Becoming

by

Michelle Obama

Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment Theme Icon
Community, Investment, and Hard Work Theme Icon
Race, Gender, and Politics Theme Icon
Marriage, Parenthood, and Work Theme Icon
Power, Privilege, and Responsibility Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Becoming, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment Theme Icon

Becoming follows the life of United States First Lady Michelle Obama. The memoir recounts Michelle’s childhood on the South Side of Chicago, her time at Princeton and Harvard Law School, her career as a lawyer, and her marriage to Barack Obama, who eventually becomes the forty-fourth President of the United States. As she examines each phase of her life, Michelle highlights the importance of fulfillment, as well as the optimism required to achieve that fulfillment. Several times over the course of the book, Michelle moves beyond a safe path in order to find one that is more rewarding and will allow her to grow. This hope and faith in a better future is characteristic not only of Michelle’s journey, but also of her and Barack’s vision for the country. Over the course of the book, Michelle’s primary argument is that it is imperative to maintain optimism in order to strive for personal growth and, eventually, fulfillment.

Michelle describes how even at an early age, she found value in wanting to grow and get better in all aspects of her life. The first memory that Michelle recounts is of taking piano lessons from her great-aunt Robbie, who lived in the apartment downstairs from her family. Michelle would often hear other piano students practicing and writes that she spent much of her childhood listening to “the sound of striving.” The word “striving” itself suggests both hard work and a hope that one will get better in the future—that is, an optimism that effort will lead to growth. Michelle demonstrates this same optimism as she practices, and she carries the persistent belief that she can improve to kindergarten. One day, her kindergarten teacher instructs each student to stand and read cards with colors on them. She trips up on the word “white” and is asked to sit back down. She realizes instantly what the word was, and the next day demands to try again, optimistic that she can get it right this time. Michelle maintains this optimism through the rest of her time in school, rising to the top of her class so that she can continue to find fulfillment beyond high school. Michelle decides to follow in her older brother Craig’s footsteps and apply to Princeton. But when a guidance counselor tells her that she doesn’t think that she’s “Princeton material,” Michelle refuses to let this shake her confidence. She continues to work hard and seeks support from a trusted individual to write her a recommendation letter. Michelle is able to prove the guidance counselor wrong and eventually attend Princeton, emphasizing that optimism is essential for growth.

Michelle continues to succeed, going on to Harvard Law School after Princeton. But later on, she realizes that she isn’t happy at her law firm job. When Michelle realizes that she is uncertain about her professional path at the law firm, she decides to leave, telling her mother explicitly, “I’m just not fulfilled.” Even though she takes a major pay cut, she does so in order to find something she really feels passionate about and will allow her to grow as a person. Michelle then finds fulfillment in a job at City Hall, where she works on “elaborate and unending” government issues. She notes that the job is “broad and people oriented enough to be energizing and almost always interesting.” Thus, by maintaining optimism that another job will be a better fit for her, Michelle is able to find something more fulfilling than her previous position at the law firm. Michelle then gets another job at a non-profit called Public Allies, which aims to “build a new generation of community leaders.” Essentially, the work involves investing in young people today in the hopes that they will work to better the future society—a job steeped in the idea of optimism and growth. With these two jobs, Michelle begins to realize that in order to find fulfillment, she needs to focus on growth even when doing so might be daunting.

Michelle’s message of striving is echoed in Barack’s message for the country. His political career demonstrates that optimism can help a nation grow in the same way that a person like Michelle can grow as an individual. Michelle constantly references Barack’s optimism, showing how negativity doesn’t faze him because he truly believes in his ability to better the world. Early in their relationship, she watches as he leads a training session as a community organizer. “Do we settle for the world as it is, or do we work for the world as it should be?” he asks. This constant belief in “the world as it should be” becomes a pillar of his entire political career. When Barack works his way up the political ladder to delivering a speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, he calls for “hope over cynicism.” His words are so inspiring that pundits and citizens alike immediately start believing that he will be the first black president of the United States, despite the fact that he has not been in the national spotlight prior to this moment. When Barack does run for president, his campaign tagline is literally “Hope,” proving his firm optimism and his belief in a better world. The American people elect him overwhelmingly, inspired by this optimism and the idea that the country might actually become better. Michelle thus demonstrates how optimism is a powerful force, one that can lead both individuals and entire societies to grow toward greater fulfillment.

Even the title of Michelle’s book, “Becoming,” implies the importance of optimism and growth. Becoming suggests that Michelle believes that people never stop growing; that she is always searching for greater fulfillment; and that she is optimistic in embracing each new phase of life and to finding her purpose within it. Through her own example, she suggests that the country, and the reader, should do the same.

