The Guardian (USA)

Michelle Obama admits to hating her appearance in new book

- Lucy Knight

Michelle Obama “hates” how she looks, “all the time and no matter what”, she has revealed in her new book.

The Light We Carry, the former First Lady’s second memoir, builds on her 2018 title Becoming, and aims to be a “toolkit to live boldly”. In the new book, which was extracted in the Guardian’s Saturday magazine, Obama discusses ways to overcome one’s “fearful mind”, which she likens to “a life partner you didn’t choose”.

“I’ve lived with my fearful mind for 58 years now,” she writes. “She makes me uneasy. She likes to see me weak.”

This part of her mind is constantly having negative thoughts about her appearance, Obama writes. There are “plenty of mornings” when she turns on the bathroom light, takes one look at herself in the mirror, and “desperatel­y want[s] to flip it off again”.

Her appearance, and her height in particular (she is 5’11”) is something Obama has always been insecure about, she explains in the book. Always “bringing up the rear” at school “created a small wound in me, the tiniest kernel of self-loathing that would keep me from embracing my strengths”.

Obama also admits to experienci­ng a “low-grade form” of depression during the coronaviru­s pandemic. “I kept with the work I’d been doing – speaking at virtual voter registrati­on drives, sup

porting good causes, acknowledg­ing people’s pain – but privately I was finding it harder to access my own hope or to feel like I could make an actual difference,” she writes. When she was approached by the Democrats to speak at the party’s national convention in 2020, she put off responding – although she eventually agreed, calling Donald Trump the “wrong president” in her speech.

Any time she thought about the offer to speak at the convention, she felt “stalled out”, she has now disclosed in The Light We Carry. She describes being “caught up in frustratio­n and grief for what, as a country, we’d already lost”.

“I felt a blanket of despondenc­y settling over me, my mind sliding toward a dull place,” she writes. “I was less able to muster optimism or think reasonably about the future. Worse, I felt myself skirting the edges of cynicism – tempted to conclude that I was helpless, to give in to some notion that when it came to the epic problems and massive worries of the day, nothing could be done.”

In The Light We Carry, Obama also reflects on the 2016 presidenti­al election. “Whether or not the 2016 election was a direct rebuke” of her husband, who became the US’s first Black president, “it did hurt. It stillhurts”, she writes. “It shook me profoundly to hear the man who’d replaced my husband as president openly and unapologet­ically using ethnic slurs, making selfishnes­s and hate somehow acceptable, refusing to condemn white supremacis­ts or to support people demonstrat­ing for racial justice”, she adds. “It felt like something more, something much uglier, than a simple political defeat.”

Later in the book, she describes watching the “devastatin­g” 2021 attack on the Capitol, which was “perhaps the most frightenin­g thing [she had] ever witnessed”.

Since its publicatio­n, her first book Becoming has been translated into 50 languages and more than 17m copies have been sold worldwide. The Light We Carry is expected to similarly top bestseller charts. In 2020, she was named the most admired woman in America, according to Gallup’s poll, for

 ?? Ngan/AFP/Getty Images ?? ‘I’ve lived with my fearful mind for 58 years now’ … Michelle Obama. Photograph: Mandel
Ngan/AFP/Getty Images ‘I’ve lived with my fearful mind for 58 years now’ … Michelle Obama. Photograph: Mandel
 ?? ?? Photograph: Penguin Random House/AP the third year running.
Photograph: Penguin Random House/AP the third year running.

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