)
just to be able to take the lessons
(00:41:02)
we've learned and the experiences that
(00:41:06)
we've gone through and hers being at the
(00:41:09)
level of the White House and mine being
(00:41:11)
what they are sort of I'm I'm the still
(00:41:13)
the regular guy in the family,
(00:41:16)
but we're we're hoping that we can share
(00:41:19)
some of these with folks and learn some
(00:41:21)
things from the people that we have on
(00:41:23)
like you just listening to her do that.
(00:41:26)
This is I this is the most fun I am
(00:41:29)
having other than hanging with my kids
(00:41:32)
and my family. I just get goosebumps
(00:41:34)
when when you hear some some good um
(00:41:38)
wisdom. Oh yeah. I mean that that that
(00:41:40)
totally like you know it just it was
(00:41:43)
just such a refreshing take on what I
(00:41:46)
was saying was is a valid concern is a
(00:41:51)
natural feeling that people are having.
(00:41:54)
M but to flip the script in our own
(00:41:56)
minds as to how we deal with it and that
(00:41:58)
constant battle that we have to have
(00:42:00)
with the thoughts in our head. And I
(00:42:02)
love what you're doing with IMO. I mean,
(00:42:03)
I was so grateful to be a guest on the
(00:42:06)
show and to visit you both uh in
(00:42:08)
Martha's Vineyard, which was last year,
(00:42:10)
I think it was. And first of all, I'm
(00:42:13)
just so grateful when I see doing it
(00:42:17)
with family is just special because
(00:42:18)
already you're seeing sides of each
(00:42:20)
other that you'd never see elsewhere. So
(00:42:23)
you can tell how authentic and real it
(00:42:24)
is and and true it is which is so
(00:42:26)
beautiful. And on top of that, what I
(00:42:29)
love about it the most is that I feel
(00:42:32)
the fact that you're doing a podcast,
(00:42:35)
which is the most accessible platform
(00:42:37)
where you're giving I mean, you know,
(00:42:38)
when we were on like questions coming in
(00:42:40)
from the audience that we were tackling
(00:42:42)
together, trying to hear from both of
(00:42:44)
your experiences and by the way, Craig,
(00:42:46)
you saying that you you know, the normal
(00:42:49)
regular person in the family, I mean,
(00:42:51)
like, you know, compared to her, I hope
(00:42:54)
everyone has the regular, you know, it's
(00:42:57)
amazing. to hear it from both of your
(00:42:58)
sides and and the fact that you're
(00:43:00)
opening up even just the way you did now
(00:43:02)
about these real life experiences that
(00:43:03)
you've both had. I I think it's so
(00:43:06)
needed because I think the challenge is
(00:43:08)
that when people do have success as both
(00:43:10)
of you have had and and the incredible
(00:43:12)
heights of success that you've had, you
(00:43:14)
forget that someone was once scared that
(00:43:17)
they were told they were stealing a
(00:43:20)
bike. Yeah. Or you know that they were
(00:43:22)
scared about going down a particular
(00:43:24)
street in their neighborhood. And and
(00:43:26)
that's where so many people start out.
(00:43:29)
And it's not saying that everyone has to
(00:43:30)
go and achieve things externally in the
(00:43:33)
world to get out of that, but these are
(00:43:35)
real emotions. And and I think what you
(00:43:37)
were saying to me that resonated just
(00:43:39)
now, Michelle, was this idea that you've
(00:43:43)
had to push yourself out of that comfort
(00:43:45)
zone and your parents wanted you to not
(00:43:47)
have that. I mean, what amazing
(00:43:49)
parenting. M yeah I mean what phenomenal
(00:43:51)
parenting when you have every reason to
(00:43:53)
scare your kids into a corner but you
(00:43:57)
actually use it to expand their vision
(00:43:59)
up to the whole world. You know what I
(00:44:00)
mean? That's we were blessed, Jay. And
(00:44:03)
the older we get, the further down
(00:44:05)
life's path we go as we parent and
(00:44:08)
parent young kids and adult kids, it
(00:44:10)
we've come to appreciate how rare our
(00:44:14)
parents' perspectives were for anyone,
(00:44:17)
let alone for people in their
(00:44:18)
circumstances, which is another thing
(00:44:21)
reason why it's like, well, let's create
(00:44:23)
a bigger kitchen table. I and with the
(00:44:26)
loss of our mom this year, that was also
(00:44:28)
a big impetus to to do this podcast
(00:44:32)
because the wisdom that she gave us, it
(00:44:35)
lives in us. And as people who were
(00:44:38)
raised to be givers and to be mentors
(00:44:41)
and to gain joy from that mentorship
(00:44:43)
truly, that's sort of a shared attribute
(00:44:46)
in both of us. being able to take that
(00:44:49)
wisdom and I don't want to say spread it
(00:44:52)
to the world, but to just let other
(00:44:54)
people benefit from the little nuggets
(00:44:57)
of of of wisdom that our parents laid
(00:45:00)
out in that kitchen table. It's like,
(00:45:02)
why not share it? You know, the power of
(00:45:05)
good parenting is too often
(00:45:09)
underestimated. And I think our parents
(00:45:12)
came into parenting with a philosophy
(00:45:15)
like like a basic philosophy. I mean,
(00:45:17)
when you think of how most people think
(00:45:18)
of parenting, they just think, I want to
(00:45:20)
have a baby. And that's where it begins
(00:45:22)
and ends. I want to have a baby. But the
(00:45:26)
then the question is, well, why? Why do
(00:45:29)
you want to have a baby? Do you want to
(00:45:32)
have a baby because you're
(00:45:33)
lonely? That that that's not going to
(00:45:36)
work out well. Uh do you want to have a
(00:45:38)
baby to create a mini me to continue on
(00:45:41)
some aspect of yourself that that you
(00:45:43)
didn't achieve? Ooh, that's going to be
(00:45:47)
a messy kind of situation. Are are you
(00:45:50)
lonely and you want a companion? Do you
(00:45:52)
want a friend? I mean, if we actually
(00:45:56)
sit down and piece that stuff apart
(00:45:59)
before we have kids because parenting is
(00:46:02)
a hard thing. I think our parents or at
(00:46:04)
least our mother for sure she wanted
(00:46:08)
parents because she felt the importance
(00:46:11)
of raising independent, kind,
(00:46:14)
compassionate people, adults. Like she
(00:46:17)
always said, "I'm not raising babies,
(00:46:19)
I'm raising adults." And that that
(00:46:22)
completely shifts your approach as to
(00:46:25)
how you parent if you're not like just
(00:46:27)
trying to raise a friend. Because let me
(00:46:29)
tell you, if you want a friend, you
(00:46:31)
never want your friend to be mad at you,
(00:46:33)
right? You want your friend to like you.
