WASHINGTON - This is the transition you don't hear so much about: Michelle Obama is getting ready for a new life as first lady, giving plenty of thought to what kind of profile she will carve out for herself in the White House.
She has plenty of role models in the last few women who have lived their lives in the limelight that'll soon shine on her. One thing is not in any doubt, however: she'll be the new president's close confidant and adviser — hewing to a tradition that transcends presidencies and political parties.

She's been compared to Jacqueline Kennedy, is every bit as high-powered as Hillary Rodham Clinton was and has praised Laura Bush's calm and rational approach to issues.
(photo: Creative Commons / Steve Rhodes)
But while it's too soon to know just what kind of first lady Mrs. Obama will be, she doubtlessly will be the kind of first lady this country hasn't seen in decades: the mother of young children.
Barack Obama has portrayed his wife as the family's "rock" — and told Newsweek magazine she had "veto power" over his decision to run for president.
Aides say publicly she is not interested in shaping policy or reserving a seat for herself at her husband's decision-making table. She prefers, at least for now, to focus on easing the transition for Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7 — getting them in new schools, settled and comfortable with a new way of life.
The girls are her priority, she has said often, the last thing she thinks about before falling asleep at night and the first thing on her mind when she wakes up in the morning.
During the campaign, she set her schedule so she would be home to tuck them into bed and see them off to school.
Not since 1977, when 9-year-old Amy Carter moved in, will there be such young children at the White House.