Sister Wives Christine Woolley Accuses Kody & Robyn of INFIDELITY, BETRAYAL in Explosive New CLIP
In the next part of the season 19 tell-all, Christine Brown is going to bring up Kody and Robin’s premarital relationship, and I don’t think anyone should be surprised.
During the season, Kody made this admission that prior to marrying Meri, he had a relationship where he lost his purity, let’s just say, and he was deeply regretful of this. It caused him a lot of pain because he was a good Mormon boy, and that’s the worst thing you can do.
He admitted that he never told Christine, Janelle, or anyone about it. This actually created a huge issue. His daughter, McKelie, found it super offensive when she watched the show.
Christine and Janelle are going to be able to respond to that on the show. During the tell-all, Christine brings up a very valid point. It has to do with Kody and Robin’s relationship prior to getting married—let’s just qualify it as “air quotes” married because they weren’t actually legally married when they had their ceremony. Kody was still legally married to Meri Brown.
At that time, Kody had two other “wives,” according to the doctrine and covenants. They would be called his plural wives or concubines. They had no legal rights to Kody. Their goal in his faith was to just be his breeders. They were meant to make children to help build his kingdom.
Throughout the season, Kody made a lot of wild, off-the-cuff comments about how it’s very different to be in love with someone than it is to be with someone that you build your kingdom with. He goes on and on about how he fell in love with Robin, and it was so different with her than it was with everyone else.
I want to share something from their book because this is a pattern for Kody when he gets into relationships. He seems to devalue the women, and he admitted to basically being a player—or I don’t know what you would call him. A guy that gets around? A guy that cheats? I don’t know what they call these guys these days.
In Becoming Sister Wives, I want you to hear what he had to say about love. This was written in 2012. He says, “I am a hopeless romantic and too easily infatuated. When I was growing up, I suffered all sorts of little heartbreaks. I had a careless dating style. I would dive into a relationship before considering my true feelings. Often, I’d find myself holding a girl’s hand, then I’d look over at her and think, ‘Why am I holding her hand? I don’t really like her.’”
“During my two years in ministry in Texas, I promised myself I would never again kiss a woman until I knew for sure that I was in love. When I returned home from my mission and began seriously considering converting from the LDS church to Mormon fundamentalism, my mother told me I should take time away from girls, or at least from dating them. She knew I needed to become less careless and discover what I truly wanted from a relationship and who I truly loved.”
“My mother sat me down and said, ‘The next time you find yourself infatuated with someone, why don’t you try and be friends? Don’t rush into a romantic relationship right off the bat. Be friends, and let something develop.’ That decided it. I told myself I was done with dating carelessly. I was done chasing girls. I was done chasing girls.”
He urged himself to be patient and to learn how to be friends with the next girl he became interested in. Meri was his “experiment” with friends. Meri was so cute and sweet when I met her that I had a hard time suppressing my hopeless romantic nature. She had a remarkable purity about her. I had a sneaking suspicion that we were soulmates, but because of the promise I had made to myself, I rejected this notion. I was determined to be Meri’s friend until I knew better and could confirm my suspicion that our destinies were intertwined.
“I was glad that Meri and I kept finding ourselves and spending more time together.” So he admits that he gets infatuated, right? He would kiss girls and then regret it. He would hold hands and regret it. He would fall in love with women and then later regret it. And whoever he was with at the time would be his obsession in that moment.
I mean, he calls Meri his soulmate and says that he was different with her because he wanted to be more careful and see if he loved her. Kody’s relationship with Meri is one where he picked her. He says she was sweet, innocent, and a wonderful listener. “She validated my existence. We became inseparable.” He says, “She validated my existence.” Kody can go back in time and look back and say he never loved Meri, but I think he’s devaluing the fact that he has to accept where he is today and the choices he made.