(00:46:34)
Yeah. And if you're a parent and you're
(00:46:36)
worried about whether your kid likes
(00:46:38)
you, I guarantee you, you are screwing
(00:46:41)
them up, right? Because so much of
(00:46:43)
parenting means that you have to suffer
(00:46:45)
through them gritting under their teeth
(00:46:48)
of, "Oh, I hate you. Oh, mom, you make
(00:46:51)
me so mad. Why don't you ever, you know,
(00:46:53)
and it's like you can have those
(00:46:54)
feelings, you know, but as my girls say
(00:46:57)
that their favorite phrase of mine is,
(00:47:00)
I'm not one of your little
(00:47:03)
friends. It's like I you don't have to
(00:47:05)
like me. I've got my own friends. So,
(00:47:08)
you can don't slam your door. You can go
(00:47:11)
in your room. You can say whatever you
(00:47:13)
want, but you better not let me hear it.
(00:47:15)
And in and when you come out, you still
(00:47:18)
have to do it because I am not raising
(00:47:21)
you to be my friend. I'm raising you to
(00:47:22)
be a human, a responsible adult in the
(00:47:25)
world. And that's how our mother raised
(00:47:29)
us. And I always say, if everybody took
(00:47:32)
that to heart before they had kids and
(00:47:35)
they treated parenting in that way, boy,
(00:47:38)
that that would solve a lot of the mess
(00:47:41)
we're trying to deal with right now.
(00:47:43)
Yes, if parents just approached the job
(00:47:47)
like this is the biggest most important
(00:47:50)
thing that I'm doing and it isn't about
(00:47:52)
me. It is about who this little human is
(00:47:55)
going to be and how they're going to
(00:47:56)
enter the world and are they going to be
(00:47:59)
empathetic? Are they going to be
(00:48:00)
responsible? Are they going to be an
(00:48:02)
out here? And you start doing
(00:48:05)
that when they're two and three and
(00:48:07)
four. All of that work is is it starts
(00:48:10)
that early. That's, you know, if I think
(00:48:13)
of of a mission for myself right now
(00:48:15)
today, it's really like having us
(00:48:19)
all rethink the way we are are building
(00:48:24)
the next generation and what our duties
(00:48:26)
and our responsibilities are, what we're
(00:48:28)
getting right and what we haven't been
(00:48:30)
getting right, and how do we
(00:48:32)
self-correct. I'm really like on a on
(00:48:36)
one for just that thing cuz we're we're
(00:48:39)
not going to be able to count on the
(00:48:41)
government, you know? I mean, we're not
(00:48:43)
right now we're not investing in
(00:48:44)
education, so we can't, you know, we're
(00:48:47)
not paying teachers enough. We're
(00:48:49)
leaving this all on us. We're saying we
(00:48:51)
don't want to pay taxes for any of this
(00:48:53)
stuff, right? So, we sure as hell better
(00:48:57)
be good at taking care of our kids cuz
(00:49:01)
now we're saying, "Well, then it's all
(00:49:03)
on us and we can't afford to get it
(00:49:05)
wrong." Mic drop. That was like that
(00:49:08)
really hits hard. I mean, that resonates
(00:49:11)
so strongly and I feel as I was
(00:49:14)
listening to you, it's in one sense, and
(00:49:16)
I want to ask you this both as parents.
(00:49:18)
I'm not a parent yet. And partly it's
(00:49:19)
because me and my wife have these
(00:49:21)
discussions. We talk a lot about what
(00:49:23)
our parenting philosophy is and we've
(00:49:25)
talked about it over the years that
(00:49:27)
we've been together. We've been together
(00:49:28)
now for 12 years and married for nine
(00:49:31)
and it's been a topic of conversation
(00:49:33)
and there's been things we haven't
(00:49:34)
agreed on. There's things we agree on
(00:49:36)
and we want to make sure that we have an
(00:49:38)
aligned viewpoint even if we have slight
(00:49:41)
differences, right? We want to have an
(00:49:44)
aligned viewpoint of because we want the
(00:49:45)
kids to get a clear message. We don't
(00:49:47)
want them to get mom and dad have
(00:49:49)
different viewpoints and they're, you
(00:49:50)
know, they're arguing about it, trying
(00:49:52)
to figure it out. And and it's hard. And
(00:49:53)
I wanted to ask you both as parents, I
(00:49:55)
think, you know, you've both lived
(00:49:57)
incredibly successful lives. You went to
(00:49:59)
the best schools in the country. You
(00:50:01)
know, you went on to pivot and have an
(00:50:03)
amazing career and your passion of
(00:50:04)
basketball, like to even be able to do
(00:50:06)
that as a coach is incredible, Craig.
(00:50:09)
Right. Like to be able to pivot, which
(00:50:11)
I'm sure took sacrifice and stress, and
(00:50:13)
I want to link it to parenting. And of
(00:50:15)
course, mashallah, going to the White
(00:50:16)
House, raising kids while you're at the
(00:50:18)
White House, leaving then continuing.
(00:50:21)
How did you put parenting as a
(00:50:24)
priority despite prioritizing your
(00:50:26)
passion, prioritizing the country and
(00:50:29)
service, prioritizing your own
(00:50:31)
marriages? Like I feel like there's so
(00:50:33)
much pressure on parents. We just said
(00:50:35)
we can't rely on school, we can't rely
(00:50:36)
on the government, can't rely so that
(00:50:38)
means it's all on this person. How does
(00:50:40)
a parent take that pressure in a way
(00:50:43)
that uplifts them and allows them to
(00:50:46)
pursue their greatness too rather than
(00:50:48)
feel completely paralyzed by it? The
(00:50:51)
first thing that comes to my mind is
(00:50:55)
that as Meech said, we were so blessed
(00:50:58)
to have such good parents. I feel
(00:51:03)
obligated to be a great parent as a
(00:51:07)
tribute to my own parents. Well, you
(00:51:09)
also know what a great parent looks
(00:51:10)
like. I do know what a great parent
(00:51:12)
looks like, but I also am so thankful
(00:51:16)
for the sacrifices that they made so
(00:51:20)
that we could thrive and it makes
(00:51:25)
sense
(00:51:26)
and irrespective of whatever my passion
(00:51:31)
is which is co basketball or coaching or
(00:51:36)
mentoring. The
(00:51:38)
first responsibility I have are to the
(00:51:42)
four kids that I brought into this
(00:51:44)
world. And that's an easy one, Jay, for
(00:51:47)
me to to do. So, if I had to sacrifice
(00:51:50)
my passion for my kids, I would have.
