Michelle Obama’s memoir has been resonating with me on many levels. I’ve already cried three times, and I’m only halfway through. Though we come from different backgrounds (racially, geographically, economically), I am still able to see my own experiences within her experiences. In the part of the book where she discusses her childhood, she writes about her grandpa “Dandy” – the perpetually disgruntled patriarch, whose ill-tempered actions the rest of her family tolerates and condones. Unlike the rest of her submissive family, young plucky Michelle confronts Dandy about his grumpy attitude. She later finds out from her mom about Dandy’s painful past and his deep-seeded discontent regarding the racial obstructions to his life’s dreams, despite his intellect and abilities. Dandy was smart enough to be a professor, but later lowered his expectations to be a technician, but even that was infeasible. Michelle later elaborates on this story (in her conversation with Oprah), where she speaks to the unshakable pain that many older generation African-Americans carry with them (especially those who are notably gifted and talented), because of their inability to fulfill their potential.
As I read about Dandy, I couldn’t help but think of my own grandma. She is currently living at a senior center in Koreatown and being her usual feisty self, she is constantly butting heads with other grandmas there. She particularly hates it when other grandmas talk about which universities they graduated from, as she takes it as a personal attack (as someone who didn’t have the means to graduate middle school). From what I hear from my relatives and as I’ve personally witnessed, my grandma is not only smart but one of the most doggedly ambitious people I know – someone who would’ve excelled if she had the opportunities. In her later years at senior centers, she would reconnect herself to this part of her identity as she would take great pride in learning how to read and write in English, finishing piles upon piles of sudokus, and framing her accolades (“High Honor Roll”) on her wall. It pains me now to think how I would be rather dismissive to her complaints about those other grandmas, thinking she was just making a fuss.
When I think about Dandy and my own grandma’s experiences, I look to my own and see that I have been able to pursue whatever I wanted to pursue despite feeling inadequate and not feeling “fit” for it. I thought I wanted to be a librarian, so I went for my MLIS degree. I later wanted pursue a career in law, so I enrolled in law school – all the while, also feeling that I was not particularly great in any of these things. What a luxury I have to be able to switch courses and push/challenge myself in positions that seem out of reach (not because of money or societal circumstances, but my own insecurities and shortcomings). I have realized how lucky I am to have never known the sorrow of living with untapped potential.


I’ve recently purchased Notorious RBG as I was casually perusing through the Rizzoli bookstore when I had to kill time. I figured I needed some new law school inspo, and I’ve known about Ruth Bader Ginsburg and that she was somewhat of a badass (an 80+ year old woman serving on the Supreme Court is pretty badass in and of itself). It was amazing to read the breakthroughs she made as a woman in the legal field (top of her class at both Harvard & Columbia Law, one of the first women to teach law, the second woman to be on the Supreme Court) as well as what did for women through law (rights for pregnant women, rights for women in the military, etc.). And it was interesting to see how she wasn’t this highly aggressive, in-your-face type of lawyer either; she was someone who was strong but reserved, and she preferred working slowly but effectively rather than quickly trying to turn things upside down.
they connected instantly. When thinking about their future together, Marty suggested that they work in the same profession so they could speak the same language and have more to bond over; they both decided on law. As they both studied at Harvard Law, Marty was diagnosed with cancer during his second year. RBG didn’t want him to fall behind so she helped him with his work on top of her heavy courseload. That’s when she realized she could survive off of one hour of sleep. She made more sacrifices for him & her family throughout her life: she gave up her Harvard Law degree to move to NY with Marty when he got a job at a top-notch NY firm and she put her career on hold to raise their children. However, what’s beautiful about their marriage is that he did the same for her when it became her time to shine; Marty’s the one who encouraged and recommended her for the position on the Supreme Court and he became a house-husband (& an amazing chef) later in their lives so that she could excel in her career.