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More Than a Fashion Icon: What We Can Learn About Work/Life Balance From Michelle Obama

inauguration.jpgby Anna T. Collins, Esquire (Portland, Maine)

What will Michelle Obama wear on inauguration day? Who designed her ball gown? These have been the questions de jour, on our mental menus for weeks. Americans are now bombarded by coverage of Michelle Obama’s style from all mediums, perhaps most intensely on-line at Mrs. O, where up-to-the-minute coverage includes analysis of Michelle Obama’s dresses, jewelry, shoes, and hair. The site lets Americans hone their voyeuristic skills, as visitors contribute their best photos detailing every aspect of the person some believe will be as legendary in her fashion choices as the first Mrs. O, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

Now, fashion certainly deserves some attention due to its pivotal place in the heart of American pop culture. Michelle Obama has also not spoken publically since becoming First Lady, which inevitably shifts the public lens on the only aspect of her persona the media can currently access: her style. Yet, there is so much more to Michelle Obama than her appreciation of American immigrant designers, unique antique jewelry, or practical flat shoes.

When asked to describe the meaning of Michelle Obama to women, Catherine Wright-Dilbert of the National Association of Mothers’ Centers explains that as the embodiment of a three dimensional presidential spouse, whose role is “not purely derivative, secondary, nor supportive,” Michelle Obama can be the catalyst for a national dialogue “on the multiple societal roles women play, and how our laws, institutions, and policies can support and facilitate them.”

In the spirit of such dialogue, we turned to experts for an analysis of Michelle Obama beyond the purely aesthetic. The experts highlighted the significance of Michelle Obama’s education and professional accomplishments, as well as the meaning of our First Lady to the cultural and sociopolitical ascent of all women. They also acknowledged Michelle Obama’s unique approach to work and marriage, both vital to analyze because of Michelle Obama’s experience with work/life balance.

The Politics of Higher Education

Michelle Obama’s educational accomplishments are impressive. As salutatorian of her high school class, she went on to major in sociology and minor in African American studies at Princeton University, where she graduated cum laude. She then obtained her law degree from Harvard Law School in 1988, which now makes her the third First Lady with a postgraduate degree, following Hillary Clinton and Laura Bush.

In regard to the significance of Obama’s high level of educational accomplishment for all women, Terry Neese summarizes as follows: “You might say that higher education is leaving men behind.” Neese, a Distinguished Fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis, points to studies showing that by 2020 the number of women that will earn B.A’s will be 156 for each 100 men. In addition, more than 50% of all degrees in recent years have been earned by women. Neese notes, however, that there is still a gap when it comes to bachelor degrees in political science and government (about 52% for men and 47% women), in part because women still feel politics “is dirty and they do not want to get involved.” Michelle Obama’s high education may thus serve not only as an example of women’s advancement, but also an inspiration for women as they aim to overcome the challenges of balancing work and family in a political environment.

The Flexibility of a Working Mother

Autumn Stephens, author of Feisty First Ladies and Other Unforgettable White House Women, agrees that Michelle Obama is an impressive woman in many ways, but says that “the intelligence, education, and influence she brings to the White House are not unprecedented, either among First Ladies or among American women as a whole.” Stephens believes that what is unprecedented, perhaps, is “the degree to which our society appears ready to accept a woman like Obama, rather than viewing her as a threat.”

Stephens believes the public’s willingness to accept Obama may be due in part to the fact that she is not blatantly political or careerist. Instead, she has stated she aims to be “Mom-in-Chief,” focused on her two young children. “It is a huge asset for approval,” Stephens explains “that she has these two young kids for whom she is obviously in a maternal role. If she didn’t have kids, she would be more threatening. People would wonder ‘what is she going to do with all that energy?’”

Yet, Stephens acknowledges that the personal can become political. If she focuses on her children and national issues relating to family, Obama may quietly define what it means to be a modern working mother. Despite her maternal focus, Obama remains a highly accomplished professional with background in both private and non-profit sectors. Stephens wonders what Obama will do after her turn in the White House or when her children are older. By focusing on family issues while her children are young, whether on the personal or national level, Obama can show Americans that “working mothers are flexible and a woman’s working cycle is often very different from that of a man.”

A Marriage of “Full Partners”

According to Quinetta Roberson, professor of management at the Villanova School of Business, Michelle Obama is only the 4th First Lady in history to qualify as a “full partner” using the “Watson Typology,” which categorizes First Ladies on a continuum from non-partner to full partner with their husbands. In that role, Obama joins the ranks of Eleanor Roosevelt, Rosalyn Carter and Hillary Clinton.

Roberson believes that Obama is in that “full partner” role more naturally than prior First Ladies due to changes in our society and the unique nature of her marriage. Roberson explains that the role of First Lady evolved substantially when Hillary Clinton wanted to be involved in sociopolitical issues, such as healthcare. “For Clinton,” Roberson explains “that was a choice. It had a little bit to do with changes in society, as women had entered the workforce.” Roberson believes that Obama, on the other hand, is not merely making a choice. She is also being brought to the foreground by her husband, who appears to look at her as a “full partner.” “We have never had a President before,” Roberson explains, “calling the First Lady ‘the Rock of our family’ or ‘my best friend’.”