(00:51:54)
Fortunately, coaching is a terrific
(00:51:57)
environment to raise kids because you're
(00:52:00)
around other young people and it really
(00:52:04)
is like having 15 kids instead of just
(00:52:07)
four. I would say there there is a
(00:52:10)
discipline that comes with it and you
(00:52:14)
talked about this being aligned. We call
(00:52:17)
it united front in our house. No matter
(00:52:20)
what what we're thinking, we are gonna
(00:52:24)
come to an agreement when it comes to
(00:52:26)
all right, let's give some advice to
(00:52:27)
this kids. This is the advice. Sometimes
(00:52:30)
it's what Kelly wants and sometimes it's
(00:52:33)
what I want, my wife Kelly. So there's a
(00:52:37)
coordinated communication, there's
(00:52:40)
discipline, and then most of all, and I
(00:52:43)
think I hear the word me time in par
(00:52:47)
these young parents, you know, my
(00:52:50)
parents never talked about me time.
(00:52:51)
Their their me time was our time. And I
(00:52:55)
know from a from a mental health
(00:52:57)
standpoint, we all need to get away and
(00:52:59)
and be on our own. But I would do that
(00:53:02)
after I made sure my kids were solidly
(00:53:05)
on good footing before I was worried
(00:53:08)
about I need a vacation with my boys to
(00:53:10)
go to Vegas. And I just saw my dad and
(00:53:15)
and and you talked about it. He was a
(00:53:17)
shift worker for the city of Chicago,
(00:53:20)
but he made time no matter what shift he
(00:53:24)
was on to attend our events, to play
(00:53:27)
with us when we when he got home, no
(00:53:29)
matter how tired he was, he made us the
(00:53:33)
priority. So, it's not hard work for it
(00:53:36)
doesn't feel like it's hard work for for
(00:53:39)
me and for us. We just had really good
(00:53:43)
role models and we were well coached in
(00:53:46)
parenting. Well, when you think of talk
(00:53:48)
about the pressure, I do I do think that
(00:53:51)
these days parents feel a lot of
(00:53:53)
pressure, but we're like taking on the
(00:53:56)
wrong pressure. Like we feel responsible
(00:54:00)
for our kids' happiness and success,
(00:54:03)
right? So we put a lot of pressure on
(00:54:07)
making sure they achieve like making
(00:54:11)
sure they don't fail, making sure they
(00:54:13)
don't feel bad or they don't experience
(00:54:16)
disappointments. So a lot of that
(00:54:18)
emotional energy we're taking on is in
(00:54:21)
my view it's misdirected and it takes a
(00:54:25)
lot of energy if you think that you're
(00:54:27)
responsible for your kids to happiness.
(00:54:31)
Right. Wow. And it's it's a whole lot of
(00:54:33)
energy if you think your kid should
(00:54:36)
always be happy. I mean, that's a
(00:54:39)
current parenting generational angst.
(00:54:42)
Like, no generations before us, you
(00:54:46)
know, cared about whether their kids
(00:54:49)
were happy, let alone being responsible
(00:54:52)
for your happiness or that you should be
(00:54:54)
happy all the time. I It feels like
(00:54:57)
that's a new phenomenon, right? You
(00:55:00)
know, I mean, we just think of all the
(00:55:02)
work that we do to keep our kids busy
(00:55:05)
and, you know, engaged and we sign them
(00:55:07)
up for this and sign them up for that
(00:55:09)
and, you know, we're taking them here
(00:55:10)
and we're taking them there instead of
(00:55:12)
just going, "Bill, maybe you're going to
(00:55:14)
be bored today." You know, what am I
(00:55:17)
what are we doing on Saturday, Mom? When
(00:55:19)
I was growing up, the answer was
(00:55:21)
nothing. You know, and my mother went on
(00:55:24)
with her day. You know, we're we're kind
(00:55:26)
of taking on a lot of that. My mom
(00:55:29)
always said that I am going to help you
(00:55:33)
own your life as early as possible. So
(00:55:38)
great words, you know, so that it's not
(00:55:41)
my life, it's not my failure, it's not
(00:55:44)
my homework, it's not my going to
(00:55:46)
school, it's yours. And when you start
(00:55:49)
giving your kids their lives early,
(00:55:51)
which means you got to let go. There's a
(00:55:54)
worry in that. But if you start letting
(00:55:56)
go, it's like you got to wake yourself
(00:55:58)
up. You got to make your bed. You got to
(00:56:00)
wash your plate. You can get to school.
(00:56:02)
You can figure it out. You got to figure
(00:56:04)
it out. And I think these days, parents
(00:56:07)
don't want to they don't want that
(00:56:09)
process of watching their kids figure it
(00:56:11)
out. And I get it. It is hard to watch
(00:56:14)
the the the person that you love
(00:56:16)
literally walk into a wall that you
(00:56:20)
see, you know, because our instinct as
(00:56:23)
parents is go, "Sweetie, no. No, no. You
(00:56:26)
were walking right into a wall. Uh, let
(00:56:29)
me stop you and sit you here and be safe
(00:56:31)
with me. Now I feel better. Right. And
(00:56:35)
the truth is is that sometime, at least
(00:56:37)
I've learned with my kids, they have to
(00:56:41)
walk into that wall. They have to bump
(00:56:43)
their head hard. And it's it hurts me to
(00:56:46)
see it, but I found that they learn
(00:56:49)
faster that way than me keeping them
(00:56:52)
from bumping their heads. Um, and
(00:56:54)
there's a release with that. It's like
(00:56:57)
it's a different kind of difficult thing
(00:56:59)
that you're dealing with, right? You're
(00:57:01)
dealing with your own emotions and
(00:57:04)
watching somebody that you care about go
(00:57:06)
through tough stuff. But there's no
(00:57:09)
other way to get them to be independent
(00:57:11)
other than dealing with that pain,
(00:57:14)
right? And I always say, as I told
(00:57:17)
Barack, I was like, you know, we either
(00:57:19)
do this stuff
(00:57:20)
early and deal with it, have these hard
(00:57:23)
kind of conversations, deal with these
(00:57:25)
mistakes and failures when they're 10
(00:57:27)
and five and 13, then rather than having
(00:57:31)
them live in our basement at 35 for for
(00:57:35)
the rest of their lives. It's like I
(00:57:37)
don't want a kid in my basement. So I've
(00:57:40)
been my our parents parented us not to
(00:57:43)
be in their basement. You pay your
(00:57:46)
bills. You handle your business. That's
(00:57:48)
our motto. Are you handling your
(00:57:50)
business? That's a certain kind of
(00:57:52)
parenting. But if you make that
(00:57:53)
investment early, you know, if you do
(00:57:55)
the hard things, if you make your kids
(00:57:57)
sleep in their bed, if you tell them no
(00:57:59)
when they're five, if you teach them
(00:58:02)
boundaries and don't let them talk back
(00:58:04)
and help them be socialized beings by
(00:58:08)
setting forth some real hard to manage
(00:58:11)
boundaries at three and four and five,
(00:58:14)
you're not even dealing with a lot of
(00:58:15)
these issues at 16 because they've
(00:58:19)
practiced something else in your
(00:58:21)
presence.
