Pulled together long enough: Michelle Obama cried after Trump's inauguration

The Obamas spend eight years in the White House, and their two daughters spend most of their childhood there.

Pulled together long enough: Michelle Obama cried after Trump's inauguration

The Obamas spend eight years in the White House, and their two daughters spend most of their childhood there. The move emotionally affects the outgoing first lady. At the time, the thought of the new residents was particularly bad, says Michelle Obama today.

Former US First Lady Michelle Obama said she cried for half an hour after leaving the White House. After Donald Trump's inauguration as president in January 2017, she and her family boarded the Air Force One government plane, the 59-year-old says in her new podcast, The Light Podcast. "And when the doors closed, I cried for 30 minutes, sobbing uncontrollably, because that's how much we've pulled ourselves together for eight years."

It was difficult to leave the White House in the US capital Washington, where she had lived for eight years - it was the only house that the two daughters really knew. "They remembered Chicago, but they had spent more time in the White House than anywhere else." Saying goodbye to White House employees was difficult, said the wife of former US President Barack Obama. "There were tears, there were these feelings." The Obamas moved into the White House in 2009.

It was particularly bad to see Trump's inauguration. The opposite of what she and her family represented was seen on stage. For example, the ranks of those present did not reflect social diversity. But you had to pull yourself together, as you had done for eight years, Obama said. The family then boarded the Presidential Helicopter, Marine One, bound for Andrews Air Base.

Michelle Obama insisted on giving Trump another one in her podcast. When they flew over the US Capitol in Washington, there weren't many people there, the 59-year-old said. "By the way, we saw it." The day after Trump's inauguration in January, Trump's then-press secretary Sean Spicer claimed at his first press conference, "This was the largest audience ever to attend an inauguration. Period!" At the time, however, the pictures showed that the rush on Capitol Hill was very limited.