Michelle Obama

Michelle Obama Opens Up About What She Hated Being Asked as a Teen

"Growth comes with difference," Michelle Obama advised her teenage audience

In this June 28, 2020, screengrab, Michelle Obama is seen during the 2020 BET Awards. The 20th annual BET Awards was held virtually due to restrictions to slow the spread of COVID-19.
BET Awards 2020/Getty Images via Getty Images

During an Instagram interview with Zaya Wade, Dwyane Wade's daughter, Michelle Obama shared some poignant advice for teenagers about personal growth.

The former first lady and author of “Becoming” revealed that the first thing she’d tell young people is to “be patient with yourself.”

“All young people are trying on different versions, different voices — they’re learning more about their intellect, learning about what they love, what they’re good at, what they like,” Obama said. “This is the period of exploration, right?”

She said that when she was a teen and adults asked her the age-old question of what she wanted to be, she hated it — because a 13-year-old's job isn’t to have all the answers, but to instead give themselves the space to figure things out.

Part of that process is experimenting and connecting with a range of friends, Obama said, especially those who, on a surface-level, seem different from you.

"Teenagers are comfortable in their sameness. A lot of times they like to be in their clique, right? They like to be around people who look like them, who act like them, who like the same things,” Obama explained. "But what we do know is that growth comes with difference. Growth comes when you try on something new and you learn from that.”

These sentiments resonated with 13-year-old Wade, who's already had her own revelations about friendship. At one point, she shared, she only wanted to hang out with people who seemed similar to her. But now, her best friend of four years is "very different," and she couldn't be happier that she didn't let those differences come between them.

"Getting a different perspective from someone who isn’t like you really helps," Wade said. "It definitely helped me in becoming me and defining my truth. And she actually really helped me to become a better ‘myself.'"

More than anything, Obama hopes that teenagers "learn how to do something new...and things that make you uncomfortable."

"No matter how confident you feel, by the time you're my age — almost 60 — you will have tried on so many different versions of yourself," she said. "Hopefully I have more things to try on. So the journey of learning and becoming who you are — it never ends."

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