Michelle Obama, Ann Romney sound off on eve of first debate

DENVER -- President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney square off in the first presidential debate Wednesday, October 3rd -- with just about a month to go before voters head to the polls on November 6th. On the eve of the debate, first lady Michelle Obama and Romney's wife, Ann discussed what debates mean to them.

NOTE: Wednesday night's debate will be broadcast live on FOX6 -- and streamed LIVE via FOX6Now.com.

Michelle Obama: Debates make me nervous

(CNN) -- Watching her husband during a presidential debate makes Michelle Obama feels like an anxious mom, the first lady confided in an exclusive interview with CNN.

"I get so nervous at these debates," a laughing Obama told CNN Chief White House Correspondent Jessica Yellin. "I'm like one of those parents watching their kid on the balance beam. You're just standing there trying not to you know, have any expression at all."

Although it may be difficult for her to watch her husband, President Barack Obama, debate on stage, she said she refrains from offering him advice beforehand. And after, she said, only gives "positive reinforcement."

"He doesn't need much advice," she said. "He's a very good debater, so I do tell him to have fun and relax and just be himself."

Some of the president's aides have said he's working on keeping his answers concise and steering clear of the long winded responses that have become a staple of his White House press conferences. When pressed to point out any of her husband's potential challenges headed into the first debate, the first lady demurred.

"He's a great speaker, you know? I mean he's good at this," she said. "Going into it ... He's gonna do his best."

Ann Romney: 'Dad' is always with Mitt at the debates

(CNN) -- In a candid and personal interview, Ann Romney tells CNN her husband's debate routine includes paying homage every time to a very important person in his life, his father, the former Michigan governor, George Romney.

Ann Romney tells CNN Chief Political Analyst Gloria Borger that "as soon as he gets on stage...he takes off his watch and puts it on the podium...then he writes 'Dad' on the piece of paper," at which point she becomes emotional because the elder Romney was a strong influence in both her and husband's lives.

"And that's amazing, because he loves his dad, respects his Dad. Doesn't want to do anything that would not make his father proud... I love the fact that Mitt does that. So he writes that."

But there is more to the routine, she says. "And then he looks in the audience and he finds me. He has to find where I am. And-- he just-- he needs just that connection. And almost after every answer that he gives, he'll find me in the audience, to see, 'Was that good? Was that okay?'"

In the interview, Mrs. Romney says she tries to fill the role in the lead-up to the debates and during them that her family has dubbed for her: "the Mitt Stabilizer."

"I'm there for him. We're there for each other emotionally all the time. In the last 20 debates that we did in the primary-- I felt that was my most important role."

Even on stage, she tells CNN, "there's an emotional connection that's happening between the two of us during the debate itself."

While the Republican nominee is getting plenty of advice from all corners, she tells Borger her advice to him is for him to be himself.

"He has to feel what he's gotta say, when he's gotta say it. He's gotta listen to his own instincts. And of course it's-- he's gonna be getting a lot of advice. But he's gotta listen to his own instincts more than anyone else's and trust that."