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Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment ThemeTracker

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Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment Quotes in Becoming

Below you will find the important quotes in Becoming related to the theme of Optimism, Growth, and Fulfillment.
Chapter 1 Quotes

I spent much of my childhood listening to the sound of striving. It came in the form of bad music, or at least amateur music, coming up through the floorboards of my bedroom—the plink plink plink of students sitting downstairs at my great-aunt Robbie’s piano, slowly and imperfectly learning their scales.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Robbie
Related Symbols: Piano
Page Number: 3
Explanation and Analysis:

The issue was that I wasn’t used to flawless. In fact, I’d never once in my life encountered it. My experience of the piano came entirely from Robbie’s […] less-than-perfect upright, with its honky-tonk patchwork of yellowed keys and its conveniently chipped middle C. To me, that’s what a piano was—the same way my neighborhood was my neighborhood, my dad was my dad, my life was my life. It was all I knew.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Michelle’s father, Robbie
Related Symbols: Piano
Page Number: 16
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

As I was entering seventh grade, the Chicago Defender, a weekly newspaper that was popular with African American readers, ran a vitriolic opinion piece that claimed Bryn Mawr had gone, in the span of a few years, from being one of the city’s best public schools to a “run-down slum” governed by a “ghetto mentality.” Our school principal, Dr. Lavizzo, immediately hit back with a letter to the editor, defending his community of parents and students and deeming the newspaper piece “an outrageous lie, which seems designed to incite only feelings of failure and flight.”

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Michelle’s mother
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

He toured the country, mesmerizing crowds with thundering calls for black people to shake off the undermining ghetto stereotypes and claim their long-denied political power. He preached a message of relentless, let’s-do-this self-empowerment. “Down with dope! Up with hope!” he’d call to his audiences.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Reverend Jesse Jackson (speaker), Barack Obama, Santita Jackson
Page Number: 62
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Your passion stays low, yet under no circumstance will you underperform. You live, as you always have, by the code of effort/result, and with it you keep achieving until you think you know the answers to all the questions—including the most important one. Am I good enough? Yes, in fact I am.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama
Page Number: 92
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

But listening to Barack, I began to understand that his version of hope reached far beyond mine: It was one thing to get yourself out of a stuck place, I realized. It was another thing entirely to try and get the place itself unstuck.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama
Page Number: 118
Explanation and Analysis:

I regretted not coming earlier. I regretted the many times, over the course of our seesawing friendship, that I’d insisted she was making a wrong move, when possibly she’d been doing it right. I was suddenly glad for all the times she’d ignored my advice. I was glad that she hadn’t over-worked herself to get some fancy business school degree. That she’d gone off for a lost weekend with a semi-famous pop star, just for fun. I was happy that she’d made it to the Taj Mahal to watch the sunrise with her mom. Suzanne had lived in ways that I had not.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Suzanne Alele
Page Number: 129
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

“I’m just not fulfilled,” I said.

I see now how this must have come across to my mother, who was then in the ninth year of a job she’d taken primarily so she could help finance my college education, after years of not having a job so that she’d be free to sew my school clothes, cook my meals, and do laundry for my dad, who for the sake of our family spent eight hours a day watching gauges on a boiler at the filtration plant.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama, Michelle’s mother, Michelle’s father, Suzanne Alele
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

Somewhat brazenly, I suppose, I laid all this out in my interview with Michael Riordan, the hospital’s new president. I even brought three-month-old Sasha along with me, too. I can’t remember the circumstances exactly, whether I couldn’t find a babysitter that day or whether I’d even bothered to try. Sasha was little, though, and still needed a lot from me. She was a fact of my life—a cute, burbling, impossible-to-ignore fact— and something compelled me almost literally to put her on the table for this discussion. Here is me, I was saying, and here also is my baby.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Malia Obama, Sasha Obama
Page Number: 196
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

“On this day,” he said, “we gather because we have chosen hope over fear, unity of purpose over conflict and discord.”

I saw that truth mirrored again and again in the faces of the people who stood shivering in the cold to witness it. There were people in every direction, as far back as I could see. They filled every inch of the National Mall and the parade route. I felt as if our family were almost falling into their arms now. We were making a pact, all of us. You’ve got us; we’ve got you.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama (speaker)
Page Number: 299
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 20 Quotes

There are pieces of public life, of giving up one’s privacy to become a walking, talking symbol of a nation, that can seem specifically designed to strip away part of your identity. But here, finally, speaking to those girls, I felt something completely different and pure—an alignment of my old self with this new role. Are you good enough? Yes, you are, all of you. I told the students of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson that they’d touched my heart. I told them that they were precious, because they truly were. And when my talk was over, I did what was instinctive. I hugged absolutely every single girl I could reach.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama
Page Number: 320
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

We were taking on a huge issue, but now I had the benefit of operating from a huge platform. I was beginning to realize that all the things that felt odd to me about my new existence—the strangeness of fame, the hawkeyed attention paid to my image, the vagueness of my job description—could be marshaled in service of real goals. I was energized. Here, finally, was a way to show my full self.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Malia Obama, Sam Kass
Related Symbols: The Garden
Page Number: 339
Explanation and Analysis:
Epilogue Quotes

For me, becoming isn’t about arriving somewhere or achieving a certain aim. I see it instead as forward motion, a means of evolving, a way to reach continuously toward a better self. The journey doesn’t end. I became a mother, but I still have a lot to learn from and give to my children. I became a wife, but I continue to adapt to and be humbled by what it means to truly love and make a life with another person. I have become, by certain measures, a person of power, and yet there are moments still when I feel insecure or unheard.

Related Characters: Michelle Obama (speaker), Barack Obama, Malia Obama, Sasha Obama
Page Number: 406
Explanation and Analysis: