Dubbed the “ultimate Obama insider,” Valerie Jarrett made history as the longest-serving presidential senior advisor. And in her new memoir, she shares her journey not only as a public servant during those eight years — but also as a business leader, lawyer and single mother.
In “Finding My Voice: My Journey to the West Wing and the Path Forward,” Jarrett traces her personal history from her childhood in Iran to the White House and beyond. The book also details her push for gender equality and civil rights, and recounts how she learned her value and was able to overcome her natural timidity.
In fact, Jarrett was a “painfully shy” child, she told “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski on Wednesday. She recalled blushing when a teacher would call on her in school and being terrified about public speaking when she got older.
“I overcame it by trial and error and keeping at it,” Jarrett said, adding that one of her first public speeches made her sweat so much she smeared her notes. “But I did it again and again and again, and I got over it. Sometimes we shy away from getting out of our comfort zone, and I got shoved out of my comfort zone.”
Women, she said, need to get comfortable with being uncomfortable and take risks; that’s when progress and growth happen.
“Early in my life when I was shy, I was kind of clinging to the safety of a plan I made in college,” Jarrett said. But she got lessons in risk-taking at a young age: She spent the first four years of her life in Iran with her parents. They made the move in the mid-50s after Jarrett’s father, an African-American physician, couldn’t find a job in the U.S. that paid him a salary equal to his white counterparts.
Her father accepted a job at a new hospital opening in Shiraz, Iran (where Jarrett was born) as head of the pathology department.
Her family didn’t speak the language and had never previously traveled further than Europe, but they were excited to take the risk. It paid off: Jarrett’s father did groundbreaking work that ultimately attracted the University of Chicago, which recruited him to become the school’s first black tenured professor.
It goes to show that the safe plan isn’t always best, Jarrett said. “Sometimes the shortest distance you want to go is the longest one around” to your goal.
In Jarrett’s case, she planned to be a lawyer for her entire career. She started in a deputy counsel role in Chicago Mayor Harold Washington’s office in 1987, and afterward went on to serve as chief of staff for Mayor Richard Daley.
That’s when she met and hired Michelle Robinson — the future Michelle Obama — who was looking to move away from a law firm into public service. Jarrett offered her a job on the spot, even though she didn’t have the authority to do so.