(00:58:22)
And so now 16, 20, our girls, our all of
(00:58:26)
our kids are joys to be with. They all
(00:58:29)
live on their own. Our kids have an
(00:58:31)
Obama tax that we will continue to pay
(00:58:33)
just to cost on their life that is not
(00:58:36)
their own. So there are certain places
(00:58:37)
that they cannot live where they can
(00:58:39)
afford to live. There's certain things
(00:58:41)
like that. But all of our kids, they
(00:58:44)
don't want our help because they're they
(00:58:46)
get gratification in saying they did
(00:58:49)
this. And that go comes down to choosing
(00:58:52)
the college that they're going to go to.
(00:58:54)
I may not agree with you. It happened.
(00:58:56)
It's like I don't think you're going to
(00:58:58)
like that school, but it's got to be
(00:59:00)
your choice. You know, I don't think you
(00:59:03)
you're going to like that that
(00:59:05)
girlfriend. It's got to be your choice.
(00:59:07)
I got to look the other way. I got to
(00:59:09)
and then I've got to be there with you
(00:59:11)
after you make that mistake going, "It's
(00:59:14)
okay. Let's talk about it. What did you
(00:59:16)
learn? let's, you know, but I my mother
(00:59:20)
was staying out of our lives very early
(00:59:22)
in our lives. Yeah. Um, and I think
(00:59:25)
that's something that makes parenting
(00:59:27)
easy in one way, but emotionally
(00:59:29)
difficult in another way. Yeah. Wow. And
(00:59:32)
I really really appreciate the
(00:59:34)
clarification of repprioritizing that
(00:59:38)
pressure because the pressure we're
(00:59:40)
placing, as you said, on the winning,
(00:59:41)
the succeeding, the it's almost
(00:59:44)
misplaced. There's a distinction that
(00:59:47)
I'm hearing from both of you in coddling
(00:59:50)
an individual and cultivating
(00:59:53)
independence.
(00:59:54)
And when we think of more love or more
(00:59:58)
support, we think fix, solve, control.
(01:00:01)
Yes. Done. Right. That's that's what we
(01:00:04)
think love is. We think love means you
(01:00:06)
have no problems. That's right. We took
(01:00:08)
care of everything and we're here for
(01:00:11)
everything that you need. That's right.
(01:00:12)
And actually what we've realized is love
(01:00:14)
is setting someone up to carry
(01:00:18)
themselves. Exactly. And fix themselves
(01:00:21)
and serve themselves and feeling the
(01:00:23)
confidence in in being able to do that.
(01:00:25)
They competence is love too. And you
(01:00:30)
know I always want my kids to know that
(01:00:33)
I I do trust that you have good sense. I
(01:00:37)
do. You can do this. Watch you do it.
(01:00:40)
and just see how kids light up when they
(01:00:43)
accomplish something on their own. And
(01:00:45)
when you're if you're the fixer, you're
(01:00:47)
robbing your kids of that sense of
(01:00:51)
self-satisfaction. I failed, it hurt,
(01:00:53)
but it was me, but when I succeed, it's
(01:00:56)
also me. And sometimes, you know, as
(01:00:59)
parents, we want that victory. Yeah,
(01:01:02)
that's what I was going to say. Meech
(01:01:04)
does a good job talking about how people
(01:01:06)
don't like friction and sometimes you
(01:01:10)
need friction as a as a parent
(01:01:13)
especially those who are doing the
(01:01:16)
coddling they're doing that for
(01:01:18)
themselves. You are not helping your kid
(01:01:20)
by doing it because parenting this way
(01:01:25)
is hard and you it causes friction in
(01:01:28)
your inside. When we say, "Okay, you can
(01:01:30)
take your scooter to the store and go
(01:01:33)
pick up some stuff and bring it back."
(01:01:35)
That's hard. It would have been easy for
(01:01:37)
me to take take you to the store and
(01:01:40)
make sure you got back in the car. And
(01:01:43)
nothing made me feel better about doing
(01:01:47)
this kind of stuff was when I found out
(01:01:49)
that our parents were deathly afraid of
(01:01:52)
us traveling on our own. Meech had an
(01:01:55)
opportunity to go to France. I played
(01:01:58)
bitty basketball and there was a trip to
(01:02:00)
Kansas City and to New Orleans and we
(01:02:02)
came to find out later that our parents
(01:02:05)
were fearful of us going on these but
(01:02:08)
they for the reasons we talked about it
(01:02:10)
the same reasons we talked but they did
(01:02:12)
it anyway because they knew it was
(01:02:14)
important for our development and I I
(01:02:17)
just thinking about the aida in their
(01:02:20)
stomachs when they're when they're
(01:02:22)
letting go of a you know your kids are
(01:02:25)
leaving town without doing things they
(01:02:26)
never did. They never did. They never
(01:02:28)
got to travel when they were young. They
(01:02:30)
didn't have the resources. They didn't
(01:02:31)
go to college. They didn't go off their
(01:02:34)
block out of their neighborhoods, you
(01:02:36)
know. So, imagine the fear of sending
(01:02:39)
your kids to do something to going to
(01:02:41)
Princeton. M you know the day they let
(01:02:44)
him leave to go to some school in some
(01:02:46)
place where they knew nothing about the
(01:02:48)
rituals the the prestige you know the
(01:02:52)
kind of confidence in your parenting
(01:02:55)
philosophy that it would take to execute
(01:02:58)
that when we were growing up in a
(01:03:00)
community where people's parents
(01:03:02)
wouldn't even fill out their FAFSA forms
(01:03:04)
because they were afraid of their kids
(01:03:06)
going to college so they held on to
(01:03:08)
their kids they said go to go to the
(01:03:11)
state school down the street because it
(01:03:13)
will make me deep down it will make me
(01:03:14)
feel better cuz I don't want to let you
(01:03:17)
go. Don't go out of state. Don't leave
(01:03:20)
the home. Don't go out of the
(01:03:22)
neighborhood. A lot of parents parent
(01:03:25)
out of fear and it's fear for
(01:03:27)
themselves. It's real fear for sure. You
(01:03:29)
know, do not get me wrong. is the
(01:03:32)
hardest thing to do, which is what makes
(01:03:34)
parenting so hard. Which is why people
(01:03:37)
really have to think before they bring
(01:03:39)
kids into the world. Cuz it's hard. It's
(01:03:43)
hard in some really obvious reasons. And
(01:03:46)
it's hard in some ways that you will
(01:03:48)
never understand until that that little
(01:03:51)
person is is breathing in this world how
(01:03:54)
they will make you feel. You will love
(01:03:56)
nothing more. So I understand it. But
(01:04:00)
that's why we get a lot of it wrong
(01:04:01)
because we're operating out of fear
(01:04:03)
sometimes. We've talked a lot about the
(01:04:05)
differences in how you were parented,
(01:04:08)
how things have changed. And I feel like
(01:04:10)
one of the biggest talking points of
(01:04:11)
today for parents and children is
(01:04:13)
therapy. Like therapy seems to be a
(01:04:16)
conversation that's opened up that a
(01:04:18)
previous generation either didn't have
(01:04:19)
access to, didn't believe in, couldn't
(01:04:22)
afford, didn't value, which some of
(01:04:24)
those challenges still exist today with
(01:04:26)
affordability and accessibility. But
(01:04:28)
what have been your personal journeys
(01:04:30)
with therapy as as a form of working on
(01:04:34)
your own self and then of course your
(01:04:36)
children as well? I would say I was your
(01:04:39)
typical
(01:04:40)
guy when it came to therapy and
(01:04:44)
typical guy of color because I wasn't
(01:04:47)
exposed to therapy until I got to
(01:04:51)
college and I found out that kids my age
(01:04:55)
were going to therapy and I was like
(01:04:58)
well what what is going on in that that
(01:05:01)
head because I didn't understand it. Now
(01:05:05)
you jump ahead to in my first marriage.
