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The White House is the people's house.
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Michelle and I, and the girls, we understand that we're here for a limited time.
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And we're here because we have this incredible privilege of serving the American people and looking after them and what they are concerned about.
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I think everybody, the first night they spend in the White House, are a little overwhelmed.
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You know, the White House is such an icon in American life and around the globe.
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And the notion that you'd be sleeping in a bed inside of it, is a little bit intimidating.
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And, at least when you've got a couple of kids, you pretty much get into a routine because you know that you're going to have to figure out how to wake them up, and make sure they get to school on that first day.
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So, the transition was smooth, but that first night you kind of wake up with a startle a little bit and say to yourself.
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"My goodness, what am I doing here?"
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Every day, although you consider it the place you live, I think you're very mindful that this is a place of history, that this is a place that belongs to the people and to the country.
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As much as you want to feel comfortable in that place, you also want to feel a little bit of reverence, for the fact that down these halls Lincoln has walked, and in these rooms FDR has made decisions that had impacts around the world.
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While you're here, you're maybe part of the first family, but once your term's up you're going to be a citizen once again.
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And that, I think, is both humbling, but extremely gratifying because it reminds us that this is a democracy and those who come into this office are here temporarily.
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Someday soon, there's going to be somebody else who takes up that mantle.
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And you just make sure that during the time that you're here you're doing the best you can to serve the people who've sent you.