Roberson concludes that full partnership appears to be natural for the Obamas, creating a new type of marriage for the public to analyze, one of two “best friends.” “I have heard men say they are looking for a Michelle Obama,” Roberson shares, “…an accomplished woman who can carry the load, have his back, be his partner.” This type of marriage not only makes the Obamas feel accessible, but underlines a new type of marriage sought out by some accomplished women and men.

Bottom Line: A Modern Approach to Work/Life Balance

Michelle Obama has openly discussed the importance of her family’s extended support system, including her mother and friends, to her achievement of work/life balance. In light of Obama’s educational and professional accomplishments, her approach to work and family, and the unique nature of her marriage, it is not surprising experts agree she will highlight a modern approach to work/life balance – one that requires the support of many, as well as flexibility to focus on family or career if necessary.

It is thus not surprisingly that organizations such as the National Association of Mothers’ Centers will be looking to Michelle Obama, as well as her husband, to “promote the idea that workers are also caregivers, and [that] the need to be economically self-sufficient co-exists with the need to care for children, the ill, elderly, and disabled.” Michelle Obama, after all, “embodies the myriad talents, abilities, and obligations of women in today’s society.” And, she wears practical flat shoes.

Photo by https://www.flickr.com/photos/nostri-imago/3216385048/in/photostream/.

Photo used under a Creative Commons license.

  1. MrsObama Fan
    MrsObama Fan says:

    It’s about time that Americans have a modern marriage to model. It is refreshing to have a First Lady who is a “full partner” and comfortable in that role. Unlike Hilary, who seemed to always be trying to prove her worth, Michelle appears secure and confident that she can achieve her goals as First Lady.

  2. Linda
    Linda says:

    It’s a breath of fresh air not to hear anything that Michelle Obama says. I hope she keeps her mouth shut for the next 4 years. I don’t appreciate her hateful,negative comments and feel that she stirs and creates too much controversy. One man went out of her campaign in Florida and started shooting a loaded gun after he attended one of her campaign rallies. This was not widely reported by the news because the news/media only wrote what they wanted to write about the Obamas. She is not a good role model for America. Let the liberals support her and let the rest of us forget her.

  3. Debbe
    Debbe says:

    How interesting I live in Florida and we never heard anything about it. Considering the Florida media thrives on sensationalism I just cannot imagine why they would not pass that up. You should be your own role model. I respect what she has done for herself and her family. What she says is HER opinion, not you, not me. I volunteered and spent 20 years in the US Navy defending people’s right to complain. You should be grateful that you DONT have to keep your mouth shut like the women did (and still do) in many countries. I’m proud to be black but prouder to be American. Worry about what with the economy, the decline in American education, our job losses and our troops…..
    that’s more important.

  4. Fred
    Fred says:

    Wow, Linda, lighten up……I mean what is the point of this article? That we dont want to hear anything she says or that she is well educated, O’Bama’s full partner and a snappy dresser to boot! You just know that when they settle down in that nice antique bed she isnt talking about what to have for dinner tomorrow….she’s helping him decide if he should nuke Iran, not to mention all those decisions about where to direct the stimulus…whooo.

  5. Alicia Anderson
    Alicia Anderson says:

    Michelle Obama teaches us so much about being a high-achieving professional and mom.

    1) You don’t have to do it all – you can have help (ie, mom)

    2) You can do life your way – (i.e., Mom-in-Chief)

    3) You can be a succesful professional AND a loving wife and great mother

    She’s creative, competent, confident, and cute!

    I’m inspired by her and appreciate the example she has set for our nation.

  6. Lisa Gates
    Lisa Gates says:

    Anna, I think we have a first couple who may be the first first couple (!!) to really understand the link between core values and life balance, and this alone IMHO is worth the price of admission for the trickle down benefits we’ll reap in the next 8 years.

    Work life balance is achieved when we consistently choose according to our values. Period. It doesn’t mean we suddenly become un-busy. We may be busier than ever before, but our choices create joy, fulfillment and accomplishment.

    The First Couple has an exemplary record of walking the talk of values, regardless of what we think of their politics.

  7. Anna T. Collins
    Anna T. Collins says:

    What I wanted to highlight in the article was the modern nature of Michelle Obama’s approach to work/life balance — modern due to her educational/professional achievements, approach to being a working mother (in the form of reliance upon an extended family/friends network), and unique marriage. These three parts of her life are uniquely modern, especially when considered together.

  8. Darlene
    Darlene says:

    It is wonderful that the Obamas have achieved such amazing personal success in their own lives, but the American people elected Mr. Obama to do more than be a symbol of his own personal success. He was elected to get things done to benefit people who are really hurting right now. If he fails to help people as he promised–or worse, if he fails to seriously try–then the American public will quickly lose interest in Michelle Obama’s taste in shoes. The pomp and circumstance will grow tiresome very quickly, and she will remind us more of Imelda Marcos than Eleanor Roosevelt.