(01:05:08)
That was when it when it hit when it
(01:05:09)
started to have trouble. We would go to
(01:05:12)
coup's therapy and then I would go to
(01:05:14)
therapy on my own. And I realized that
(01:05:17)
my last statement about not knowing what
(01:05:19)
therapy was and not doing it. I just did
(01:05:23)
it in a different way. My therapy was
(01:05:26)
the barberh shop. It wasn't church for
(01:05:29)
me cuz I wasn't a churchgoer. But for
(01:05:31)
some people it's church. But for me, it
(01:05:34)
is fellowship type with my good friends
(01:05:38)
that I can tell stuff to. Mhm. But I
(01:05:41)
wasn't a real therapy guy until I had
(01:05:44)
trouble in my first
(01:05:46)
marriage. But I'm happy to say that my
(01:05:48)
two older children are regular therapy
(01:05:52)
goers. And it just warms my heart
(01:05:54)
because it wasn't like I said, you know,
(01:05:56)
you guys should go to therapy. They just
(01:05:58)
kind of did it on themselves. So, I I am
(01:06:00)
a big believer in it. And I'm sure
(01:06:03)
people have used this analogy before,
(01:06:06)
but we tune up just about everything in
(01:06:09)
our lives. You know, we tune up our
(01:06:11)
cars, we tune up our electronics, but we
(01:06:14)
don't tune up our minds and our our
(01:06:16)
emotions. And and we should. And I have
(01:06:20)
to say that you got into therapy, I
(01:06:23)
think, before I did. And that kind of
(01:06:27)
opened my eyes to it, too. even before I
(01:06:29)
was having trouble in my marriage. So
(01:06:32)
you you can share share your your
(01:06:34)
experience. No, I I believe in all the
(01:06:36)
therapies that Craig just outlined. I
(01:06:39)
believe in the the friendship therapy. I
(01:06:42)
believe in the power of sharing your
(01:06:46)
challenges with other people that you
(01:06:48)
trust and that can come in many forms
(01:06:51)
and it has for me. I am a talker and I
(01:06:54)
think you know our family was you know
(01:06:58)
our first therapy was the kitchen table.
(01:07:01)
Right. Right. Um and our first
(01:07:04)
therapists were our parents and our
(01:07:06)
family members because you'd have an
(01:07:08)
experience that you you needed to
(01:07:10)
something you needed to let off your
(01:07:11)
chest, something you had to let go of.
(01:07:14)
And we have parents that created a safe
(01:07:17)
space to speak openly and honestly. They
(01:07:20)
didn't treat us like children at that
(01:07:22)
table. They treated us like thinking
(01:07:24)
beings. So it was very early on that I
(01:07:28)
we learned the power of our own thoughts
(01:07:31)
and to trust our own emotions. And when
(01:07:33)
something felt off, you know, we were
(01:07:35)
encouraged. It's like, no, you're not
(01:07:37)
crazy. You're seeing what you're seeing.
(01:07:39)
And yeah, your anger, that anger is
(01:07:41)
real, but you can't show it this way.
(01:07:43)
You know, we were validated at our
(01:07:46)
table. And that's what therapy is. It's
(01:07:48)
it's a validation. And so very early on,
(01:07:52)
I sought out the company of girlfriends,
(01:07:55)
friends I could trust and that we could
(01:07:56)
talk to and we could have that
(01:07:59)
validation and and present honestly. And
(01:08:02)
as I said in in in my book, The Light,
(01:08:05)
you know, I cultivated those tables
(01:08:07)
throughout my life. You know, I had that
(01:08:09)
those t table. I needed that table in
(01:08:11)
college when I was we were one of a few
(01:08:14)
black kids on on an all-white Ivy League
(01:08:17)
school campus. We needed a safe place to
(01:08:21)
go, which might have been the the third
(01:08:23)
world center, right, where minority
(01:08:25)
students gathered. I found a mentor uh
(01:08:28)
in an older administrator who was my
(01:08:31)
confidant during those days. Um small
(01:08:35)
mini sessions, right? Then when I got
(01:08:37)
married and started having kids, I built
(01:08:39)
this amazing community. We built
(01:08:42)
together this amazing community of moms
(01:08:45)
parenting young young kids and babies.
(01:08:48)
And we started getting together every
(01:08:50)
Saturday, taking our kids to all the
(01:08:52)
activities, but sitting around maybe
(01:08:54)
opening a bottle of champagne and
(01:08:57)
shedding our feelings and our fears and
(01:08:59)
exchanging ideas. But I've also, you
(01:09:03)
know, been to a formal therapist because
(01:09:05)
I, as Craig said, I think we need to be
(01:09:08)
coached throughout our lives. And I
(01:09:10)
think therapy is a form of coaching
(01:09:12)
where somebody objective can come in and
(01:09:14)
say, "Have you thought about this this
(01:09:17)
way?" You're entering a new phase of
(01:09:19)
life. Um, how are you thinking about it?
