Michelle Obama has addressed the ongoing rumors about her marriage to Barack Obama,

Michelle Obama has addressed the ongoing rumors about her marriage to Barack Obama, making her stance on the matter very clear.

These speculations arenโ€™t new, and Michelle has consistently dismissed them as baseless. She explained in an interview with Steven Bartlett on the Diary of a CEO podcast that if she and Barack were ever to separate, โ€˜everyone would know.โ€™

In another discussion, Michelle attributed these rumors to some peopleโ€™s inability to imagine her making independent decisions.

Recently, she tackled these rumors again as a guest on NPRโ€™s Wild Card podcast hosted by Rachel Martin.

During the conversation, the 61-year-old Michelle talked about the significant changes in her life after transitioning from the role of First Lady to a more relaxed lifestyle.

She remarked, โ€œIt takes a moment to adjust to thinking, โ€˜can you say this? Can you touch this topic?โ€™ โ€

Michelle expressed that even trivial comments made by her and Barack become headlines. She humorously noted, โ€œThe fact that people donโ€™t see me going out on a date with my husband sparks rumors of the end of our marriage, it feels almost apocalyptic!โ€

Adding humor to the topic, Michelle pointed out that being in their 60s, they donโ€™t document every experience online, especially not with selfies! โ€œYou just arenโ€™t going to know every little thing weโ€™re doing each day,โ€ she jested. โ€œYes, weโ€™re famous, but we donโ€™t spend our time taking selfies at this age!โ€

She shared that Barack joked about her never taking pictures, and she replied, โ€œIโ€™m not focused on snapping photos all the time.โ€

This shift away from constantly documenting their lives has been something both have adjusted to.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=p156Ta8e1c8%3Ffeature%3Doembed

The couple first met in 1988 in Chicago while working at a law firm, where Michelle was assigned as Barackโ€™s adviser.

They married four years later and became parents to Malia in 1998, followed by Natasha in 2001.

In 2009, Barack made history as the first African-American President of the United States, completing two terms until 2017.

Barack has admitted that serving as President put their marriage under strain.