(01:09:22)
Having somebody that has a skill set to
(01:09:24)
help you shape a paradigm. I fully
(01:09:26)
believe in that. I believe in couples
(01:09:28)
therapy. Um, I believe I believe in it
(01:09:31)
all. Um, whatever works for you. And at
(01:09:34)
this, you know, phase of my life, I'm
(01:09:36)
I'm in therapy right now because I'm
(01:09:39)
transitioning. You know, I'm 60 years
(01:09:41)
old. I've finished a really hard thing
(01:09:44)
in my life with my family intact. I'm an
(01:09:47)
empty neester. My girls are in, you
(01:09:50)
know, they they've been launched. And
(01:09:52)
now, for the first time, as I've said
(01:09:54)
before, every choice that I'm making is
(01:09:57)
completely mine. I now don't have the
(01:10:00)
excuse of well my kids need this or my
(01:10:02)
husband needs that or the country needs
(01:10:04)
that. So how do I think about this next
(01:10:08)
phase and let me get some help? Let me
(01:10:11)
unwind some old habits. Let me sort
(01:10:13)
through some old guilt that I've been
(01:10:16)
carrying around. Let me talk about how
(01:10:19)
my relationship my with my mother has
(01:10:21)
affected how I think about things. So,
(01:10:24)
I'm getting that tuneup for this next
(01:10:27)
phase because I believe this is a whole
(01:10:29)
another phase in life for me. And I now
(01:10:32)
have the wisdom to know, let me let me
(01:10:34)
go get some coaching while I'm doing it
(01:10:37)
so that I've got other voices other than
(01:10:39)
pe the people who know me best. I've got
(01:10:42)
a new person that's getting to know me
(01:10:44)
and seeing me completely new and hearing
(01:10:47)
all these emotions. I am an an advocate
(01:10:50)
of it. Everybody needs to find their
(01:10:52)
form of it. the best way they can. For
(01:10:55)
some people, it's podcasts like
(01:10:58)
ours, you know, that are providing
(01:11:01)
people with that therapy. And it's one
(01:11:03)
of the reasons why I'm excited about
(01:11:05)
doing these things, coming on yours and
(01:11:08)
developing IMO, because I hope that
(01:11:10)
maybe for the people who are a little
(01:11:12)
bit skeptical of it, that these forums
(01:11:15)
become the place where they start at
(01:11:17)
least getting some ideas, you know, and
(01:11:20)
thinking, "Wow, I never thought of it
(01:11:22)
that way. I never saw it that way. And
(01:11:24)
maybe they'll never go to therapy, but
(01:11:26)
they come here for 90 minutes and they,
(01:11:28)
you know, they find some answers for
(01:11:31)
themselves. I firmly believe in it.
(01:11:33)
Yeah. I love what you were saying about
(01:11:35)
needing them at transitions. When we're
(01:11:39)
shapeshifting and molding and it's
(01:11:42)
almost like ever since someone
(01:11:44)
graduates, if they went to college, it's
(01:11:45)
like from that point on, you just left
(01:11:48)
to figure it out. Yeah. And it's almost
(01:11:49)
like there were these markers like when
(01:11:51)
you went from elementary school to high
(01:11:53)
school to college, there were markers
(01:11:55)
and there were transitions and there
(01:11:57)
were summers in between where you knew
(01:11:59)
what was coming next and then you become
(01:12:02)
an adult and then now there's not really
(01:12:05)
the well there are the markers of get
(01:12:07)
married, you have kids, you get to a
(01:12:10)
career success or whatever it is, the
(01:12:11)
kids leave as you said, but there's no
(01:12:13)
real transitionary summers anymore.
(01:12:15)
there's not not everyone's talking to
(01:12:17)
you about hey what's going on and and
(01:12:19)
also there's less there's less formal
(01:12:22)
training for those transitions that are
(01:12:25)
so emotionally tough uh because you're
(01:12:28)
you're almost grieving an identity you
(01:12:31)
had but then knowing there's a new
(01:12:34)
version that exists and that push and
(01:12:36)
pull of do I stay or do I go in in all
(01:12:40)
of areas of your life and I wonder
(01:12:42)
Michelle from your perspective and then
(01:12:44)
of course from yours as well Craig like
(01:12:46)
and and you mentioned their guilt. Like
(01:12:47)
I was like what was the what is the
(01:12:49)
guilt that you feel you've you having to
(01:12:51)
learn to let go of or in the beautiful
(01:12:54)
upbringing you had like what were the
(01:12:55)
things that you're like but these are
(01:12:57)
certain ideas that aren't serving us
(01:12:59)
anymore or aren't helping to whom much
(01:13:01)
is given much is expected
(01:13:04)
I feel incredibly blessed in this life
(01:13:08)
you know and it's almost like u knocking
(01:13:10)
on wood it's like let me never take it
(01:13:13)
for granted let me always find ways of
(01:13:16)
giving back. And so the guilt comes from
(01:13:19)
am I doing enough? You know, which is a
(01:13:22)
a form of am I enough? Right? That's the
(01:13:26)
guilt of
(01:13:27)
feeling should I do this next thing?
(01:13:30)
Should I say yes when I say no? I mean,
(01:13:32)
because there's so many requests.
(01:13:34)
There's so much you can possibly do in
(01:13:37)
life that you you could never stop. And
(01:13:40)
I do hold guilt to tell somebody that is
(01:13:44)
asking for help or needs something to
(01:13:46)
say I can't or I don't want
(01:13:50)
to, you know, I mean to even say those
(01:13:53)
words, it's hard to I don't want to do
(01:13:57)
that right
(01:13:59)
now. It's like unpacking that, right? So
(01:14:04)
to to say that to for me, Michelle
(01:14:07)
Obama, to say that to a therapist, you
(01:14:10)
know, I mean, my therapist is like,
(01:14:13)
"What? You you you still think you
(01:14:15)
haven't done enough?" And I was like,
(01:14:17)
"Honestly, yeah."
(01:14:19)
It's like, "So, let's unpack that."
(01:14:23)
Um, so yeah, that's, you know, that's
(01:14:25)
probably what overachievers, we're all
(01:14:28)
dealing with that in some way, right?
(01:14:31)
When's enough's enough? What? Where's
(01:14:33)
the bar? Who sets it? We're setting it
(01:14:36)
for ourselves. And we keep setting it so
(01:14:39)
incredibly high, right, at all times.
(01:14:43)
And then I'm thinking about, well, what
(01:14:44)
am I modeling for my girls? It's like at
(01:14:47)
some point, you know, I uh used to say
(01:14:50)
this to Rosalyn Carter, you know, you
(01:14:53)
the Carters, they were giving until they
(01:14:55)
were, you know, they they couldn't walk,
(01:14:58)
you know, and when I was in the White
(01:15:00)
House every year, Rosyn Carter would set
(01:15:02)
up a meeting, you know, cuz she would
(01:15:04)
want to talk through a set of issues and
(01:15:05)
things she wanted to do and update me on
(01:15:08)
everything she was she was just she was
(01:15:10)
she they were those people constantly
(01:15:12)
doing and I used to joke with her when
(01:15:14)
she was in how old must she have been
(01:15:17)
when I'm in office that requires math.
(01:15:19)
So let's say she was in her early 80s or
(01:15:22)
you know she was an older woman who had
(01:15:25)
done enough and I used to joke it's like
(01:15:27)
if you don't stop because you're my bar
(01:15:32)
right and I don't know that I want to be
(01:15:34)
coming to the White House with an agenda
(01:15:37)
list when I'm in my 80s right but then I
(01:15:41)
realized it's like well that's her
(01:15:43)
bar that doesn't have to be my bar if my
(01:15:47)
bar is different and So now I'm
(01:15:51)
practicing out some different bars for
(01:15:53)
myself, right? Some different limits and
(01:15:56)
seeing how I really feel in those limits
(01:15:59)
rather than what I think I'm supposed to
(01:16:01)
do. So, you know, that's, you know, I it
(01:16:05)
just makes me sigh just saying it, but
(01:16:08)
that's how my brain works. And so
(01:16:10)
sometimes you need help with right
(01:16:12)
sizing your thinking. Thank you for
(01:16:15)
sharing that. Thank you for being so
(01:16:17)
open and vulnerable because I know it
(01:16:19)
takes a lot to be able to say what
(01:16:21)
you're saying in therapy to say it out
(01:16:23)
loud and I can see the emotion on your
(01:16:24)
face that it's not, you know, something
(01:16:26)
you're grappling with. It's real. So,
(01:16:28)
you're working on it right now and and I
(01:16:30)
hope that gives everyone who's
(01:16:31)
listening. I know it will give everyone
(01:16:33)
who's listening and watching courage to
(01:16:34)
think, yeah, you know, like maybe I'm
(01:16:38)
setting the bars too high for myself,
(01:16:40)
you know, whatever that may be or a
(01:16:42)
different question. But thank you,
(01:16:45)
Craig. Sorry, I'd love to. No, no, no. I
(01:16:47)
I that
(01:16:48)
that's I I I actually thought Mishe was
(01:16:51)
going to touch on this a little earlier,
(01:16:53)
but our mom when and and you've been so
(01:16:56)
gracious to say nice things about us and
(01:17:00)
our success and all the wonderful things
(01:17:02)
that that that we've been able to do.
(01:17:05)
Marian Robinson, our mom, used to say,
(01:17:09)
"My kids aren't any different from the
(01:17:11)
kids they grew up with." And she is
(01:17:13)
absolutely right. She would say, "I was
(01:17:17)
fortunate enough not to have to go to
(01:17:19)
work and we encouraged them to work
(01:17:22)
hard. They they never said you had to
(01:17:24)
get straight A's. They just said work
(01:17:26)
hard, have high
(01:17:28)
self-esteem, you know, treat people
(01:17:31)
nicely." Uh but she always bragged on
(01:17:35)
the kids who we grew up with and kids
(01:17:38)
around the globe. Yeah. She would say
(01:17:40)
there are a million Michelle Craig and
(01:17:43)
Baracks, you know. She would say that
(01:17:45)
would be the first thing. And that's I
(01:17:48)
take that to heart. Yeah. And that's
(01:17:51)
where my guilt is. I am fortunate to be
(01:17:55)
sitting here talking to J. Shetty in his
(01:17:58)
studio about myself. It just is. It's
(01:18:02)
almost
(01:18:03)
embarrassing because I feel like my mom
(01:18:06)
like I grew up with a ton of guys who
(01:18:08)
could have been bond traders. Could have
(01:18:11)
been easy and they just had some
(01:18:14)
different decisions and different
(01:18:16)
parenting and different different bumps
(01:18:18)
in the road bumps in the road that they
(01:18:20)
couldn't handle. And I do feel guilty
(01:18:24)
about that which uh sort of like
(01:18:26)
survivors remorse. Yeah. and and it
(01:18:28)
explains my sort of wanting to be
(01:18:30)
philanthropic with my uh time, my
(01:18:34)
emotions, my stories because they're but
(01:18:38)
for the grace of God, right? And uh so
(01:18:41)
she when when she would say that I would
(01:18:43)
it it'd be like what are you going to
(01:18:45)
say? She's absolutely right. She is
(01:18:47)
absolutely right. And she was she led by
(01:18:51)
example. So, not only did she parent us,
(01:18:54)
but she was up at the school parenting
(01:18:57)
other people, helping. I remember when
(01:18:59)
she taught this kid how to
(01:19:02)
multiply. And she said, she was like a
(01:19:05)
room parent. She wasn't the teacher. She
(01:19:06)
was just coming up to the school to help
(01:19:08)
before there were room parents. She just
(01:19:10)
came up and volunteered. And she was
(01:19:13)
teaching this young kid who was in my
(01:19:15)
grade, fourth grade, how to multiply.
(01:19:18)
And he just couldn't figure it out. And
(01:19:20)
she said, "Multiplication is just adding
(01:19:23)
multiple times." And and he was like,
(01:19:26)
"Well, I can't figure this out." And she
(01:19:28)
said, "Use your fingers." And he said,
(01:19:31)
"I don't want to use my fingers. I'm in
(01:19:33)
fourth grade. I'm embarrassed to use my
(01:19:34)
fingers." And my mom would say, "Well,
(01:19:37)
then don't show anybody. Just put your
(01:19:38)
hand on your desk and press down on your
(01:19:41)
fingers." I was like, "That's ingenious.
(01:19:44)
That's ingenious." But she was she was
(01:19:46)
sharing the kind of knowledge with
(01:19:48)
others that she we we got that every day
(01:19:52)
every day when we you know so I feel a
(01:19:55)
little bit of survivors guilt when it
(01:19:59)
comes to the opportunities that I've had
(01:20:03)
in my life because I do feel like she
(01:20:06)
does that it it could have been anybody.
(01:20:09)
You've both been so gracious and
(01:20:11)
generous with your time today. I could
(01:20:13)
truly talk to you for another 3 hours,
(01:20:15)
but I'm going to end with one last
(01:20:18)
question for you each. Or maybe two.
(01:20:20)
Let's two last question. Maybe one one
(01:20:23)
last question uh for you each and it
(01:20:25)
would be for you to share with each
(01:20:28)
other what you believe your mother would
(01:20:30)
be most proud of, but of each other.
(01:20:33)
Yeah. All right. I'm going to make him
(01:20:34)
start so that I don't start crying. If
(01:20:37)
you could say what your mother would be
(01:20:39)
most proud about Michelle if she was
(01:20:41)
here with us today. But if you There's
(01:20:43)
so many things that my mom would be
(01:20:45)
proud of. Uh she she would be proud of
(01:20:48)
her as a parent. Another one of her
(01:20:51)
greatest compliments was the fact that
(01:20:54)
she never had to worry about her
(01:20:56)
grandkids. That that warms both of our
(01:20:59)
hearts because as Meech said, our you
(01:21:01)
know, our older kids are off and running
(01:21:03)
and and not bounced back. And that made
(01:21:07)
her felt feel
(01:21:09)
like
(01:21:10)
she taught us how to be good parents.
(01:21:13)
And I think and it was the gift of
(01:21:16)
allowing her to be just grandma. Just a
(01:21:20)
cool grandma cuz she didn't have to
(01:21:22)
discipline discipline or raise or yeah
(01:21:26)
house. She could just come over and
(01:21:28)
candy for everybody. Jump on the couch
(01:21:31)
and do whatever you want. and and she
(01:21:33)
really relished in that role. Uh I think
(01:21:37)
I think she would be proud of Meech for
(01:21:40)
that. I think she would be proud of how
(01:21:44)
Meech has been able to have a colossal
(01:21:48)
effect on so many people and that
(01:21:53)
is White House notwithstanding White
(01:21:56)
House is gone. Look, look at what what
(01:21:58)
she's doing now. I mean it is it is a
(01:22:02)
massive
(01:22:04)
massive lift uplift for so many people
(01:22:09)
who don't get to to you know be her sis
(01:22:13)
be her brother or be her husband or or
(01:22:16)
ch child. So I think those are two
(01:22:19)
really good
(01:22:20)
things. But most
(01:22:23)
importantly, she would be very proud
(01:22:25)
that she is a terrific wife because we
(01:22:31)
all revered my father. All of us, my
(01:22:35)
mom, the kids, all of our relatives, he
(01:22:38)
was like the the beacon in our family.
(01:22:41)
And my mom was tough on him, but she
(01:22:46)
loved him. And Meech reminds me of that
(01:22:49)
with her relationship with Barack. Just
(01:22:52)
because you're the president of the
(01:22:53)
United States doesn't mean you're
(01:22:54)
getting off easy. My mom would would
(01:22:57)
like that. But then she would be like,
(01:23:00)
"He's got a lot of stuff going on. Don't
(01:23:01)
be so hard on him." You know what I
(01:23:04)
mean? It's just I think she would
(01:23:06)
appreciate that. I like that, Craig.
(01:23:09)
That's a good one. I'm a podcaster now.
(01:23:12)
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Round this off,
(01:23:14)
Michelle. Well, um, take it home. What
(01:23:16)
sums it up is that mom would be so um
(01:23:21)
proud of the fact that you're a good man
(01:23:23)
in the world and that you have been a
(01:23:27)
good fathering for a long long time and
(01:23:30)
and passing on the the that's a dig cuz
(01:23:34)
he's an old dad, right? Um still a long
(01:23:38)
long long time. Um, but passing on the
(01:23:42)
wisdom, you know, showing up in the
(01:23:44)
world in a way that would make dad
(01:23:46)
proud, living out his his his view of
(01:23:50)
what it means to be a man. Um, and then
(01:23:53)
sharing that with a lot of other men. I
(01:23:56)
mean, the fact that you she would be
(01:23:58)
proud of the fact that you walked away
(01:23:59)
from a lucrative career in
(01:24:02)
finance to help other young men figure
(01:24:06)
out how they can be fast and strong, but
(01:24:09)
good, too. and build a life for
(01:24:11)
themselves. That you've taken that same
(01:24:13)
uh that that same wisdom and you're
(01:24:16)
finding ways to continue to multiply it.
(01:24:18)
To whom much is given, she'd be proud of
(01:24:21)
that. And that you're still here right
(01:24:23)
by my side. I think that would make her
(01:24:27)
proud. Thank you both so much. I am so
(01:24:31)
grateful to welcome you to the world of
(01:24:33)
podcasting. Uh I hope everyone who's
(01:24:35)
listening and watching goes and
(01:24:36)
subscribes to IMO. uh you're gonna get
(01:24:40)
so much wisdom, so much insight from two
(01:24:42)
of the smartest, brightest minds, but
(01:24:44)
two people who have such sweet, soft
(01:24:46)
hearts. And I love that combination that
(01:24:48)
you both bring of being absolutely bold
(01:24:51)
powerhouses. But in the times I've got
(01:24:53)
to know you both and spend with you
(01:24:55)
both, you also have the most beautiful
(01:24:56)
hearts and that combination is
(01:24:58)
unstoppable. And I am so excited to see
(01:25:01)
what you both do in this next season of
(01:25:04)
your life. I'm a friend of family. Yes,
(01:25:08)
sir. Yes, sir. Yeah. We just have to
(01:25:10)
meet your sister. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We
(01:25:15)
We're going to drag her up. Hook by hook
(01:25:17)
her by croak. We're going to drag her up
(01:25:19)
here. Thank you. Thank you both so much.
(01:25:21)
Thanks, man. If you enjoyed this
(01:25:23)
podcast, you're going to love my
(01:25:25)
conversation with Michelle Obama where
(01:25:28)
she opens up on how to stay with your
(01:25:30)
partner when they're changing and the
(01:25:33)
four check-ins you should be doing in
(01:25:35)
your relationship. We also talk about
(01:25:37)
how to deal with relationships when
(01:25:39)
they're under stress. If you're going
(01:25:41)
through something right now with your
(01:25:43)
partner or someone you're seeing, this
(01:25:45)
is the episode for you. No wonder our
(01:25:47)
kids are struggling. We have a new
(01:25:50)
technology and we've just taken it in
(01:25:52)
hook, line, and sinker. And we have to
(01:25:55)
be mindful for our kids. They'll just be
(01:25:58)
thumbming through this stuff. You know,
(01:25:59)
their their mind's never sleeping.
